1000 resultados para dengue diagnosis
Resumo:
A dengue outbreak started in March, 1986 in Rio de Janeiro and spread very rapidly to other parts of the country. The great majority of cases presented classical dengue fever but there was one fatal case, confirmed by virus isolation. Dengue type 1 strains were isolated from patients and vectors (Aedes aegypti) in the area by cultivation in A. albopictus C6/36 cell line. The cytopathic effect (CPE) was studied by electron microscopy. An IgM capture test (MAC-ELISA) was applied with clear and reproducible results for diagnosis and evaluation of virus circulation; IgM antibodies appeared soon after start of clinical disease, and persisted for about 90 days in most patients. The test was type-specific in about 50% of the patients but high levels of heterologous response for type 3 were observed. An overall isolation rate of 46,8% (813 virus strains out of 1734 specimens) was recorded. The IgM test increased the number of confirmed cases to 58,2% (1479 out of 2451 suspected cases). The importance of laboratory diagnosis in all regions where the vectors are present is emphasized.
Resumo:
A retrospective serologic study was carried out in Fortaleza, State of Ceará, Brazil, in order to detect the dengue virus activity before recognizing the epidemic of 1994. Mac-Elisa was performed by using a mixture of specific DEN-1 and DEN-2 antigens on serum samples from the Emilio Ribas Laboratory collection. Samples were obtained from 1,224 patients with exanthematic febrile disease and negative serological results for rubella. All specimens were taken during November 1993 to May 1994. The results confirmed dengue infections in Fortaleza by November 1993, approximately six months before the beginning of the epidemic, proving how misleading diagnosis of dengue infection are still troublesome, in spite of the strong dengue activity in Ceará. The authors stress the urgent necessity to implement the active surveillance system in order to prevent another extensive dengue fever epidemics in the state. Epidemiological background of the dengue activity in the State of Ceará is also described.
Resumo:
Dengue virus types 1 and 2 have been isolated in Brazil by the Department of Virology, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, in 1986 and 1990 respectively, after many decades of absence. A successful continental Aedes aegypti control program in the Americas, has been able to eradicate the vector in most countries in the 60's, but the program could not be sustained along the years. Dengue viruses were reintroduced in the American region and the infection became endemic in Brazil, like in most Central and SouthAmerican countries and in the Caribbean region, due to the weaning of the vector control programs in these countries. High demographic densities and poor housing conditions in large urban communities, made the ideal conditions for vector spreading. All four dengue types are circulating in the continent and there is a high risk of the introduction in the country of the other two dengue types in Brazil, with the development of large epidemics. After the Cuban episode in 1981, when by the first time a large epidemic of dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome have been described in the Americas, both clinical presentations are observed, specially in the countries like Brazil, with circulation of more than one dengue virus type. A tetravalent potent vaccine seems to be the only possible way to control the disease in the future, besides rapid clinical and laboratory diagnosis, in order to offer supportive treatment to the more severe clinical infections.
Resumo:
El dengue es la arbovirosis de mayor incidencia mundial y una importante causa de morbilidad y mortalidad. Debido a que la enfermedad se presenta en principio como un cuadro febril inespecífico, se requieren herramientas que permitan reconocer y clasificar a los pacientes con dengue en forma temprana. Un parámetro de utilidad en este sentido puede ser la presencia de linfocitos atípicos. Objetivo: revisar los resultados de los trabajos originales existentes en la literatura sobre linfocitos atípicos e infección por virus dengue y su papel en el diagnóstico y pronóstico de la enfermedad. Materiales y métodos: para la revisión se emplearon los motores de búsqueda PubMed y Lilacs, bajo la combinación de términos Dengue AND Atypical lymphocyte (OR Reactive lymphocyte, OR Turk cell), limitando los hallazgos a estudios en humanos. La información obtenidafue clasificada por su contenido. Solo se incluyeron en el presente trabajo los estudios relevantes para el tema. Resultados: se ajustaron 68 referencias a la estrategia de búsqueda empleada, pero solo doce correspondían al objeto de la revisión. Todos los estudios incluidos reportaron presenciade linfocitos atípicos como hallazgo hematológico particular en pacientes con dengue y aunque no fue un hallazgo específico de la enfermedad, su concentración fue significativamente superioren estos pacientes, sobre todo en cuadros severos de la misma. Conclusiones: de acuerdo con la evidencia encontrada, puede considerarse que existe una asociación entre la presencia de linfocitos atípicos y la infección por el virus dengue; sin embargo, la intensidad y utilidad de este hallazgo requiere mayor estudio y análisis.
