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The text and citations in this version of Dengue fever have passed independent expert peer review and been published in the journal Open Medicine at http://www.openmedicine.ca/article/view/562/562.
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<!-- Definition and symptoms -->
<!-- Definition and symptoms -->
'''Dengue fever''' ({{IPAc-en|UK|ˈ|d|ɛ|ŋ|ɡ|eɪ}} or {{IPAc-en|US|ˈ|d|ɛ|ŋ|ɡ|iː}}), also known as '''breakbone fever''', is a [[mosquito-borne disease|mosquito-borne]] [[tropical disease]] caused by the [[dengue virus]]. Symptoms include [[fever]], [[headache]], [[myalgia|muscle]] and [[arthralgia|joint pains]], and a characteristic [[skin rash]] that is [[morbilliform|similar to measles]]. In a small proportion of cases the disease develops into the life-threatening '''dengue hemorrhagic fever''', resulting in [[bleeding]], [[thrombocytopenia|low levels of blood platelets]] and blood plasma leakage, or into '''dengue shock syndrome''', where [[Shock (circulatory)|dangerously low blood pressure]] occurs.
'''Dengue fever''', also known as '''breakbone fever''', is a mosquito-borne infectious tropical disease caused by the dengue virus. This disease occurs primarily in the equatorial regions of Africa, the Americas, South-East Asia, and the Western Pacific.<ref name=1abc>{{cite journal|last=Amarasinghe|first=A|author2=Kuritsk, JN |author3=Letson, GW |author4= Margolis, HS |title=Dengue virus infection in Africa.|journal=Emerging Infectious Diseases|date=August 2011|volume=17|issue=8|pages=1349–54|pmid=21801609 |doi=10.3201/eid1708.101515 |pmc=3381573}}</ref> The incidence of dengue fever has increased dramatically since the 1960s,<ref name=2abc>{{cite journal|author=Whitehorn J, Farrar J|title=Dengue|journal=Br. Med. Bull.|volume=95|pages=161–73|year=2010|pmid=20616106|doi=10.1093/bmb/ldq019}}</ref> with current estimates of incidence ranging from 50 million<ref name=2abc/> to 528 million<ref name=3abc>{{cite journal |author=Bhatt S, Gething PW, Brady OJ, et al. |title=The global distribution and burden of dengue |journal=Nature |volume=496 |issue=7446 |pages=504–7 |date=April 2013 |pmid= 23563266|doi=10.1038/nature12060 |pmc=3651993 }}</ref> people infected yearly. This increase is believed to be due to several factors, including global warming and urbanization.<ref name=2abc/> Early descriptions of the condition date from 1779, and its viral cause and mechanism of transmission were elucidated in the early 20th century.<ref name=4abc>{{cite journal |author=Gubler DJ |title=Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever |journal=Clin. Microbiol. Rev. |volume=11 |issue=3 |pages=480–96 |year=1998 |month=July |pmid=9665979 |pmc=88892 |doi= |url=}}</ref> Dengue has become a global problem since the Second World War and is endemic in more than 110 countries.<ref name=5abc>{{cite journal|author=Ranjit S, Kissoon N|title=Dengue hemorrhagic fever and shock syndromes|journal=Pediatr. Crit. Care Med.|date=January 2011|pmid=20639791|doi=10.1097/PCC.0b013e3181e911a7 |volume=12|pages=90–100|issue=1}}</ref>


After an incubation period of 3–10 days, the illness starts with acute onset of high fever, which is typically accompanied by headache, myalgia, arthralgia, and occasionally a characteristic maculopapular skin rash similar to measles (Figure&nbsp;1).<ref name=6abc>{{cite book|author=Gubler DJ|editor=Mahy BWJ, Van Regenmortel MHV|title=Desk Encyclopedia of Human and Medical Virology|chapter=Dengue viruses|publisher=Academic Press|location=Boston|year=2010|isbn=0-12-375147-0|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=nsh48WKIbhQC&pg=PA372 | pages=372–82}}</ref><ref name=7abc>Wright S, Jack M. Tropical medicine (chapter 21). In: Knoop KJ, Stack
LB, Storrow AB, Thurman RJ, editors. Atlas of emergency medicine. 3rd ed. New York (NY): McGraw-Hill Professional; 2009. p. 649-687.</ref> Most infected people have few if any symptoms, and most of those who do have symptoms recover spontaneously. In a small proportion of cases, the disease progresses to a more severe form, life-threatening '''dengue hemorrhagic fever''', which is characterized by hemorrhage, thrombocytopenia, and leakage of blood plasma, or to dengue shock syndrome.<ref name=8abc>{{cite book|title=Global Strategy For Dengue Prevention And Control|year=2012|publisher=World Health Organization|isbn=978-92-4-150403-4|pages=16–17|url=http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/75303/1/9789241504034_eng.pdf}}</ref>
<!-- Cause and prevention -->
<!-- Cause and prevention -->
Dengue is transmitted by several species of mosquito within the genus ''Aedes'', principally ''Aedes aegypti''.<ref name=8abc/> The virus has 5 different types;<ref name=9abc>{{cite journal | author=Normile D | title=Surprising new dengue virus throws a spanner in disease control efforts | journal=Science | year=2013 | volume=342 | issue=6157 | pages=415 | doi=10.1126/science.342.6157.415 | pmid=24159024}}</ref> infection with a given type usually confers lifelong immunity to that type, but only short-term immunity to the others.<ref name=10abc>{{cite journal|author=Chen LH, Wilson ME|title=Dengue and chikungunya infections in travelers|journal=Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases|volume=23|issue=5|pages=438–44|date=October 2010|pmid=20581669 |doi=10.1097/QCO.0b013e32833c1d16}}</ref> Subsequent infection with a different type increases the risk of severe complications.<ref name=10abc/> As there is no commercially available vaccine, prevention is sought by reducing the habitat and the number of mosquitoes and limiting exposure to bites.<ref name=11abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 3.1: Overview. p. 59. (accessed 2014 Jul 27).</ref>
Dengue is transmitted by several species of [[mosquito]] within the [[genus]] ''[[Aedes]]'', principally ''[[Aedes aegypti|A. aegypti]]''. The virus has five different types;<ref name = new_type/> infection with one type usually gives lifelong [[immunity (medical)|immunity]] to that type, but only short-term immunity to the others. Subsequent infection with a different type increases the risk of severe complications. As there is no commercially available [[vaccine]], prevention is sought by reducing the habitat and the number of mosquitoes and limiting exposure to bites.

<!-- Treatment, epidemiology and history -->
<!-- Treatment, epidemiology and history -->
Treatment of acute dengue is supportive,<ref name=7abc/> with either oral or intravenous rehydration for mild or moderate disease and intravenous fluids and blood transfusion for more severe cases.<ref name=12abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 2.3: Recommendations for treatment. p. 32–53. (accessed 2014 Jul 27).</ref> Apart from eliminating the mosquitoes, work is ongoing to develop a vaccine and medications targeting the virus.<ref name=13abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Chapter 6: New avenues. p. 137–146.</ref>
Treatment of acute dengue is supportive, using either oral or intravenous [[rehydration]] for mild or moderate disease, and [[Intravenous therapy|intravenous fluids]] and [[blood transfusion]] for more severe cases. The number of cases of dengue fever has increased dramatically since the 1960s, with between 50 and 528&nbsp;million people infected yearly.<ref name=White10/><ref name=Bhatt2013/> Early descriptions of the condition date from 1779, and its viral cause and transmission were understood by the early 20th century. Dengue has become a global problem since the [[World War II|Second World War]] and is [[endemic (epidemiology)|endemic]] in more than 110&nbsp;countries. Apart from eliminating the mosquitoes, work is ongoing on a vaccine, as well as medication targeted directly at the virus.


