Publication | Open Access
Emergence of a new epidemic/epizootic Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus in South America.
104
Citations
20
References
1995
Year
VaccinationSouth AmericaVirus EpidemiologyEmerging Infectious DiseasesEmergent VirusVirologyEnzootic Vee VirusEnzootic VirusesDisease EmergenceEmerging Infectious DiseaseVirus TransmissionMedicineAnimal VirusEpidemiologyNorthern South America
One of the most important questions in arbovirology concerns the origin of epidemic Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) viruses; these viruses caused periodic, extensive epidemics/epizootics in the Americas from 1938-1973 (reaching the United States in 1971) but had recently been presumed extinct. We have documented the 1992 emergence of a new epidemic/epizootic VEE virus in Venezuela. Phylogenetic analysis of strains isolated during two outbreaks indicated that the new epidemic/epizootic virus(es) evolved recently from an enzootic VEE virus in northern South America. These results suggest continued emergence of epizootic VEE viruses; surveillance of enzootic viruses and routine vaccination of equines should therefore be resumed.
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