[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":233},["ShallowReactive",2],{"article:hantavirus:how-do-you-get-hantavirus":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"category":187,"description":188,"extension":189,"faq":190,"image":203,"image_alt":204,"last_updated":205,"meta":206,"meta_description":207,"meta_title":208,"navigation":209,"path":210,"related":211,"risk_level":224,"seo":225,"sources":226,"stem":230,"subcategory":231,"__hash__":232},"hantavirus\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fhow-do-you-get-hantavirus.md","How Do You Get Hantavirus? Transmission Routes Explained",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":178},"minimark",[9,13,18,21,24,27,30,34,41,47,53,57,68,74,89,95,99,102,124,142,146,149,175],[10,11,12],"p",{},"The mechanism behind virtually every US hantavirus infection is the same: dried rodent waste gets disturbed, particles become airborne, and someone inhales them before leaving the space. Understanding exactly how that happens — and what conditions make it more or less likely — is more useful than a general warning to \"avoid rodents.\"",[14,15,17],"h2",{"id":16},"the-primary-route-inhaling-aerosolized-particles","The Primary Route: Inhaling Aerosolized Particles",[10,19,20],{},"Infected deer mice shed Sin Nombre virus in their urine, droppings, and saliva throughout their lives. When those secretions dry, the virus doesn't immediately die — it remains viable in the dried material for days to weeks, longer in cool and dark conditions.",[10,22,23],{},"The problem starts when that dried material is disturbed. Sweeping a dusty floor, shaking out a stored sleeping bag, moving boxes in a contaminated attic, opening a sealed storage unit — any of these can break apart dried rodent waste and launch microscopic particles into the air. The resulting aerosol is invisible. You can't smell it, see it, or feel it entering your lungs.",[10,25,26],{},"The enclosed environment matters as much as the disturbance itself. In open outdoor air, virus-laden particles disperse rapidly and are degraded by UV radiation. In an enclosed room, barn, attic, or vehicle with limited ventilation, the same particles remain concentrated in the air you are breathing for minutes.",[10,28,29],{},"This is why the typical HPS case is not someone who walked past a mouse in a park. It is someone who spent time in a confined, contaminated space — a sealed cabin, a cluttered storage room, an RV that has been closed for months — and disturbed accumulated rodent material without protection.",[14,31,33],{"id":32},"secondary-routes","Secondary Routes",[10,35,36,40],{},[37,38,39],"strong",{},"Direct contact followed by mucous membrane exposure",": Handling contaminated material — droppings, nesting, dead rodents — and then touching your eyes, nose, or mouth is a documented transmission route. Washing hands thoroughly after any rodent-related work addresses this risk. Gloves reduce the chance of contaminating your hands.",[10,42,43,46],{},[37,44,45],{},"Rodent bites",": Documented but uncommon in the US. A deer mouse bite can transmit the virus directly. In practice, few HPS patients report being bitten — most cases involve no direct rodent contact at all. If you are bitten by a wild rodent, clean the wound with soap and water and contact a healthcare provider.",[10,48,49,52],{},[37,50,51],{},"Contaminated food or water",": Consuming food or water that has been directly urinated on or defecated in by an infected rodent is listed as a possible route. This is not the common scenario — most infections are respiratory — but it is a reason to discard any food showing signs of rodent contact.",[14,54,56],{"id":55},"what-does-not-transmit-hantavirus","What Does Not Transmit Hantavirus",[10,58,59,62,63],{},[37,60,61],{},"Person-to-person contact",": In the United States, Sin Nombre virus has never been documented to spread between people. Healthcare workers who treated early HPS patients without protective equipment in 1993 did not become infected. Household contacts of HPS patients did not develop the disease. ",[64,65,67],"a",{"href":66},"\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fcan-hantavirus-spread-between-humans","The sole exception — Andes virus in South America — is a different strain not present in North America.",[10,69,70,73],{},[37,71,72],{},"Pets",": Dogs and cats are not known carriers of hantavirus strains that cause HPS. They cannot infect you. They can, however, catch and bring rodents indoors or come into contact with rodent-contaminated areas — so a pet's behavior can indicate rodent activity worth investigating.",[10,75,76,79,80,84,85],{},[37,77,78],{},"The common house mouse",": ",[81,82,83],"em",{},"Mus musculus"," — the gray or brown mouse found in urban kitchens — is not a known reservoir for HPS-causing hantavirus in the US. If the rodents in your home are house mice, your concerns should be sanitation and food contamination, not HPS. The deer mouse — the hantavirus carrier — has a white underside and feet, with a bicolored tail, and favors rural and semi-rural habitats. ",[64,86,88],{"href":87},"\u002Frodent-id\u002Fdeer-mouse-vs-house-mouse","See the comparison here.",[10,90,91,94],{},[37,92,93],{},"Casual outdoor contact",": Deer mice live outdoors. Brief outdoor exposure — hiking past areas where deer mice live, walking through fields — is very low risk. Transmission requires being in an enclosed space with concentrated accumulated waste, not a passing outdoor encounter.",[14,96,98],{"id":97},"the-situations-that-actually-matter","The Situations That Actually Matter",[10,100,101],{},"The transmission route explains the risk profile precisely. You are most at risk in situations