==Signs and symptoms==
==Signs and symptoms==
[[File:Dengue fever symptoms.svg|thumb|upright=1.2|alt=Outline of a human torso with arrows indicating the organs affected in the various stages of dengue fever|Fgure 2. Schematic depiction of the symptoms of dengue fever]]
[[File:Dengue fever symptoms.svg|thumb|upright=1.2|alt=Outline of a human torso with arrows indicating the organs affected in the various stages of dengue fever|Schematic depiction of the symptoms of dengue fever]]
Figure 2 depicts the symptoms of dengue fever according to the phase of illness. Typically, people infected with dengue virus are [[asymptomatic]] (80%) or have only mild symptoms, such as uncomplicated fever.<ref name=2abc/><ref name=14abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Chapter 6: New avenues. p. 3–21.</ref><ref name=15abc>{{cite journal|author=Reiter P |title=Yellow fever and dengue: a threat to Europe?|journal=Euro Surveill |date=11 March 2010|volume=15|issue=10|pages=19509|pmid=20403310 | url=http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleId=19509}}</ref> Others have more severe illness (5%), and in a small proportion of cases (< 1%), it is life-threatening and causes death, despite treatment.<ref name=2abc/><ref name=14abc/><ref name=15abc/> The incubation period (time between exposure and onset of symptoms) ranges from 3 to 14 days, but most often it is 4 to 7 days.<ref name=6abc/> Therefore, travellers returning from endemic areas are unlikely to have dengue if fever or other symptoms start more than 14 days after they arrive home.<ref name=5abc/> Children are more likely to have atypical presentation, often experiencing symptoms similar to those of the common cold or gastroenteritis (vomiting and diarrhea).<ref name=16abc>{{cite journal|author=Varatharaj A|title=Encephalitis in the clinical spectrum of dengue infection|journal=Neurol. India|volume=58|issue=4|pages=585–91|year=2010|pmid=20739797|doi=10.4103/0028-3886.68655|url=http://www.neurologyindia.com/article.asp?issn=0028-3886;year=2010;volume=58;issue=4;spage=585;epage=591;aulast=Varatharaj}}</ref> Children are also at greater risk of severe complications,<ref name=5abc/><ref name=17abc>{{cite journal |author=Simmons CP, Farrar JJ, Nguyen vV, Wills B |title=Dengue |journal=N Engl J Med |volume=366 |issue=15 |pages=1423–32 |date=April 2012 |pmid=22494122 |doi=10.1056/NEJMra1110265}}</ref> although their initial symptoms may be mild.<ref name=17abc/>
Typically, people infected with dengue virus are [[asymptomatic]] (80%) or only have mild symptoms such as an uncomplicated fever.<ref name=White10>{{cite journal|author=Whitehorn J, Farrar J|title=Dengue|journal=Br. Med. Bull.|volume=95|pages=161–73|year=2010|pmid=20616106|doi=10.1093/bmb/ldq019}}</ref><ref name=WHOp14/><ref name=Euro10>{{cite journal|author=Reiter P |title=Yellow fever and dengue: a threat to Europe?|journal=Euro Surveill |date=11 March 2010|volume=15|issue=10|pages=19509|pmid=20403310 | url=http://www.eurosurveillance.org/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleId=19509}}</ref> Others have more severe illness (5%), and in a small proportion it is life-threatening.<ref name=White10/><ref name=Euro10/> The [[incubation period]] (time between exposure and onset of symptoms) ranges from 3 to 14 days, but most often it is 4 to 7 days.<ref name=Gubler2010>{{cite book|author=Gubler DJ|editor=Mahy BWJ, Van Regenmortel MHV|title=Desk Encyclopedia of Human and Medical Virology|chapter=Dengue viruses|publisher=Academic Press|location=Boston|year=2010|isbn=0-12-375147-0|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=nsh48WKIbhQC&pg=PA372 | pages=372–82}}</ref> Therefore, travelers returning from endemic areas are unlikely to have dengue if fever or other symptoms start more than 14&nbsp;days after arriving home.<ref name=Peads10/> Children often experience symptoms similar to those of the [[common cold]] and [[gastroenteritis]] (vomiting and diarrhea)<ref name=India10>{{cite journal|author=Varatharaj A|title=Encephalitis in the clinical spectrum of dengue infection|journal=Neurol. India|volume=58|issue=4|pages=585–91|year=2010|pmid=20739797|doi=10.4103/0028-3886.68655|url=http://www.neurologyindia.com/article.asp?issn=0028-3886;year=2010;volume=58;issue=4;spage=585;epage=591;aulast=Varatharaj}}</ref> and have a greater risk of severe complications,<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=NEJM2012/> though initial symptoms are generally mild but include high fever.<ref name=NEJM2012>{{cite journal |author=Simmons CP, Farrar JJ, Nguyen vV, Wills B |title=Dengue |journal=N Engl J Med |volume=366 |issue=15 |pages=1423–32 |date=April 2012 |pmid=22494122 |doi=10.1056/NEJMra1110265}}</ref>


===Clinical course===
===Clinical course===
[[File:Course of Dengue illness vectorized.svg|thumb|left|upright=1.2|Figure 3. Clinical course of dengue fever]]
[[File:Course of Dengue illness vectorized.svg|thumb|left|upright=1.2|Clinical course of dengue fever<ref name=WHOp25>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]] p.&nbsp;25–27</ref>]]
The characteristic symptoms of dengue are sudden-onset fever, headache (typically located behind the eyes), muscle and joint pains, and a rash (Figure&nbsp;3). <ref name=18abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Figure 2.1: The course of dengue illness. p. 25. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> The alternative name for dengue, breakbone fever, comes from the associated muscle and joint pains.<ref name=2abc/><ref name=10abc/> The course of infection is divided into 3&nbsp;phases: febrile, critical, and recovery.<ref name=18abc/>
The characteristic symptoms of dengue are sudden-onset fever, headache (typically located behind the eyes), muscle and joint pains, and a rash. The alternative name for dengue, "breakbone fever", comes from the associated muscle and joint pains.<ref name=White10/><ref name=Chen>{{cite journal|author=Chen LH, Wilson ME|title=Dengue and chikungunya infections in travelers|journal=Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases|volume=23|issue=5|pages=438–44|date=October 2010|pmid=20581669 |doi=10.1097/QCO.0b013e32833c1d16}}</ref> The course of infection is divided into three phases: febrile, critical, and recovery.<ref name=WHOp25>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], pp. 25–27.</ref>


The febrile phase involves high fever, potentially over 40°C (104°F), and is associated with generalized pain and a headache; this phase usually lasts 2–7 days.<ref name=10abc/><ref name=18abc/> Vomiting may also occur.<ref name=17abc/> A rash occurs in 50%–80% of those with symptoms, on the first or second day of symptoms as flushed skin, or later in the course of illness (days 4–7) as a measles-like maculopapular rash.<ref name=7abc/><ref name=19abc>{{cite book|author=Wolff K, Johnson RA (eds.)|title=Fitzpatrick's color atlas and synopsis of clinical dermatology|year=2009|publisher=McGraw-Hill Medical|location=New York|isbn=978-0-07-159975-7|chapter=Viral infections of skin and mucosa|edition=6th|pages=810–2}}</ref> A rash described as "islands of white in a sea of red" has also been described.<ref name=20abc>{{cite journal|author=Gould EA, Solomon T|title=Pathogenic flaviviruses|journal=[[The Lancet]]|volume=371|issue=9611|pages=500–9|date=February 2008|pmid=18262042|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60238-X}}</ref> Some petechiae may appear at this point,<ref name=18abc/> as may some mild bleeding from the mucous membranes of the mouth and nose.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=10abc/> The fever pattern is classically biphasic or "saddleback," breaking and then returning for 1&nbsp;or&nbsp;2 more days.<ref name=7abc/><ref name=20abc/>
The febrile phase involves high fever, potentially over {{convert|40|C|F}}, and is associated with generalized pain and a headache; this usually lasts two to seven days.<ref name=WHOp25/><ref name=Chen/> Nausea and vomiting may also occur.<ref name=NEJM2012/> A rash occurs in 50–80% of those with symptoms<ref name=Chen/><ref name=Fitz2009>{{cite book|author=Wolff K, Johnson RA (eds.)|title=Fitzpatrick's color atlas and synopsis of clinical dermatology|year=2009|publisher=McGraw-Hill Medical|location=New York|isbn=978-0-07-159975-7|chapter=Viral infections of skin and mucosa|edition=6th|pages=810–2}}</ref> in the first or second day of symptoms as [[erythema|flushed skin]], or later in the course of illness (days 4–7), as a [[morbilliform|measles-like]] rash.<ref name=Fitz2009/><ref name=ER2010>{{cite book|author=Knoop KJ, Stack LB, Storrow A, Thurman RJ (eds.)|title=Atlas of emergency medicine|year=2010|publisher=McGraw-Hill Professional|location=New York|isbn=0-07-149618-1|chapter=Tropical medicine|edition=3rd| pages=658–9}}</ref> A rash described as "islands of white in a sea of red" has also been described.<ref name=Gould/> Some [[petechia]]e (small red spots that do not disappear when the skin is pressed, which are caused by broken [[capillary|capillaries]]) can appear at this point,<ref name=WHOp25/> as may some mild bleeding from the [[mucous membrane]]s of the mouth and nose.<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=Chen/> The fever itself is classically [[fever#Types|biphasic]] or saddleback in nature, breaking and then returning for one or two days.<ref name=ER2010/><ref name=Gould/>


[[File:Early Dengue Fever Rash 2014.jpg|thumb|The rash of dengue fever in the acute stage of the infection]]
[[File:Early Dengue Fever Rash 2014.jpg|thumb|The rash of dengue fever in the acute stage of the infection]]
In some people, the disease proceeds to a critical phase as the fever resolves.<ref name=17abc/> This phase is characterized by significant, diffuse leakage of plasma typically lasting 1–2 days.<ref name=18abc/> This leakage can result in pulmonary edema and ascites, as well as hypovolemia and shock.<ref name=18abc/> There may also be organ dysfunction and severe bleeding, typically from the gastrointestinal tract.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=18abc/> Shock (dengue shock syndrome) and hemorrhage (dengue hemorrhagic fever) occur in less than 5% of all cases of dengue;<ref name=5abc/> however, those who have previously been infected with other serotypes of dengue virus (and are thus experiencing a secondary infection) are at increased risk.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=21abc>{{cite journal|author=Rodenhuis-Zybert IA, Wilschut J, Smit JM|title=Dengue virus life cycle: viral and host factors modulating infectivity|journal=Cell. Mol. Life Sci.|volume=67|issue=16|pages=2773–86|date=August 2010|pmid=20372965|doi=10.1007/s00018-010-0357-z}}</ref> This critical phase, though rare, is more common among children and young adults.<ref name=17abc/>
In some people, the disease proceeds to a critical phase as fever resolves.<ref name=NEJM2012/> During this period there is leakage of plasma from the blood vessels which typically lasts one to two days.<ref name=WHOp25/> This may result in fluid accumulation in the [[thoracic cavity|chest]] and [[abdominal cavity]] as well as [[hypovolemia|depletion of fluid from the circulation]] and [[hypoperfusion|decreased blood supply to vital organs]].<ref name=WHOp25/> There may also be organ dysfunction and severe [[bleeding]], typically from the [[gastrointestinal tract]].<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=WHOp25/> [[Shock (circulatory)|Shock]] (dengue shock syndrome) and hemorrhage (dengue hemorrhagic fever) occur in less than 5% of all cases of dengue,<ref name=Peads10/> however those who have previously been infected with other [[serotype]]s of dengue virus ("secondary infection") are at an increased risk.<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=Life10/> This critical phase, while rare, occurs relatively more commonly in children and young adults.<ref name=NEJM2012/>


