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Journal of travel medicine
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Dengue fever (DF) is a mosquito-transmitted acute disease caused by any of four dengue flavivirus serotypes (DEN-1, DEN-2, DEN-3, and DEN-4) which is becoming a major public health problem in intertropical areas.1 DF is increasingly observed in febrile travelers returning from tropical areas,2 especially those returning from the Caribbean islands and Southeast Asia, but it is rarely diagnosed in travelers returning from Africa.3-8 Diagnosis is often serologic, and in most cases is not confirmed; virus isolation remains exceptional. In a retrospective study of 44 cases of imported DF diagnosed in France, we found that the epidemiologic, clinical and diagnostic characteristics of these cases were similar to those reported in other previous published studies; diagnosis was carried out with serology, and no virus isolation was reported. To draw the attention of physicians from nonendemic areas to the possible occurrence of dengue infection in febrile travelers from all tropical countrie...
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2017
Epidemiological data on dengue in Africa are still scarce. We investigated imported dengue infection among travelers with a high proportion of subjects from Africa over a 9-year period. From January 2005 to December 2013, blood samples from travelers with clinical suspicion of dengue were analyzed. Dengue was diagnosed using serological, antigen detection, and molecular methods. Subjects were classified according to birthplace (Europeans versus non-Europeans) and last country visited. Overall, 10,307 serum samples corresponding to 8,295 patients were studied; 62% were European travelers, most of them from Spain, and 35.9% were non-Europeans, the majority of whom were born in Africa (mainly Equatorial Guinea) and Latin America (mainly Bolivia, Ecuador, and Colombia). A total of 492 cases of dengue were identified, the highest number of cases corresponding to subjects who had traveled from Africa (N = 189), followed by Latin America (N = 174) and Asia (N = 113). The rate of cases for Africa (4.5%) was inferior to Asia (9%) and Latin America (6.1%). Three peaks of dengue were found (2007, 2010, and 2013) which correlated with African cases. A total of 2,157 of past dengue infections were diagnosed. Non-Europeans who had traveled from Africa had the highest rate of past infection (67.8%), compared with non-Europeans traveling from Latin America (38.7%) or Asia (35%). Dengue infection in certain regions of Africa is underreported and the burden of the disease may have a magnitude similar to endemic countries in Latin America. It is necessary to consider dengue in the differential diagnosis of other febrile diseases in Africa.
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2002
Travelers have the potential both to acquire and to spread dengue virus infection. The incidence of dengue fever (DF) among European travelers certainly is underestimated, because few centers use standardized diagnostic procedures for febrile patients. In addition, DF is currently not reported in most European public health systems. Surveillance has commenced within the framework of a European Network on Imported Infectious Disease Surveillance (TropNetEurop) to gain information on the quantity and severity of cases of dengue imported into Europe. Descriptions of 294 patients with DF were analyzed for epidemiological information and clinical features. By far the most infections were imported from Asia, which suggests a high risk of DF for travelers to that region. Dengue hemorrhagic fever occurred in 7 patients (2.4%) all of whom recovered. Data reported by member sites of the TropNetEurop can contribute to understanding the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of imported DF.
Dengue …, 2010
Dengue is usually not considered a significant health problem in Africa because severe forms of dengue illness are rarely reported. In the absence of local surveillance data, the investigation of dengue cases imported to France contributed to document the circulation of dengue virus in this area. From 1 July 2006 to 31 December 2008, a total of 148 dengue cases imported to metropolitan France were reported through the mandatory notification system. Arthralgia and signs of severity (haemorrhage, thrombocytopenia) were less frequent in patients returning from West African countries. DENV-3 was isolated in two patients from Côte d'Ivoire in 2008. The number and proportion of patients returning from Côte d'Ivoire to France increased significantly in 2008 compared with the previous 18-month period. In parallel, the marginal increase in air travel does not explain the high increase observed in imported dengue cases to France. Our data illustrate increased dengue circulation and the emergence of DENV-3 in this area, with public health implications for epidemiological surveillance and case management locally.
