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Dengue

Journal

LANCET
Volume 370, Issue 9599, Pages 1644-1652

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61687-0

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The four dengue viruses are transmitted in tropical countries that circle the globe. All can cause syndromes that are self-limited or severe. The common severe syndrome-dengue haernorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome (DHF/DSS)-is characterised. by sudden vascular permeability generated by cytokines released when T cells attack dengue-infected cells. Dengue 1 virus became prevalent in Hawaii where it was transmitted by Aedes albopictus, producing a classic virgin soil epidemic, with clinical disease seen largely in adults. In Cuba and Singapore, sequential 8 dengue infections at long intervals produced unusually severe disease in adults. Evidence suggests that enhancing and cross-reactive neutralising antibodies regulate dengue epidemics and disease severity. Classic DHF/DSS arises during initial dengue infections in infants with low circulating amounts of maternal dengue antibodies, an observation that precludes an exclusive causal role for secondary T-cell responses. Here, I review and discuss data on clinical diagnosis and pathophysiology of vascular permeability and coagulopathy, parenteral treatment of DHF/DSS, and new laboratory tests.

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