[[File:Dengue recovery rash (White islands in red sea).jpg|thumb|left|The rash that commonly forms during the recovery from dengue fever with its classic islands of white in a sea of red.]]
[[File:Dengue recovery rash (White islands in red sea).jpg|thumb|left|The rash that commonly forms during the recovery from dengue fever with its classic islands of white in a sea of red.]]
Among those who have experienced the critical phase, the recovery phase occurs next, with resorption of the leaked fluid into the bloodstream<ref name=18abc/> over a period of 2–3 days.<ref name=5abc/> The improvement is often striking and may be accompanied by severe pruritus and bradycardia.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=18abc/> Another rash may occur, with either a maculopapular or a vasculitic appearance, which is followed by desquamation.<ref name=17abc/> During this stage, a fluid-overloaded state may occur, in rare instances causing cerebral edema that leads to reduced level of consciousness or seizures.<ref name=5abc/> Fatigue may last for weeks in adults.<ref name=17abc/>
The recovery phase occurs next, with resorption of the leaked fluid into the bloodstream.<ref name=WHOp25/> This usually lasts two to three days.<ref name=Peads10/> The improvement is often striking, and can be accompanied with severe [[itch]]ing and a [[Bradycardia|slow heart rate]].<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=WHOp25/> Another rash may occur with either a [[maculopapular rash|maculopapular]] or a [[vasculitis|vasculitic]] appearance, which is followed by peeling of the skin.<ref name=NEJM2012/> During this stage, a [[fluid overload]] state may occur; if it [[cerebral edema|affects the brain]], it may cause a [[altered level of consciousness|reduced level of consciousness]] or [[Epileptic seizure|seizures]].<ref name=Peads10/> A feeling of [[fatigue (medical)|fatigue]] may last for weeks in adults.<ref name=NEJM2012/>


===Associated problems===
===Associated problems===
Dengue occasionally affects several other body systems,<ref name=18abc/> either in isolation or along with the classic dengue symptoms.<ref name=16abc/> Decreased level of consciousness occurs in 0.5%–6% of severe cases, attributable to encephalitis or, indirectly, to impairment of vital organs (e.g., hepatic encephalopathy).<ref name=16abc/><ref name=20abc/>
Dengue can occasionally affect several other [[biological system|body systems]],<ref name=WHOp25/> either in isolation or along with the classic dengue symptoms.<ref name=India10/> A decreased level of consciousness occurs in 0.5–6% of severe cases, which is attributable either to [[encephalitis|inflammation of the brain by the virus]] or indirectly as a result of impairment of vital organs, for example, the [[hepatic encephalopathy|liver]].<ref name=India10/><ref name=Gould>{{cite journal|author=Gould EA, Solomon T|title=Pathogenic flaviviruses|journal=[[The Lancet]]|volume=371|issue=9611|pages=500–9|date=February 2008|pmid=18262042|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60238-X}}</ref><ref name=Carod2013>{{cite journal |author=Carod-Artal FJ, Wichmann O, Farrar J, Gascón J |title=Neurological complications of dengue virus infection |journal=Lancet Neurol |volume=12 |issue=9 |pages=906–19 | date=September 2013 |pmid=23948177 |doi=10.1016/S1474-4422(13)70150-9}}</ref>


Other neurologic disorders have been reported in the context of dengue, such as transverse myelitis and Guillain–Barré syndrome.<ref name=16abc/> Myocarditis and acute liver failure are among the rarer complications.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=18abc/>
Other neurological disorders have been reported in the context of dengue, such as [[transverse myelitis]] and [[Guillain-Barré syndrome]].<ref name=India10/><ref name=Carod2013/> [[Myocarditis|Infection of the heart]] and [[acute liver failure]] are among the rarer complications.<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=WHOp25/>


==Cause==
==Cause==
===Virology===
===Virology===
{{Main|Dengue virus}}
{{Main|Dengue virus}}
[[File:Dengue.jpg|thumb|alt=A transmission electron microscopy image showing dengue virus|Figure 4. A [[Transmission electron microscopy|TEM]] [[micrograph]] showing dengue virus [[virion]]s (the cluster of dark dots near the center)]]
[[File:Dengue.jpg|thumb|alt=A transmission electron microscopy image showing dengue virus|A [[Transmission electron microscopy|TEM]] [[micrograph]] showing dengue virus [[virion]]s (the cluster of dark dots near the center)]]


Dengue fever virus (DENV) is a single-stranded, positive-sense RNA virus of the family Flaviviridae and the genus ''Flavivirus''. In Figure 4, a transmission electron micrograph, dengue virus virions appear as a cluster of dark dots near the centre of the image. Other members of the same genus include yellow fever virus, West Nile virus, St. Louis encephalitis virus, Japanese encephalitis virus, tick-borne encephalitis virus, Kyasanur Forest disease virus, and Omsk hemorrhagic fever virus.<ref name=20abc/> Most are transmitted by arthropods (mosquitoes or ticks) and are therefore also referred to as arboviruses (arthropod-borne viruses).<ref name=20abc/>
Dengue fever virus (DENV) is an [[RNA virus]] of the family ''[[Flaviviridae]]''; genus ''[[Flavivirus]]''. Other members of the same genus include [[yellow fever|yellow fever virus]], [[West Nile virus]], [[St. Louis encephalitis|St. Louis encephalitis virus]], [[Japanese encephalitis|Japanese encephalitis virus]], [[tick-borne encephalitis virus]], [[Kyasanur forest disease|Kyasanur forest disease virus]], and [[Omsk hemorrhagic fever|Omsk hemorrhagic fever virus]].<ref name=Gould/> Most are transmitted by [[arthropod]]s (mosquitoes or [[tick]]s), and are therefore also referred to as [[arbovirus]]es (''ar''thropod-''bo''rne viruses).<ref name=Gould/>


The dengue virus genome (i.e., genetic material) contains about 11 000 nucleotide bases, which code for a single polyprotein that is cleaved post-translationally into 3 structural protein molecules (C, prM, and E) that form the virus particle and 7 nonstructural proteins (NS1, NS2a, NS2b, NS3, NS4a, NS4b, and NS5) that are found only in infected host cells and are required for viral replication.<ref name=21abc/><ref name=22abc>{{cite journal|author=Guzman MG, Halstead SB, Artsob H, et al.|title=Dengue: a continuing global threat|journal=Nature Reviews Microbiology|volume=8|issue=12 Suppl|pages=S7–S16|date=December 2010|pmid=21079655|doi=10.1038/nrmicro2460|url=http://www.nature.com/nrmicro/journal/v8/n12_supp/full/nrmicro2460.html}}</ref> The 5 strains of the virus (DENV-1, DENV-2, DENV-3, DENV-4, and DENV-5) are called serotypes because they differ in serum reactivity (antigenicity).<ref name=9abc/><ref name=14abc/><ref name=23abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Table 4.3: Advantages and limitations of dengue diagnostic methods. p. 96. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> The fifth of these strains was first announced in 2013.<ref name=9abc/>
The dengue virus [[genome]] (genetic material) contains about 11,000 [[nucleotide base]]s, which [[Genetic code|code]] for the three different types of protein molecules (C, prM and E) that form the [[Virion|virus particle]] and seven other types of protein molecules (NS1, NS2a, NS2b, NS3, NS4a, NS4b, NS5) that are only found in infected host cells and are required for replication of the virus.<ref name=Life10>{{cite journal|author=Rodenhuis-Zybert IA, Wilschut J, Smit JM|title=Dengue virus life cycle: viral and host factors modulating infectivity|journal=Cell. Mol. Life Sci.|volume=67|issue=16|pages=2773–86|date=August 2010|pmid=20372965|doi=10.1007/s00018-010-0357-z}}</ref><ref name=Guzman10>{{cite journal|author=Guzman MG, Halstead SB, Artsob H, et al.|title=Dengue: a continuing global threat|journal=Nature Reviews Microbiology|volume=8|issue=12 Suppl|pages=S7–S16|date=December 2010|pmid=21079655|doi=10.1038/nrmicro2460|url=http://www.nature.com/nrmicro/journal/v8/n12_supp/full/nrmicro2460.html}}</ref> There are five<ref name=new_type>{{cite journal | author=Normile D | title=Surprising new dengue virus throws a spanner in disease control efforts | journal=Science | year=2013 | volume=342 | issue=6157 | pages=415 | doi=10.1126/science.342.6157.415 | pmid=24159024}}</ref> strains of the virus, called [[serovar|serotype]]s, of which the first four are referred to as DENV-1, DENV-2, DENV-3 and DENV-4.<ref name=WHOp14/> The fifth type was announced in 2013.<ref name=new_type/> The distinctions between the serotypes are based on their [[antigenicity]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Solomonides|first=Tony|title=Healthgrid applications and core technologies : proceedings of HealthGrid 2010|year=2010|publisher=IOS Press|location=Amsterdam|isbn=978-1-60750-582-2|page=235|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=nf-Q0TYTS-0C&pg=PA235|edition=[Online-Ausg.].}}</ref>