where:",[103,104,105,112,118],"ol",{},[106,107,108,111],"li",{},[37,109,110],{},"The space has been closed for weeks or months"," — allowing rodent waste to accumulate",[106,113,114,117],{},[37,115,116],{},"The space is enclosed"," — limiting air exchange and concentrating particles when disturbed",[106,119,120,123],{},[37,121,122],{},"You are physically disturbing the accumulated material"," — cleaning, sweeping, moving stored items, opening stored equipment",[10,125,126,127,131,132,136,137,141],{},"That combination — closed, enclosed, disturbed — covers the most common HPS exposure scenarios: ",[64,128,130],{"href":129},"\u002Frv-cabin\u002Fcleaning-cabin-after-winter-safely","opening a cabin after winter",", cleaning out ",[64,133,135],{"href":134},"\u002Fguides\u002Fhow-to-disinfect-garage-after-mice","a storage unit or garage",", entering ",[64,138,140],{"href":139},"\u002Frv-cabin\u002Frv-mouse-contamination-guide","an RV that has been sealed for months",", working in an attic or crawlspace with evidence of rodent activity.",[14,143,145],{"id":144},"what-actually-prevents-infection","What Actually Prevents Infection",[10,147,148],{},"Given the transmission mechanism, the protection hierarchy is:",[103,150,151,157,163,169],{},[106,152,153,156],{},[37,154,155],{},"Ventilate before entering"," — open all windows and doors, leave the space for 30 minutes before beginning any work. Air exchange reduces particle concentration before you go back in.",[106,158,159,162],{},[37,160,161],{},"Wear an N95 respirator"," — filters fine particles that surgical masks and cloth masks do not catch",[106,164,165,168],{},[37,166,167],{},"Wet before disturbing"," — apply a bleach solution to droppings before touching anything, which prevents material from becoming airborne",[106,170,171,174],{},[37,172,173],{},"Gloves"," — reduces contact transmission risk and prevents hand contamination before touching your face",[10,176,177],{},"The respirator is the critical protection because the primary transmission route is respiratory. Everything else is important, but none of it substitutes for an N95 when you are entering a space with evidence of rodent activity.",{"title":179,"searchDepth":180,"depth":180,"links":181},"",2,[182,183,184,185,186],{"id":16,"depth":180,"text":17},{"id":32,"depth":180,"text":33},{"id":55,"depth":180,"text":56},{"id":97,"depth":180,"text":98},{"id":144,"depth":180,"text":145},"hantavirus","Nearly all hantavirus infections happen the same way: disturbing dried rodent waste in an enclosed space and inhaling the resulting particles. Here's the precise mechanism, the other routes, and what doesn't actually transmit the virus.","md",[191,194,197,200],{"question":192,"answer":193},"How do you get hantavirus?","Hantavirus is transmitted primarily through inhaling aerosolized particles from infected rodent droppings, urine, or nesting material. This happens when dried rodent waste is disturbed in an enclosed space — sweeping, moving stored items, or cleaning a long-closed area. The virus becomes airborne when dried material is disturbed; you breathe it in before you know it happened.",{"question":195,"answer":196},"Can you get hantavirus from touching rodent droppings?","Touching droppings alone is very unlikely to cause infection. The primary transmission route is inhalation, not skin contact. However, touching contaminated material and then touching your eyes, nose, or mouth before washing your hands is a documented secondary route. Wear gloves and wash hands thoroughly after any rodent cleanup — but the more important protection is a respirator, not gloves.",{"question":198,"answer":199},"Can you get hantavirus from a mouse bite?","Yes, but it is rare. Direct rodent bites are a documented but uncommon transmission route. The vast majority of US hantavirus cases involve no bite at all — just exposure to accumulated rodent waste in an enclosed space. If you are bitten by a wild rodent, clean the wound and contact a healthcare provider.",{"question":201,"answer":202},"Can you get hantavirus from eating food contaminated by mice?","In rare cases, yes — consuming food or water directly contaminated by infected rodent urine or droppings is listed as a possible route in CDC guidance. However, this is an uncommon route compared to inhalation. Discard any food that shows signs of rodent contact and clean contaminated surfaces with a bleach solution.","\u002Fimages\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fhow-do-you-get-hantavirus.webp","Cross-section diagram showing aerosolized rodent dropping particles in an enclosed space — the primary route of hantavirus transmission","2026-05-21",{},"Hantavirus is transmitted by breathing aerosolized rodent waste — not through food, water, or person-to-person contact. Here's exactly how infection happens and what situations put you at risk.","How Do You Get Hantavirus? All Transmission Routes Explained | RodentHealthRisk.com",true,"\u002Fhantavirus\u002Fhow-do-you-get-hantavirus",[212,215,218,221],{"slug":213,"title":214},"guides\u002Fhantavirus-exposure-guide","Hantavirus Exposure Guide: Symptoms, Risks, and What to Do",{"slug":216,"title":217},"hantavirus\u002Fcan-hantavirus-spread-between-humans","Can Hantavirus Spread Between Humans?",{"slug":219,"title":220},"hantavirus\u002Fhantavirus-symptoms-timeline","Hantavirus Symptoms Timeline",{"slug":222,"title":223},"guides\u002Fwhat-ppe-to-wear-when-cleaning-mouse-droppings","What PPE to Wear When Cleaning Mouse Droppings","moderate",{"title":5,"description":188},[227,228,229],"CDC","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.cdc.gov\u002Fhantavirus\u002Ftransmission\u002Findex.html","WHO","hantavirus\u002Fhow-do-you-get-hantavirus","basics","tqrXLJ5ej1gUGeDcIVerhMqdvci4vgaZBWTodiMDiTQ",1779612276142]