Infection, 2002
Background: Dengue fever is increasingly recognized in travelers returning from endemic areas with acute febrile illness; however, its true burden in nonendemic countries is unknown. Only few studies focus on clinical manifestations and serological findings in primarily nonimmune individuals. Patients and Methods: We analyzed the epidemiology, clinical manifestations and virological results in patients with imported acute dengue infection who presented at our travel clinic in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, between September 1998 and November 2000. An immunochromatographic test and an immunofluorescence assay were used for antibody testing. Results: Dengue fever was confirmed in 13 patients, thus being the second commonest tropical infection after malaria in patients with fever and a travel history to a tropical country (18 cases per 1,000 patient visits per year). Most patients had only spent a short time abroad, either in South Central or South East Asia or in the Caribbean. Conclusion: The clinical features considered typical for dengue were not always present. Antibody assays were typically negative early in the course of disease, with seroconversion occurring only after cessation of clinical symptoms. A high index of suspicion is needed in these patients who often present without typical features of dengue and whose early antibody tests may be negative.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2007
Clinical Microbiology and Infection, 2015
During 12 years of surveillance in Belgium, dengue virus (DENV) infection was diagnosed in 676 of 7771 (8.7%) returning travellers by the use of ELISA, RT-PCR, and/or antigen detection. Men and women were equally infected. The mean age of the patients was 36.78 years (range, 3-77 years). Most of the infections occurred after a stay in Asia (55.9%), followed by the Americas (31.8%), Africa (7.2%), Oceania (1.0%), and Europe (0.4%). The number of patients coming from Africa increased as of 2009, to reach a proportion of 17% in 2011. The most prevalent serotype was DENV-1, followed by DENV-2, DENV-3, and DENV-4. Two remarkable increases in dengue incidence were noticed in 2010 and 2013.
Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin, 2016
Dengue fever is rarely reported in travellers returning from Africa. We report two cases of dengue fever in travellers returning from Burkina Faso to France. One of them presented a severe dengue fever with ALT > 1,000 IU/L and pericarditis. Serotype 2 was identified. The cases reflect a large ongoing outbreak with over 1,000 reported cases between August and November in the capital city. Clinicians should consider dengue fever in malaria-negative febrile travellers returning from Africa.
Bulletin de la Société de pathologie exotique, 2016
Dengue fever is growing at a global level both as number of cases and as geographic area of endemicity. Italy is not in endemic area, but the competent vector Aedes albopictus is widespread in this country, so that the possibility of introduction of the infection cannot be ruled out. We retrospectively collected demographic, clinical, and laboratory data about consecutive cases diagnosed in Torino and Negrar-Verona in the period 2010-2015. One hundred thirteen cases of dengue were observed, with an increasing trend during years. The infection was imported mostly from southeast Asia, but the risk appears to be higher in Latin America. More than half of the patients were admitted to the hospital but only one case of severe dengue was observed. Many patients presented after the resolution of symptoms. Rapid diagnostic tests were done in the majority of patients and allowed a diagnosis both in the acute (NS1 antigen) and convalescent (IgM antibodies) phases of the disease. An early diagnosis is paramount to avoid the spreading of the infection.
Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2003
Dengue fever (DF) has become common in western travelers to the tropics. To improve the basis for travel advice, risk factors and dengue manifestations were assessed in 107 Swedish patients for whom DF was diagnosed after return from travel in 1998 and 1999. Patient data were compared with data on a sample of all Swedish travelers to dengue-endemic countries in the same years. Only three of the patients had received pretravel advice concerning DF from their physicians. Hemorrhagic manifestations were common 74 patients) but caused no deaths. Risk factors for a DF diagnosis were travel to the Malay Peninsula (odds ratio [OR] 4.95; confidence interval [CI] 2.92 to 8.46), age 15-29 years (OR 3.03; CI 1.87 to 4.92), and travel duration >25 days (OR 8.75; CI 4.79 to 16.06). Pretravel advice should be given to all travelers to DF-endemic areas, but young persons traveling to southern and Southeast Asia for >3 weeks (who constituted 31% of the patients in our study) may be more likely to benefit by adhering to it.
MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
Dengue is a potentially fatal acute febrile illness caused by any of four mosquito-transmitted dengue viruses (DENV-1 to belonging to the family Flaviviridae and endemic throughout the tropics. Competent mosquito vectors of DENV are present in approximately one half of all U.S. counties. To describe epidemiologic trends in travel-associated and locally acquired dengue cases in the United States, CDC analyzed cases reported from the 50 states and District of Columbia to the national arboviral surveillance system (ArboNET). Cases are confirmed by detection of 1) virus RNA by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in any body fluid or tissue, 2) DENV antigen in tissue by a validated assay, 3) DENV nonstructural protein 1 (NS1) antigen, or 4) immunoglobulin M (IgM) anti-DENV antibody if the patient did not report travel to an area with other circulating flaviviruses. When travel to an area with other flaviviruses was reported, IgM-positive cases were defined as probable. During 2010-2017, totals of 5,009 (93%) travel-associated and 378 (7%) locally acquired confirmed or probable dengue cases were reported to ArboNET. Cases were equally distributed between males and females, and median age was 41 years. Eighteen (three per 1,000) fatal cases were reported, all among travelers. Travelers should review country-specific recommendations (https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/watch/dengue-asia) for reducing their risk for DENV infection, including using insect repellent and staying in residences with air conditioning or screens on windows and doors.
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