===Transmission===
===Transmission===
[[File:Aedes aegypti feeding.jpg|alt=Close-up photograph of an ''Aedes aegypti'' mosquito biting human skin|thumb|left|The mosquito ''[[Aedes aegypti]]'' feeding on a human host]]
[[File:Aedes aegypti feeding.jpg|alt=Close-up photograph of an ''Aedes aegypti'' mosquito biting human skin|thumb|left|The mosquito ''[[Aedes aegypti]]'' feeding on a human host]]


Dengue virus is transmitted primarily by ''Aedes'' mosquitoes, particularly ''Aedes aegypti''<ref name=14abc/> (Figure&nbsp;5). These mosquitoes usually live between the latitudes of 35°N and 35°S below an elevation of 1000m (3300 feet).<ref name=14abc/> They typically bite during the day, particularly in the early morning and in the evening.<ref name=8abc/><ref name=11abc/> Other ''Aedes'' species that transmit the disease include ''A. albopictus, A. polynesiensis,'' and ''A. scutellaris''.<ref name=14abc/> Humans are the primary host of the virus,<ref name=14abc/><ref name=20abc/> which arose in nonhuman primates.<ref name=22abc/> An infection can be acquired via a single bite.<ref name=24abc>Tomashek, KM. Dengue fever and dengue hemorrhagic fever. In: Brunette GW, Kozarsky PE, Magill AJ, Shlim DR, Whatley AD, editors. [http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2012/chapter-3-infectious-diseases-related-to-travel/dengue-fever-and-dengue-hemorrhagic-fever.htm CDC health information for international travel 2012: the Yellow Book]. Atlanta (GA): Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2012. (accessed 2013 Apr 6).</ref> A female mosquito that takes a blood meal from an infected person (during the potential 2-&nbsp;to&nbsp;12-day range of the febrile, viremic period) becomes infected with the virus in the cells lining its gut. About 8–10 days later, the virus spreads to other tissues, including the mosquito’s salivary glands, and is subsequently released into its saliva. The virus seems to have no detrimental effect on the mosquito, which remains infected for life.<ref name=6abc/> ''Aedes aegypti'' is particularly implicated, as it prefers to lay its eggs in artificial water containers, to live in close proximity to humans, and to feed on people rather than other vertebrates.<ref name=6abc/>
Dengue virus is primarily transmitted by ''[[Aedes]]'' mosquitoes, particularly ''[[Aedes aegypti|A. aegypti]]''.<ref name=WHOp14>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], pp.&nbsp;14–16.</ref> These mosquitoes usually live between the [[latitude]]s of 35°&nbsp;North and 35°&nbsp;South below an [[elevation]] of {{convert|1000|m|ft}}.<ref name=WHOp14/> They typically bite during the day, particularly in the early morning and in the evening,<ref name=WHOp59/><ref name=WHO2012/> but they are able to bite and thus spread infection at any time of day all during the year.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/content/outbreak-notice/dengue-tropical-sub-tropical.aspx |title=Travelers' Health Outbreak Notice |publisher=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention |date=2 June 2010 |accessdate=27 August 2010| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100826005756/http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/content/outbreak-notice/dengue-tropical-sub-tropical.aspx| archivedate= 26 August 2010 | deadurl= no}}</ref> Other ''Aedes'' species that transmit the disease include ''[[Aedes albopictus|A. albopictus]]'', ''[[Aedes polynesiensis|A. polynesiensis]]'' and ''[[Aedes scutellaris|A. scutellaris]]''.<ref name=WHOp14/> Humans are the primary [[Host (biology)|host]] of the virus,<ref name=WHOp14/><ref name=Gould/> but it also circulates in nonhuman [[primate]]s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Vector-borne viral infections|url=http://www.who.int/vaccine_research/diseases/vector/en/index1.html|publisher=World Health Organization|accessdate=17 January 2011}}</ref> An infection can be acquired via a single bite.<ref name=Yellow10>{{cite web|url=http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2010/chapter-5/dengue-fever-dengue-hemorrhagic-fever.aspx|title=Chapter 5 dengue fever (DF) and dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF)|work=2010 Yellow Book|author=Center for Disease Control and Prevention|accessdate=23 December 2010}}</ref> A female mosquito that takes a blood meal from a person infected with dengue fever, during the initial 2–10 day febrile period, becomes itself infected with the virus in the cells lining its gut.<ref>{{cite book|last=Fauci|first=[edited by] Vassil St. Georgiev; foreword by Anthony S.|title=National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH.|year=2009|publisher=Humana|location=Totowa, N.J.|isbn=978-1-60327-297-1|page=268|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=pymSBkVU-FsC&pg=PA268|edition=1}}</ref> About 8–10 days later, the virus spreads to other tissues including the mosquito's [[salivary gland]]s and is subsequently released into its saliva. The virus seems to have no detrimental effect on the mosquito, which remains infected for life.<ref name=Gubler2010/> ''Aedes aegypti'' is particularly involved, as it prefers to lay its eggs in artificial water containers, to live in close proximity to humans, and to feed on people rather than other [[vertebrate]]s.<ref name=Gubler2010/>


Dengue can also be transmitted via infected blood products and through organ donation.<ref name=25abc>{{cite journal|author=Wilder-Smith A, Chen LH, Massad E, Wilson ME|title=Threat of dengue to blood safety in dengue-endemic countries|journal=Emerg. Infect. Dis.|volume=15|issue=1|pages=8–11|date=January 2009|pmid=19116042|pmc=2660677|doi=10.3201/eid1501.071097|url=http://www.cdc.gov/eid/content/15/1/8.htm}}</ref><ref name=26abc>{{cite journal|author=Stramer SL, Hollinger FB, Katz LM, et al.|title=Emerging infectious disease agents and their potential threat to transfusion safety|journal=Transfusion|volume=49 Suppl 2|pages=1S–29S|date=August 2009|pmid=19686562|doi=10.1111/j.1537-2995.2009.02279.x}}</ref> In countries such as Singapore, where dengue is endemic, the risk is estimated to be between 1.6 and 6 per 10000 transfusions.<ref name=27abc>{{cite journal|author=Teo D, Ng LC, Lam S|title=Is dengue a threat to the blood supply?|journal=Transfus Med|volume=19|issue=2|pages=66–77|date=April 2009|pmid=19392949|pmc=2713854|doi=10.1111/j.1365-3148.2009.00916.x|url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-3148.2009.00916.x/full}}</ref> Vertical transmission (from mother to child) during pregnancy or at birth has been reported.<ref name=28abc>{{cite journal |author=Wiwanitkit V |title=Unusual mode of transmission of dengue |journal=Journal of Infection in Developing Countries |volume=4 |issue=1 |pages=51–4 |date=January 2010 |pmid=20130380 |doi= 10.3855/jidc.145|url=http://www.jidc.org/index.php/journal/article/view/20130380}}</ref> Other person-to-person modes of transmission have also been reported but are very unusual.<ref name=10abc/> Dengue genetic types are region-specific, which suggests that establishment in new territories is relatively infrequent, despite dengue having emerged in new regions in recent decades.<ref name=17abc/>
Dengue can also be transmitted via infected [[blood products]] and through [[organ donation]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Wilder-Smith A, Chen LH, Massad E, Wilson ME|title=Threat of dengue to blood safety in dengue-endemic countries|journal=Emerg. Infect. Dis.|volume=15|issue=1|pages=8–11|date=January 2009|pmid=19116042|pmc=2660677|doi=10.3201/eid1501.071097|url=http://www.cdc.gov/eid/content/15/1/8.htm}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Stramer SL, Hollinger FB, Katz LM, et al.|title=Emerging infectious disease agents and their potential threat to transfusion safety|journal=Transfusion|volume=49 Suppl 2|pages=1S–29S|date=August 2009|pmid=19686562|doi=10.1111/j.1537-2995.2009.02279.x}}</ref> In countries such as [[Singapore]], where dengue is endemic, the risk is estimated to be between 1.6 and 6 per 10,000 [[blood transfusions|transfusions]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Teo D, Ng LC, Lam S|title=Is dengue a threat to the blood supply?|journal=Transfus Med|volume=19|issue=2|pages=66–77|date=April 2009|pmid=19392949|pmc=2713854|doi=10.1111/j.1365-3148.2009.00916.x|url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-3148.2009.00916.x/full}}</ref> [[Vertical transmission]] (from mother to child) during pregnancy or at birth has been reported.<ref name="pmid20130380">{{cite journal |author=Wiwanitkit V |title=Unusual mode of transmission of dengue |journal=Journal of Infection in Developing Countries |volume=4 |issue=1 |pages=51–4 |date=January 2010 |pmid=20130380 |doi= 10.3855/jidc.145|url=http://www.jidc.org/index.php/journal/article/view/20130380}}</ref> Other person-to-person modes of transmission have also been reported, but are very unusual.<ref name=Chen/> The genetic variation in dengue viruses is region specific, suggestive that establishment into new territories is relatively infrequent, despite dengue emerging in new regions in recent decades.<ref name=NEJM2012/>


