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Dengue Virus Infection in Africa

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TLDR
Dengue is likely underrecognized and underreported in Africa because of low awareness by health care providers, other prevalent febrile illnesses, and lack of diagnostic testing and systematic surveillance.
Abstract
Reported incidence of dengue has increased worldwide in recent decades, but little is known about its incidence in Africa. During 1960-2010, a total of 22 countries in Africa reported sporadic cases or outbreaks of dengue; 12 other countries in Africa reported dengue only in travelers. The presence of disease and high prevalence of antibody to dengue virus in limited serologic surveys suggest endemic dengue virus infection in all or many parts of Africa. Dengue is likely underrecognized and underreported in Africa because of low awareness by health care providers, other prevalent febrile illnesses, and lack of diagnostic testing and systematic surveillance. Other hypotheses to explain low reported numbers of cases include cross-protection from other endemic flavivirus infections, genetic host factors protecting against infection or disease, and low vector competence and transmission efficiency. Population-based studies of febrile illness are needed to determine the epidemiology and true incidence of dengue in Africa.

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Low Seroprevalence Indicates Vulnerability of Eastern and Central Sudan to Infection with Chikungunya Virus

TL;DR: In this article, the seroprevalence of chikungunya virus (CHIKV) infection in 379 serum samples from patients with fever in the outpatient clinics of three hospitals in eastern and central Sudan was investigated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dengue and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever

TL;DR: A review of the changing epidemiology of dengue and hemorrhagic fever by geographic region, the natural history and transmission cycles, clinical diagnosis of both Dengue fever and DVF, serologic and virologic laboratory diagnoses, pathogenesis, surveillance, prevention, and control can be found in this paper.

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Spectrum of Disease and Relation to Place of Exposure among Ill Returned Travelers

TL;DR: When patients present to specialized clinics after travel to the developing world, travel destinations are associated with the probability of the diagnosis of certain diseases, and diagnostic approaches and empiric therapies can be guided by these destination-specific differences.
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Dengue: the risk to developed and developing countries

TL;DR: At the root of the emergence of dengue as a major health problem are changes in human demography and behavior, leading to unchecked populations of and increased exposure to the principal domestic mosquito vector, Aedes aegypti.
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Dengue/dengue hemorrhagic fever: the emergence of a global health problem.

TL;DR: The near simultaneous occurrence of outbreaks of dengue fever on three continents indicates that these viruses and their mosquito vector have had a worldwide distribution in the tropics for more than 200 years.
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