Resumo:
A comparison of dengue virus (DENV) antibody levels in paired serum samples collected from predominantly DENV-naive residents in an agricultural settlement in Brazilian Amazonia (baseline seroprevalence, 18.3%) showed a seroconversion rate of 3.67 episodes/100 person-years at risk during 12 months of follow-up. Multivariate analysis identified male sex, poverty, and migration from extra-Amazonian states as significant predictors of baseline DENY seropositivity, whereas male sex, a history of clinical diagnosis of dengue fever, and travel to an urban area predicted subsequent seroconversion. The laboratory surveillance of acute febrile illnesses implemented at the study site and in a nearby town between 2004 and 2006 confirmed 11. DENV infections among 102 episodes studied with DENV IgM detection, reverse transcriptase-polymerise chain reaction, and virus isolation; DENV-3 was isolated. Because DENV exposure is associated with migration or travel, personal protection measures when visiting high-risk urban areas may reduce the incidence of DENV infection in this rural population.
Resumo:
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
Resumo:
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
Resumo:
The natural co-infection with dengue virus can occur in highly endemic areas where different serotypes have been observed for many years. We report one case of DENV-1/DENV-4 co-infection in human serum detected by molecular tests. Phylogenetic analysis of the sequences obtained indicated the presence of genotype V and II for DENV-1 and DENV-4, respectively.
Resumo:
O aumento das formas mais graves do número de casos de dengue na cidade de Belém tem preocupado as autoridades locais. O objetivo deste estudo foi realizar uma análise crítica dos achados hematológicos e sorológicos de pacientes com suspeita clínica de dengue atendidos em um laboratório de Belém-Pará. Tratou-se de estudo retrospectivo com 210 pacientes encaminhados ao Laboratório de Patologia Clínica Dr. Paulo C. Azevedo, Belém-Pará, no período de fevereiro a março de 2007, com solicitação de hemograma e sorologia para IgM para confirmação de dengue. Dos casos analisados, 51/210 (24,3%) apresentaram plaquetopenia e 53/210 (25,2%) leucopenia. A positividade da pesquisa sorológica para IgM foi de 47,1% (99/210). Foi observada associação estatística (p<0.05) somente entre pacientes que apresentavam plaquetopenia (33/99) e sorologia positiva para dengue, sugerindo que as alterações hematológicas de leucopenia e plaquetopenia, freqüentemente associadas a este agravo, podem não estar presentes no início da infecção, como verificado neste estudo, sendo fundamental, para confirmação do diagnóstico, a realização da sorologia para pesquisa de IgM.
Resumo:
Dengue tem causado epidemias de diferentes magnitudes nas últimas décadas e está presente em quase todos os Estados do Brasil, com a circulação dos quatro sorotipos diferentes, desde a introdução no país do sorotipo 4 em janeiro de 2011. O atual cenário epidemiológico do país indica a elevação das formas graves de dengue na faixa etária pediátrica. No entanto, estudos descritivos de casos da doença em crianças, que fazem referência às características epidemiológicas e clínicas, são pouco freqüentes. O presente trabalho destina-se a mostrar as características demográficas e formas clínicas apresentadas pelas crianças com idade inferior a doze anos, internadas com dengue, em um hospital de referência da Amazônia. Neste estudo, utilizou-se uma metodologia que permitisse uma busca retrospectiva, através da análise de 154 prontuários de crianças internadas com dengue no período de 2009 à 2011, no Hospital Universitário João de Barros Barreto. As variáveis analisadas foram: idade, sexo, área de residência, distribuição por municípios, sinais e sintomas, data da internação, data de início dos sintomas, forma clínica da doença e valores de plaquetas, hematócrito e enzimas hepáticas. Neste estudo, não houve diferença estatisticamente significativa entre os gêneros, e a maioria dos casos confirmados de dengue foram procedentes de municípios no interior do Pará (57,6%). A febre foi o sinal mais freqüentemente encontrado (98,7%). Petéquia foi a manifestação hemorrágica referida como mais freqüente neste estudo (76,6%). Entre os sinais de alerta para febre hemorrágica do Dengue, dor abdominal e vômitos estavam presentes em 77,3% dos pacientes. No que se refere ao tempo decorrido entre o início dos sintomas até a data da internação hospitalar, a principal característica observada neste estudo é que somente após cinco à sete dias do início do quadro clínico, os pacientes tiveram acesso ao tratamento em hospital de referência. Esses resultados mostram que é necessário reforçar os serviços básicos de saúde, a fim de fornecer diagnóstico precoce e tratamento adequado, sobretudo na faixa etária pediátrica, onde casos de dengue eventualmente são confundidos com outras viroses prevalentes na infância. Certamente, há necessidade de avaliar a eficácia dos programas de controle de dengue e aplicação de medidas específicas para áreas identificadas como prioritárias.