===Predisposition===
===Predisposition===
Severe disease is more common in babies and young children, but in contrast to many other infections, it is more common in children who are relatively well nourished.<ref name=5abc/> Other risk factors for severe disease include female sex, high body mass index, and high viral load.<ref name=29abc>{{cite journal|author=Martina BE, Koraka P, Osterhaus AD|title=Dengue virus pathogenesis: an integrated view|journal=Clin. Microbiol. Rev.|volume=22|issue=4|pages=564–81|date=October 2009|pmid=19822889|pmc=2772360|doi=10.1128/CMR.00035-09|url=http://cmr.asm.org/cgi/content/full/22/4/564}}</ref> Although each serotype can cause the full spectrum of disease,<ref name=21abc/> virus strain is another risk factor for severe disease.<ref name=17abc/> Infection with a given serotype is thought to produce lifelong immunity to that type, but only short-term protection against the other four.<ref name=10abc/><ref name=14abc/> The risk of severe disease from secondary infection increases if a person who was previously exposed to serotype DENV-1 contracts serotype DENV-2 or DENV-3, or if a person previously exposed to DENV-3 acquires DENV-2.<ref name=22abc/> Dengue can be life-threatening for people with chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus and asthma.<ref name=22abc/>
Severe disease is more common in babies and young children, and in contrast to many other infections it is more common in children that are relatively well nourished.<ref name=Peads10/> Other [[risk factor]]s for severe disease include female sex, high [[body mass index]],<ref name=NEJM2012/> and [[viral load]].<ref name=Martina09/> While each serotype can cause the full spectrum of disease,<ref name=Life10/> virus strain is a risk factor.<ref name=NEJM2012/> Infection with one serotype is thought to produce lifelong immunity to that type, but only short-term protection against the other three.<ref name=WHOp14/><ref name=Chen/> The risk of severe disease from secondary infection increases if someone previously exposed to serotype DENV-1 contracts serotype DENV-2 or DENV-3, or if someone previously exposed to DENV-3 acquires DENV-2.<ref name=Guzman10/> Dengue can be life-threatening in people with [[chronic disease]]s such as [[diabetes mellitus|diabetes]] and [[asthma]].<ref name=Guzman10/>


Polymorphisms (normal variations) in particular genes have been linked to an increased risk of severe complications of dengue. Examples of affected genes include those coding for the proteins known as tumour necrosis factor α (TNFα), mannan-binding lectin,<ref name=2abc/> cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA4), transforming growth factor β (TGFβ),<ref name=21abc/> dendritic cell–specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing non-integrin (DC-SIGN), phospholipase C epsilon 1 (PLCE1), and particular forms of human leukocyte antigen from gene variations of HLA-B.<ref name=17abc/><ref name=22abc/> Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, a common genetic abnormality, particularly among people from Africa, appears to increase the risk.<ref name=29abc/> Polymorphisms in the genes for the vitamin D receptor and Fc gamma receptor (FcγR) seem to offer protection against severe disease in secondary dengue infection.<ref name=22abc/>
[[Polymorphism (biology)|Polymorphisms]] (normal variations) in particular [[gene]]s have been linked with an increased risk of severe dengue complications. Examples include the genes coding for the proteins known as [[Tumor necrosis factor-alpha|TNFα]], [[mannan-binding lectin]],<ref name=White10/> [[CTLA4]], [[Transforming growth factor beta|TGFβ]],<ref name=Life10/> [[DC-SIGN]], [[PLCE1]], and particular [[allele|forms]] of [[human leukocyte antigen]] from gene variations of [[HLA-B]].<ref name=NEJM2012/><ref name=Guzman10/> A common genetic abnormality, especially in Africans, known as [[glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency]], appears to increase the risk.<ref name=Martina09>{{cite journal|author=Martina BE, Koraka P, Osterhaus AD|title=Dengue virus pathogenesis: an integrated view|journal=Clin. Microbiol. Rev.|volume=22|issue=4|pages=564–81|date=October 2009|pmid=19822889|pmc=2772360|doi=10.1128/CMR.00035-09|url=http://cmr.asm.org/cgi/content/full/22/4/564}}</ref> Polymorphisms in the genes for the [[Calcitriol receptor|vitamin D receptor]] and [[Fc receptor#Fc-gamma receptors|FcγR]] seem to offer protection against severe disease in secondary dengue infection.<ref name=Guzman10/>


==Mechanism of infection==
==Mechanism==
When a mosquito carrying dengue virus bites a person, the virus enters the skin along with the mosquito’s saliva. It binds to and enters white blood cells and then reproduces inside the cells while they move throughout the body. The white blood cells respond by producing a number of signalling proteins, including interferons and other cytokines, which are responsible for nonspecific symptoms such as fever, headache, joint pain, and muscle pain. In severe infection, virus production inside the body is greatly increased, and many more organs (such as the liver and the bone marrow) may be affected. Fluid from the bloodstream leaks through the wall of small blood vessels into body cavities because of endothelial dysfunction. As a result, less blood circulates, and shock may result. Furthermore, dysfunction of the bone marrow due to infection of the stromal cells leads to thrombocytopenia, which increases the risk of bleeding, the other major complication.<ref name=29abc/>
When a mosquito carrying dengue virus bites a person, the virus enters the skin together with the mosquito's saliva.<!-- <ref name=Martina09/> --> It binds to and enters [[white blood cell]]s, and reproduces inside the cells while they move throughout the body.<!-- <ref name=Martina09/> --> The white blood cells respond by producing a number of signaling proteins, such as [[cytokines]] and [[interferons]], which are responsible for many of the symptoms, such as the fever, the flu-like symptoms and the severe pains.<!-- <ref name=Martina09/> --> In severe infection, the virus production inside the body is greatly increased, and many more organs (such as the [[liver]] and the [[bone marrow]]) can be affected. Fluid from the bloodstream leaks through the wall of small blood vessels into body cavities due to capillary permeability.<!-- <ref name=Martina09/> --> As a result, less blood circulates in the blood vessels, and the blood pressure becomes so low that it cannot supply sufficient blood to vital organs. Furthermore, dysfunction of the bone marrow due to infection of the [[stromal cell]]s leads to reduced numbers of platelets, which are necessary for effective blood clotting; this increases the risk of bleeding, the other major complication of dengue fever.<ref name=Martina09/>


===Viral replication===
===Viral replication===
Once inside the skin, dengue virus binds to Langerhans cells (dendritic cells in the skin that are engaged in surveillance for pathogens).<ref name=29abc/> The virus enters these cells through binding of viral proteins with membrane proteins on the cells, specifically the C-type lectins known as DC-SIGN, mannose receptors, and C-type lectin domain family 5 member A (CLEC5 A).<ref name=21abc/> DC-SIGN, a nonspecific receptor for foreign material on dendritic cells, seems to be the main point of entry.<ref name=22abc/> The dendritic cell then moves to the nearest lymph node. Meanwhile, the virus genome is translated in membrane-bound vesicles associated with the cell’s endoplasmic reticulum, where the cell’s protein synthesis apparatus produces new viral proteins that then copy the viral RNA and begin to assemble viral particles.<ref name=21abc/> Immature virus particles are transported to the Golgi apparatus, the part of the cell where some of the proteins receive necessary sugar chains (glycoproteins), and the precursor membrane protein prM is cleaved to its M form. The mature new viruses bud inside the cell and are released by exocytosis. They are then able to enter other white blood cells, such as monocytes and macrophages.<ref name=21abc/>
Once inside the skin, dengue virus binds to [[Langerhans cell]]s (a population of [[dendritic cell]]s in the skin that identifies pathogens).<ref name=Martina09/> The virus [[Receptor-mediated endocytosis|enters the cells]] through binding between viral proteins and [[membrane protein]]s on the Langerhans cell, specifically the [[C-type lectin]]s called DC-SIGN, [[mannose receptor]] and [[CLEC5A]].<ref name=Life10/> DC-SIGN, a non-specific receptor for foreign material on dendritic cells, seems to be the main point of entry.<ref name=Guzman10/> The dendritic cell moves to the nearest [[lymph node]]. Meanwhile, the virus genome is translated in membrane-bound vesicles on the cell's [[endoplasmic reticulum]], where the cell's protein synthesis apparatus produces new viral proteins that replicate the viral RNA and begin to form viral particles. Immature virus particles are transported to the [[Golgi apparatus]], the part of the cell where some of the proteins receive necessary sugar chains ([[glycoprotein]]s). The now mature new viruses bud on the surface of the infected cell and are released by [[exocytosis]]. They are then able to enter other white blood cells, such as [[monocyte]]s and [[macrophage]]s.<ref name=Life10/>


The initial reaction of infected cells is to produce interferon, a cytokine that raises a number of defences against viral infection through the innate immune system by augmenting the production of a large group of proteins (interferon-stimulated genes or ISGs), a process mediated by the Janus kinase signal transducer and activator of transcription pathway (also known as the JAK-STAT pathway).<ref name=21abc/> Some serotypes of dengue virus appear to have mechanisms to slow down this process.<ref name=21abc/> The ISGs also help to activate cells of the adaptive immune system, leading to the generation of antibodies specific for the virus, as well as T cells that directly attack infected cells.<ref name=21abc/> Various antibodies are generated. Some of these antibodies bind tightly to the viral proteins and target them for phagocytosis (ingestion by specialized cells and destruction), but others bind the virus less well and appear instead to deliver the virus into a part of the phagocytes where it is not destroyed but is able to replicate further.<ref name=21abc/>
The initial reaction of infected cells is to produce interferon, a [[cytokine]] that raises a number of defenses against viral infection through the [[innate immune system]] by augmenting the production of a large group of proteins mediated by the [[JAK-STAT signaling pathway|JAK-STAT pathway]]. Some serotypes of dengue virus appear to have mechanisms to slow down this process. Interferon also activates the [[adaptive immune system]], which leads to the generation of [[antibody|antibodies]] against the virus as well as [[T cell]]s that directly attack any cell infected with the virus.<ref name=Life10/> Various antibodies are generated; some bind closely to the viral proteins and target them for [[phagocytosis]] (ingestion by [[phagocyte|specialized cells]] and destruction), but some bind the virus less well and appear instead to deliver the virus into a part of the phagocytes where it is not destroyed but is able to replicate further.<ref name=Life10/>


