DOI: 10.3390/microbiolres17070119 ISSN: 2036-7481

Wesselsbron Virus as a Surveillance-Sensitive One Health Pathogen: Evidence Strength, Diagnostic Under-Detection, and Integrated Risk Assessment

Koycho Koev, Gabriela Goujgoulova

Wesselsbron disease remains an underrecognized mosquito-borne flaviviral disease despite long-standing evidence of ruminant reproductive loss, neonatal disease, hepatic pathology, zoonotic infection, and mosquito-associated circulation. This narrative review critically synthesizes verified evidence on Wesselsbron virus (WSLV) at the animal–human–vector–environment interface, with the specific aim of clarifying why the virus should be considered a surveillance-sensitive One Health pathogen rather than a rare veterinary curiosity. The review integrates classical veterinary pathology, experimental infection studies, human case reports, serological and molecular evidence, mosquito surveillance, ecological suitability modelling, diagnostic-development studies, and recent evidence from molecular epidemiology, camel investigations, and digital histopathology. The review uses an evidence-weighted synthesis to distinguish experimentally and pathologically supported animal disease, confirmed but poorly quantified human infection, mosquito-associated detection, ecological suitability, diagnostic under-recognition, and unresolved reservoir or transmission questions before integrating these domains into a qualitative One Health risk-assessment framework. The evidence supports WSLV as a cause of ruminant abortion, neonatal disease, and hepatic lesions, confirms zoonotic potential, and indicates repeated detection in ecologically relevant mosquito and multi-host contexts. However, current data remain insufficient for robust estimates of animal burden, human incidence, reservoir competence, natural route frequency, or climate-driven expansion. WSLV should therefore be incorporated into targeted differential diagnosis, laboratory readiness, and One Health surveillance where ruminant abortion events, unexplained neonatal disease, compatible mosquito ecology, undiagnosed febrile illness, diagnostic ambiguity, or ecological suitability indicate plausible risk.

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