Resumo:
Objective: To study the antibody prevalence against dengue in the municipality of Jundiai, Sao Paulo, Brazil, due to the low number of official confirmed autochthonous cases. Methods: A serological study on dengue infection was conducted during January 2010 and previous reports on dengue and entomological surveillance during that period were reviewed. Results: A prevalence of 7.8% IgG positive (68:876) was found. Furthermore, based on the detection of IgM antibodies in five samples, it was observed that the incidence of dengue in the city at the time of the survey contrasts with the absence of notifications by local health authorities over the same period of time. Conclusion: These results highlight the discrepancies between the actual and the detected number of dengue infections, possibly due to significant numbers of asymptomatic infections aggravated by difficulties with dengue clinical diagnosis.
Resumo:
Suspicion of Brazilian spotted fever (BSF) should occur in endemic regions upon surveillance of the acute febrile icteric hemorrhagic syndrome (AFIHS). However, limitations associated with currently available laboratory tests pose a challenge to early diagnosis, especially in fatal cases. Two real-time PCR (qPCR) protocols were evaluated to diagnose BSF in 110 fatal AFIHS cases, collected in BSF-endemic regions in 2009-2010. Of these, 24 were positive and 86 negative by indirect immunofluorescence (IFA) assay (cutoff IgG and/or IgM >= 128). DNA from these samples was used in the qPCR protocols: one to detect Rickettsia spp. (Citrate synthase gene) and another to determine spotted fever group (SFG) Rickettsia species (OmpA gene). Of the 24 IFA-positive samples, 5 (21%) were positive for OmpA and 9 (38%) for citrate synthase. In the IFA-negative group (n = 86), OmpA and citrate synthase were positive in 23 (27%) and 27 (31%), respectively. These results showed that the 2 qPCR protocols were about twice as sensitive as the IFA test alone (93% concordance). In conclusion, qPCR is a sensitive method for the diagnosis of fatal BSF cases and should be considered for routine surveillance of AFIHS in places like Brazil, where spotted fever-related lethality is high and other endemic diseases like dengue and leptospirosis can mislead diagnosis. (C) 2012 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne viral disease estimated to cause about 230 million infections worldwide every year, of which 25,000 are fatal. Global incidence has risen rapidly in recent decades with some 3.6 billion people, over half of the world's population, now at risk, mainly in urban centres of the tropics and subtropics. Demographic and societal changes, in particular urbanization, globalization, and increased international travel, are major contributors to the rise in incidence and geographic expansion of dengue infections. Major research gaps continue to hamper the control of dengue. The European Commission launched a call under the 7th Framework Programme with the title of 'Comprehensive control of Dengue fever under changing climatic conditions'. Fourteen partners from several countries in Europe, Asia, and South America formed a consortium named 'DengueTools' to respond to the call to achieve better diagnosis, surveillance, prevention, and predictive models and improve our understanding of the spread of dengue to previously uninfected regions (including Europe) in the context of globalization and climate change. The consortium comprises 12 work packages to address a set of research questions in three areas: Research area 1: Develop a comprehensive early warning and surveillance system that has predictive capability for epidemic dengue and benefits from novel tools for laboratory diagnosis and vector monitoring. Research area 2: Develop novel strategies to prevent dengue in children. Research area 3: Understand and predict the risk of global spread of dengue, in particular the risk of introduction and establishment in Europe, within the context of parameters of vectorial capacity, global mobility, and climate change. In this paper, we report on the rationale and specific study objectives of 'DengueTools'. DengueTools is funded under the Health theme of the Seventh Framework Programme of the European Community, Grant Agreement Number: 282589 Dengue Tools.
Resumo:
In 2010, a large outbreak of dengue occurred in Santos, Brazil. The detection of the NS1 antigen was used for diagnosis in addition to the detection of IgG, IgM, and RNA. A large number of NS1 false-negative results were obtained. A total of 379 RNA-positive samples were selected for thorough evaluation. NS1 was reactive in 37.7% of cases. Most of the cases were characterized as a secondary infection by dengue 2 virus. Sequencing of NS1 positive and negative isolates did not reveal any mutation that could justify the diagnostic failure. Use of existing NS1 tests in the Brazilian population may present a low negative predictive value, and they should be used with caution, preferentially after performing a validation with samples freshly obtained during the ongoing epidemic.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: To study the antibody prevalence against dengue in the municipality of Jundiaí, São Paulo, Brazil, due to the low number of official confirmed autochthonous cases. METHODS: A serological study on dengue infection was conducted during January 2010 and previous reports on dengue and entomological surveillance during that period were reviewed. RESULTS: A prevalence of 7.8% IgG positive (68:876) was found. Furthermore, based on the detection of IgM antibodies in five samples, it was observed that the incidence of dengue in the city at the time of the survey contrasts with the absence of notifications by local health authorities over the same period of time. CONCLUSION: These results highlight the discrepancies between the actual and the detected number of dengue infections, possibly due to significant numbers of asymptomatic infections aggravated by difficulties with dengue clinical diagnosis.