===Severe disease===
===Severe disease===
It is not entirely clear why secondary infection with a different strain of dengue virus places people at risk of dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome. The most widely accepted hypothesis is that of antibody-dependent enhancement. The exact mechanism behind antibody-dependent enhancement is unclear. It may be caused by poor binding of non-neutralizing antibodies and delivery into the wrong compartment of white blood cells that have ingested the virus for destruction.<ref name=21abc/><ref name=22abc/> There is also a suspicion that antibody-dependent enhancement is not the only mechanism underlying severe dengue-related complications,<ref name=2abc/> and various lines of research have implied a role for T-cells and soluble factors such as cytokines and the complement system.<ref name=29abc/>
It is not entirely clear why secondary infection with a different strain of dengue virus places people at risk of dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome. The most widely accepted hypothesis is that of [[antibody-dependent enhancement]] (ADE). The exact mechanism behind ADE is unclear. It may be caused by poor binding of non-neutralizing antibodies and delivery into the wrong compartment of white blood cells that have ingested the virus for destruction.<ref name=Life10/><ref name=Guzman10/> There is a suspicion that ADE is not the only mechanism underlying severe dengue-related complications,<ref name=White10/><ref name=Carod2013/> and various lines of research have implied a role for T cells and soluble factors such as cytokines and the [[complement system]].<ref name=Martina09/>


Severe disease is marked by capillary permeability (which allows protein-containing fluid to escape from blood vessels) and coagulopathy.<ref name=16abc/><ref name=17abc/> These features appear to be associated with a disordered state of the endothelial glycocalyx, which acts as a molecular filter of blood components.<ref name=17abc/> Leaky capillaries (and the critical disease phase that results) are thought to be caused by an immune system response.<ref name=17abc/> Other processes of interest include infected cells becoming necrotic, which affects both coagulation (blood clotting) and fibrinolysis (dissolution of blood clots), and thrombocytopenia, which also affects clotting.<ref name=29abc/>
Severe disease is marked by the problems of capillary permeability (an allowance of fluid and protein normally contained within blood to pass) and disordered [[coagulation|blood clotting]].<ref name=India10/><ref name=NEJM2012/><!--NEJM specifies upon the capillary/microvasculature--> These changes appear associated with a disordered state of the endothelial [[glycocalyx]], which acts as a [[Molecular sieve|molecular filter]] of blood components.<ref name=NEJM2012/> Leaky capillaries (and the critical phase) are thought to be caused by an immune system response.<ref name=NEJM2012/> Other processes of interest include infected cells that become [[necrosis|necrotic]]—which affect both coagulation and [[fibrinolysis]] (the opposing systems of blood clotting and clot degradation)—and low platelets in the blood, also a factor in normal clotting.<ref name=Martina09/>


==Diagnosis==
==Diagnosis==
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The diagnosis of dengue is typically made clinically, on the basis of reported symptoms and physical examination, especially in endemic areas.<ref name=2abc/> However, early dengue fever can be difficult to differentiate from other viral infections.<ref name=5abc/> A probable diagnosis is based on findings of fever and 2 of the following: nausea and vomiting, rash, generalized pains, leukopenia, positive result on tourniquet test, or any warning sign (see Box 1) in someone who lives in an endemic area.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=30abc>[[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Figure 1.4: Suggested dengue case classification and levels of severity. p. 11. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> Warning signs typically occur before the onset of severe dengue.<ref name=18abc/> The tourniquet test, which is particularly useful in settings where laboratory investigations are not readily available, involves applying a blood pressure cuff, inflating it to the midpoint between the diastolic and systolic pressure for 5 minutes, and then counting any petechial hemorrhages that occur. A higher number of petechiae makes diagnosis of dengue more likely; the lower limit for diagnosis is variably defined as 10–20 petechiae per 2.5 cm<sup>2</sup> (square inch).<ref name=18abc/><ref name=31abc>Farrar J. Clinical features of dengue. In: Halstead SB, editor. Dengue (tropical medicine: science and practice). London (UK): Imperial College Press; 2008. The tourniquet test; p. 180–181.</ref><ref name=32abc>Rigau-Perez JG. Controversies. In: Halstead S, editor. Dengue (tropical medicine: science and practice). London (UK): Imperial College Press. 2008; p. 427–429.</ref>
The diagnosis of dengue is typically made clinically, on the basis of reported symptoms and [[physical examination]]; this applies especially in endemic areas.<ref name=White10/> However, early disease can be difficult to differentiate from other [[viral infections]].<ref name=Peads10/> A probable diagnosis is based on the findings of fever plus two of the following: [[nausea]] and vomiting, rash, generalized pains, [[Leukopenia|low white blood cell count]], positive [[tourniquet test]], or any warning sign (see table) in someone who lives in an [[Endemic (epidemiology)|endemic]] area.<ref name=WHOp10/> Warning signs typically occur before the onset of severe dengue.<ref name=WHOp25/> The tourniquet test, which is particularly useful in settings where no laboratory investigations are readily available, involves the application of a [[Sphygmomanometer|blood pressure cuff]] at between the [[blood pressure|diastolic]] and systolic pressure for five minutes, followed by the counting of any [[petechial]] hemorrhages; a higher number makes a diagnosis of dengue more likely with the cut off being more than 10 to 20 per 1&nbsp;inch<sup>2</sup> (6.25&nbsp;cm<sup>2</sup>).<ref name=WHOp25/><ref>{{cite book|last=Halstead|first=Scott B.|title=Dengue|year=2008|publisher=Imperial College Press|location=London|isbn=978-1-84816-228-0|page=180 & 429|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=6zLd9mFwxwsC&pg=PA180}}</ref>


The diagnosis of dengue fever should be considered in anyone who experiences fever within 2 weeks of being in the tropics or subtropics.<ref name=17abc/> It can be difficult to distinguish between dengue fever and chikungunya, a similar viral infection that shares many of the same symptoms and occurs in similar parts of the world.<ref name=10abc/> Often, investigations are performed to exclude other conditions that cause similar symptoms, such as malaria, leptospirosis, viral hemorrhagic fever, typhoid fever, meningococcal disease, measles, and influenza.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=33abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 4.2.1.1: Differential diagnosis. p. 94–95. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref>
The diagnosis should be considered in anyone who develops a fever within two weeks of being in the [[tropics]] or [[subtropics]].<ref name=NEJM2012>{{cite journal|last=Simmons|first=CP|author2=Farrar, JJ |author3=Nguyen, vV |author4= Wills, B |title=Dengue|journal=The New England Journal of Medicine|date=12 April 2012|volume=366|issue=15|pages=1423–32|pmid=22494122|doi=10.1056/NEJMra1110265}}</ref> It can be difficult to distinguish dengue fever and [[chikungunya]], a similar viral infection that shares many symptoms and occurs in similar parts of the world to dengue.<ref name=Chen/> Often, investigations are performed to exclude other conditions that cause similar symptoms, such as [[malaria]], [[leptospirosis]], [[viral hemorrhagic fever]], [[typhoid fever]], [[meningococcal disease]], [[measles]], and [[influenza]].<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=WHOp90/>


The earliest change detectable on laboratory investigations is leukopenia, which may be followed by thrombocytopenia and metabolic acidosis.<ref name=5abc/> A moderately elevated level of aminotransferase (aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase) from the liver is commonly associated with thrombocytopenia and leukopenia.<ref name=17abc/> In severe disease, plasma leakage results in hemoconcentration (indicated by a rising hematocrit) and hypoalbuminemia.<ref name=5abc/> Pleural effusions or ascites can be detected by physical examination if they are large,<ref name=5abc/> and ultrasonographic demonstration of fluid may assist in the early identification of dengue shock syndrome.<ref name=2abc/><ref name=5abc/>
The earliest change detectable on laboratory investigations is a low white blood cell count, which may then be followed by [[Thrombocytopenia|low platelets]] and [[metabolic acidosis]].<ref name=Peads10/> A moderately elevated level of [[aminotransferase]] ([[Aspartate transaminase|AST]] and [[Alanine transaminase|ALT]]) from the liver is commonly associated with low platelets and white blood cells.<ref name=NEJM2012/> In severe disease, plasma leakage results in [[hemoconcentration]] (as indicated by a rising [[hematocrit]]) and [[hypoalbuminemia]].<ref name=Peads10/> [[Pleural effusion]]s or [[ascites]] can be detected by physical examination when large,<ref name=Peads10/> but the demonstration of fluid on [[medical ultrasonography|ultrasound]] may assist in the early identification of dengue shock syndrome.<ref name=White10/><ref name=Peads10/> The use of ultrasound is limited by lack of availability in many settings.<ref name=White10/> Dengue shock syndrome is present if [[pulse pressure]] drops to ≤&nbsp;20&nbsp;mm&nbsp;Hg along with peripheral vascular collapse.<ref name=NEJM2012/> Peripheral vascular collapse is determined in children via delayed [[capillary refill]], rapid heart rate, or cold extremities.<ref name=WHOp25/> While warning signs are an important aspect for early detection of potential serious disease, the evidence for any specific clinical or laboratory marker is weak.<ref name=Yacoub2014/>


