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Prospective study of the duration and magnitude of viraemia in children hospitalised during the 1996-1997 dengue-2 outbreak in French Polynesia
146
Citations
31
References
2000
Year
Virus EpidemiologyViral DiagnosticsMalariaDisease OutbreakArbovirusVector-borne PathogenVector Borne DiseaseClinical EpidemiologyEmerging Infectious DiseaseProspective StudyPlasma SamplesPublic HealthDiagnostic VirologyFrench PolynesiaVirology1996-1997 Dengue-2 OutbreakDengue 2EpidemiologyFlavivirusMedicine
The magnitude and duration of viraemia in children admitted to the hospital with dengue was studied during a dengue 2 outbreak in French Polynesia in 1996-1997. Forty-nine patients from whom at least 3 plasma samples were available were included in the study. Based on analysis of IgG-ELISA and haemagglutination inhibition assay, 21 of these were primary and 28 were secondary infections. According to World Health Organization criteria, 42 were dengue fever and 7 were dengue haemorrhagic fever. Virus was detectable by reverse transcription-PCR in all patients for at least the first 3 days of the onset of fever, but was never detected after the 6th day (mean duration = 4.4 days). Plasma virus titers ranged from 1.7-5.6 Log(10) TCID(50)/ml. A significant difference was not observed in the magnitude and duration of viraemia in patients with primary versus secondary infections. The severity of the illness, however, was correlated with both criteria.
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