===Classification===
===Classification===
The 2009 classification of the World Health Organization (WHO) divides dengue fever into 2 groups: uncomplicated and severe.<ref name=2abc/><ref name=34abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 1.1.6: Dengue case classification. p. 10–12. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> According to this system, dengue that is associated with severe bleeding, severe organ dysfunction, or severe plasma leakage is considered severe, whereas all other cases are uncomplicated.<ref name=34abc/> This simplified system replaces the 1997 WHO classification, which was found to be too restrictive, although it is still widely used,<ref name=34abc/> including by the WHO’s Regional Office for South-East Asia (as of 2011).<ref name=35abc>{{cite book|title=Comprehensive guidelines for prevention and control of dengue and dengue haemorrhagic fever.|publisher=World Health Organization Regional Office for South-East Asia|location=New Delhi, India|year=2011|isbn=978-92-9022-387-0|page=17|url=http://203.90.70.117/PDS_DOCS/B4751.pdf|edition=Rev. and expanded.}}</ref> The 1997 classification divided dengue into undifferentiated fever, dengue fever, and dengue hemorrhagic fever.<ref name=5abc/> Dengue hemorrhagic fever was subdivided further into grades I&nbsp;to&nbsp;IV, where grade I is the presence of only easy bruising or a positive tourniquet test result in someone with fever, grade II is the presence of spontaneous bleeding into the skin and elsewhere, grade III is clinical evidence of shock, and grade IV is shock so severe that blood pressure and pulse cannot be detected.<ref name=36abc>Dengue haemorrhagic fever: diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control. 2nd ed. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 1997. Chapter 2: Clinical diagnosis. p. 12–23 (section “Grading severity of dengue haemorrhagic fever,” p. 22).</ref> In this system, grades III and IV are referred to as "dengue shock syndrome."<ref name=34abc/>
The [[World Health Organization]]'s 2009 classification divides dengue fever into two groups: uncomplicated and severe.<ref name=White10/><ref name=WHOp10>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], pp. 10–11.</ref> This replaces the 1997 WHO classification, which needed to be simplified as it had been found to be too restrictive, though the older classification is still widely used<ref name=WHOp10/> including by the World Health Organization's Regional Office for South-East Asia as of 2011.<ref>{{cite book|title=Comprehensive guidelines for prevention and control of dengue and dengue haemorrhagic fever.|publisher=World Health Organization Regional Office for South-East Asia|location=New Delhi, India|year=2011|isbn=978-92-9022-387-0|page=17|url=http://203.90.70.117/PDS_DOCS/B4751.pdf|edition=Rev. and expanded.}}</ref> Severe dengue is defined as that associated with severe bleeding, severe organ dysfunction, or severe plasma leakage while all other cases are uncomplicated.<ref name=WHOp10/> The 1997 classification divided dengue into undifferentiated fever, dengue fever, and dengue hemorrhagic fever.<ref name=Peads10>{{cite journal|author=Ranjit S, Kissoon N|title=Dengue hemorrhagic fever and shock syndromes|journal= [[Pediatr. Crit. Care Med.]] |date=January 2011|pmid=20639791|doi=10.1097/PCC.0b013e3181e911a7 |volume=12|pages=90–100|issue=1}}</ref><ref name=WHO97/> Dengue hemorrhagic fever was subdivided further into grades I–IV. Grade I is the presence only of easy bruising or a positive tourniquet test in someone with fever, grade II is the presence of spontaneous bleeding into the skin and elsewhere, grade III is the clinical evidence of shock, and grade IV is shock so severe that blood pressure and [[pulse]] cannot be detected.<ref name=WHO97>{{cite book|author=WHO|url=http://www.who.int/csr/resources/publications/dengue/012-23.pdf|chapter=Chapter 2: clinical diagnosis|title=Dengue haemorrhagic fever: diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control|edition=2nd|location=Geneva|publisher=World Health Organization|pages=12–23|year=1997|isbn=92-4-154500-3}}</ref> Grades III and IV are referred to as "dengue shock syndrome".<ref name=WHOp10/><ref name=WHO97/>


===Laboratory tests===
===Laboratory tests===
The graph shown in figure 6 illustrates the points when various laboratory tests for dengue fever become positive in relation to the course of illness, with day 0 being the first day of symptoms.<ref name=17abc/> In the graph, "1st" refers to those with a primary infection, and "2nd" refers to those with a secondary infection.
[[File:Dengue testing.png|thumb|Graph of when laboratory tests for dengue fever become positive. Day zero refers to the start of symptoms, 1st refers to in those with a primary infection, and 2nd refers to in those with a secondary infection.<ref name=NEJM2012/>]]
The diagnosis of dengue fever can be confirmed by microbiological laboratory testing.<ref name=30abc/> This can be done by isolating virus in cell cultures, detecting its nucleic acid by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and detecting viral antigens (such as NS1) or specific antibodies (i.e., serology).<ref name=22abc/><ref name=37abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 4.2.1: Clinical management. p. 93–95. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> Virus isolation and nucleic acid detection are more accurate than antigen detection, but these tests are not widely available because of their high cost.<ref name=37abc/> Detection of NS1 during the febrile phase of a primary infection may be greater than 90% sensitive; however, sensitivity is only 60%–80% in subsequent infections.<ref name=17abc/> All test results may be negative in the early stages of the disease.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=22abc/> PCR and viral antigen detection are more accurate in the first 7 days of infection.<ref name=17abc/> A test approved in 2012, which is a DENV reverse transcription PCR assay, may improve access to PCR-based diagnosis.<ref name=38abc>Schirmer PL, Lucero-Obusan CA, Benoit SR, Santiago LM, Stanek D, Dey A, et al. Dengue surveillance in veterans affairs healthcare facilities, 2007–2010. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 2013;7(3):e2040.</ref>
The diagnosis of dengue fever may be confirmed by microbiological laboratory testing.<ref name=WHOp10/><ref>{{cite journal|last=Wiwanitkit|first=V|title=Dengue fever: diagnosis and treatment|journal=Expert review of anti-infective therapy|date=July 2010|volume=8|issue=7|pages=841–5|pmid=20586568|doi=10.1586/eri.10.53}}</ref> This can be done by virus isolation in [[cell culture]]s, [[Nucleic acid test|nucleic acid detection]] by [[polymerase chain reaction|PCR]], viral [[antigen]] detection (such as for [[NS1 antigen test|NS1]]) or specific [[antibodies]] (serology).<ref name=Guzman10/><ref name=WHOp90>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], pp.&nbsp;90–95.</ref> Virus isolation and nucleic acid detection are more accurate than antigen detection, but these tests are not widely available due to their greater cost.<ref name=WHOp90/> Detection of NS1 during the febrile phase of a primary infection may be greater than 90% [[sensitive]] however is only 60–80% in subsequent infections.<ref name=NEJM2012/> All tests may be negative in the early stages of the disease.<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=Guzman10/> PCR and viral antigen detection are more accurate in the first seven days.<ref name=NEJM2012/> In 2012 a PCR test was introduced that can run on equipment used to diagnose influenza; this is likely to improve access to PCR-based diagnosis.<ref>{{cite web|title=New CDC test for dengue approved|url=http://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2012/p0620_dengue_test.html|publisher=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention|date=20 June 2012}}</ref>


Except for serology tests, these laboratory investigations are of diagnostic value only during the acute phase of the illness. Tests for dengue virus–specific antibodies (immunoglobulins G and M [IgG and IgM]) can be useful in confirming the diagnosis in the later stages of the infection. Both IgG and IgM are produced after 5–7 days. The highest levels (titres) of IgM are detected following a primary infection, but IgM is also produced during re-infection. IgM becomes undetectable 30–90 days after a primary infection, but earlier following re-infections. IgG, by contrast, remains detectable for over 60 years and, in the absence of symptoms, is a useful indicator of past infection. After a primary infection, IgG reaches peak levels in the blood after 14–21 days. During subsequent infections, levels peak earlier and titres are usually higher. Both IgG and IgM provide protective immunity to the infecting serotype of the virus.<ref name=6abc/><ref name=10abc/><ref name=22abc/> In testing for IgG and IgM antibodies, there may be cross-reactivity with other flaviviruses, which may result in false positive results if there has been recent infection with or vaccination for yellow fever virus or Japanese encephalitis virus.<ref name=17abc/> The detection of IgG alone is not considered diagnostic unless blood samples have been collected 14 days apart and a greater than 4-fold increase in levels of specific IgG over this period is detected. In a person with symptoms, the detection of IgM is considered diagnostic.<ref name=6abc/>
These laboratory tests are only of diagnostic value during the acute phase of the illness with the exception of serology. Tests for dengue virus-specific antibodies, types [[IgG]] and [[IgM]], can be useful in confirming a diagnosis in the later stages of the infection. Both IgG and IgM are produced after 5–7 days. The highest levels ([[titre]]s) of IgM are detected following a primary infection, but IgM is also produced in reinfection. IgM becomes undetectable 30–90 days after a primary infection, but earlier following re-infections. IgG, by contrast, remains detectable for over 60 years and, in the absence of symptoms, is a useful indicator of past infection. After a primary infection IgG reaches peak levels in the blood after 14–21 days. In subsequent re-infections, levels peak earlier and the titres are usually higher. Both IgG and IgM provide protective immunity to the infecting serotype of the virus.<ref name=Gubler2010/><ref name=Chen/><ref name=Guzman10/> In testing for IgG and IgM antibodies there may be cross-reactivity with other flaviviruses which may result in a false positive after recent infections or vaccinations with yellow fever virus or Japanese encephalitis.<ref name=NEJM2012/> The detection of IgG alone is not considered diagnostic unless blood samples are collected 14 days apart and a greater than fourfold increase in levels of specific IgG is detected. In a person with symptoms, the detection of IgM is considered diagnostic.<ref name=Gubler2010/>


==Prevention==
==Prevention==
[[File:Vector Control.jpg|alt=A black and white photograph of people filling in a ditch with standing water|thumb|A 1920s photograph of efforts to disperse standing water and thus decrease mosquito populations]]
[[File:Vector Control.jpg|alt=A black and white photograph of people filling in a ditch with standing water|thumb|A 1920s photograph of efforts to disperse standing water and thus decrease mosquito populations]]


There are no approved vaccines for the dengue virus.<ref name=2abc/> Prevention thus depends on control of, and protection from the bites of, the mosquito that transmits it.<ref name=11abc/><ref name=13abc/> The WHO recommends an integrated vector control program consisting of 5 elements:
There are no approved [[vaccine]]s for the dengue virus.<ref name="White10"/> Prevention thus depends on control of and protection from the bites of the mosquito that transmits it.<ref name="WHOp59">[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], pp.&nbsp;59–64.</ref><ref name="WHOp137">[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], p.&nbsp;137.</ref> The World Health Organization recommends an Integrated Vector Control program consisting of five elements:<ref name="WHOp59"/>


advocacy, social mobilization, and legislation to ensure that public health bodies and communities are strengthened;
# Advocacy, social mobilization and legislation to ensure that public health bodies and communities are strengthened;
collaboration between health care and other sectors (public and private);
# Collaboration between the health and other sectors (public and private);
an integrated approach to disease control to optimize use of resources;
# An integrated approach to disease control to maximize use of resources;
evidence-based decision-making to ensure that any interventions are targeted appropriately;
# Evidence-based decision making to ensure any interventions are targeted appropriately; and
and capacity-building to ensure an adequate response to the local situation.<ref name=11abc/>
# Capacity-building to ensure an adequate response to the local situation.


The primary method of controlling A. aegypti is by eliminating its habitats, which include standing water in urban areas (e.g., discarded tires, ponds, drainage ditches, and open barrels).<ref name=11abc/> The photograph in Figure 7 (from the 1920s) depicts efforts to disperse standing water and thus decrease mosquito populations. If removal of habitat is not possible, another option is adding insecticides or biological control agents to standing water. Reducing open collections of water through environmental modification is the preferred method of control, given the concerns about negative health effects from insecticides and the greater logistic difficulties associated with control agents.<ref name=11abc/> Generalized spraying with organophosphate or pyrethroid insecticides is sometimes done but is not thought to be effective.<ref name=15abc/> People can prevent mosquito bites by wearing clothing that fully covers the skin, using repellent on clothing, or staying in air-conditioned, screened, or netted areas.<ref name=25abc/> However, these methods appear not to be sufficiently effective, as the frequency of outbreaks appears to be increasing in some areas, probably because urbanization is increasing Aedes mosquito habitat; in addition, the range of the disease appears to be expanding, possibly because of climate change.<ref name=9abc/>
The primary method of controlling ''A. aegypti'' is by eliminating its [[habitat]]s.<ref name="WHOp59"/> This is done by getting rid of open sources of water, or if this is not possible, by adding [[insecticide]]s or [[biological pest control|biological control agents]] to these areas.<ref name="WHOp59"/> Generalized spraying with [[organophosphate]] or [[pyrethroid]] insecticides, while sometimes done, is not thought to be effective.<ref name="Euro10"/> Reducing open collections of water through environmental modification is the preferred method of control, given the concerns of negative health effects from insecticides and greater logistical difficulties with control agents.<ref name="WHOp59"/> People can prevent mosquito bites by wearing clothing that fully covers the skin, using [[mosquito net]]ting while resting, and/or the application of [[insect repellent]] ([[DEET]] being the most effective).<ref name="Yellow10"/> However, these methods appear not to be sufficiently effective, as the frequency of outbreaks appears to be increasing in some areas, probably due to urbanization increasing the habitat of ''A. aegypti''. The range of the disease appears to be expanding possibly due to climate change.<ref name=new_type/>


==Management==
==Management==
There are no specific antiviral drugs for dengue; however, maintaining proper fluid balance is important.<ref name=17abc/> Treatment depends on the severity of symptoms.<ref name=12abc/> Those who are able to drink, are passing urine, have no warning signs (as listed in Box 1), and are otherwise healthy can be managed at home with daily follow-up and oral rehydration therapy.<ref name=12abc/> Those who have other health problems, who have warning signs, or who cannot manage regular follow-up should be admitted to hospital for care.<ref name=5abc/><ref name=12abc/> For those with severe dengue, care should be provided in an area with access to an intensive care unit.<ref name=12abc/>
There are no specific [[antiviral drug]]s for dengue, however maintaining proper fluid balance is important.<ref name=NEJM2012/> Treatment depends on the symptoms.<ref name=WHOp32/> Those who are able to drink, are passing urine, have no "warning signs" and are otherwise healthy can be managed at home with daily follow up and [[oral rehydration therapy]].<ref name=WHOp32>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], pp.&nbsp;32–37.</ref> Those who have other health problems, have "warning signs" or who cannot manage regular follow up should be cared for in hospital.<ref name=Peads10/><ref name=WHOp32/> In those with severe dengue care should be provided in an area where there is access to an [[intensive care unit]].<ref name=WHOp32/>


Intravenous hydration, if required, is typically needed for only 1 or 2 days.<ref name=12abc/> The rate of fluid administration is titrated to a urinary output of 0.5–1 mL/kg per hour, stabilization of vital signs, and normalization of hematocrit.<ref name=5abc/> The amount of fluid administered should be the smallest amount required to achieve these markers.<ref name=12abc/> Invasive medical procedures such as nasogastric intubation, intramuscular injections, and arterial punctures are to be avoided, in view of the bleeding risk.<ref name=5abc/> Paracetamol (acetaminophen) is used for fever and discomfort, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen and acetylsalicylic acid are to be avoided, as they may aggravate the risk of bleeding. For patients presenting with unstable vital signs in the face of decreasing hematocrit, blood transfusion should be initiated early, rather than waiting for the hemoglobin concentration to decline to some predetermined "transfusion trigger" level. Packed red blood cells or whole blood is recommended; platelets and fresh frozen plasma are usually not recommended.<ref name=12abc/>
Intravenous hydration, if required, is typically only needed for one or two days.<ref name=WHOp32/> The rate of fluid administration is titrated to a [[Urination|urinary output]] of 0.5–1&nbsp;mL/kg/h, stable [[vital signs]] and normalization of hematocrit.<ref name=Peads10/> The smallest amount of fluid required to achieve this is recommended.<ref name=WHOp32/> Invasive medical procedures such as [[nasogastric intubation]], [[intramuscular injection]]s and arterial punctures are avoided, in view of the bleeding risk.<ref name=Peads10/> [[Paracetamol]] (acetaminophen) is used for fever and discomfort while [[NSAIDs]] such as [[ibuprofen]] and [[aspirin]] are avoided as they might aggravate the risk of bleeding.<ref name=WHOp32/> [[Blood transfusion]] is initiated early in people presenting with unstable vital signs in the face of a ''decreasing hematocrit'', rather than waiting for the hemoglobin concentration to decrease to some predetermined "transfusion trigger" level.<ref name=WHOp40>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], pp.&nbsp;40–43.</ref> [[Packed red blood cells]] or [[whole blood]] are recommended, while [[platelet]]s and [[fresh frozen plasma]] are usually not.<ref name=WHOp40/> There is not enough evidence to determine if [[corticosteroid]]s have a positive or negative effect in dengue fever.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Zhang|first1=F|last2=Kramer|first2=CV|title=Corticosteroids for dengue infection.|journal=The Cochrane database of systematic reviews|date=1 July 2014|volume=7|pages=CD003488|pmid=24984082}}</ref>


During the recovery phase, intravenous fluids are discontinued to prevent fluid overload. If fluid overload occurs and vital signs are stable, stopping administration of fluid may be all that is needed to eliminate the excess fluid. If the person is outside the critical phase, a loop diuretic such as furosemide may be used to eliminate excess fluid from the circulation.<ref name=12abc/>
During the recovery phase intravenous fluids are discontinued to prevent a state of [[Hypervolemia|fluid overload]].<ref name=Peads10/> If fluid overload occurs and vital signs are stable, stopping further fluid may be all that is needed.<ref name=WHOp40/> If a person is outside of the critical phase, a [[loop diuretic]] such as [[furosemide]] may be used to eliminate excess fluid from the circulation.<ref name=WHOp40/>


==Epidemiology==
==Epidemiology==
Line 143: Line 143:
{{legend|#0ff|''A. aegypti'', without epidemic dengue}} ]]
{{legend|#0ff|''A. aegypti'', without epidemic dengue}} ]]


Most people with dengue recover without any ongoing problems.<ref name=34abc/> The fatality rate among those with severe disease is 1%–5%5 and may be less than 1% with adequate treatment;<ref name=34abc/> however, the fatality rate among those with shock can reach 26% if treatment is inadequate.<ref name=5abc/> Dengue is endemic in more than 110 countries.<ref name=5abc/> Figure 8 shows the distribution in 2006, with red indicating areas with A. aegypti and epidemic dengue, and aqua indicating A. aegypti without epidemic dengue. Current estimates of incidence range from 50 million<ref name=2abc/> to 528 million<ref name=3abc/> people infected yearly, leading to half a million hospital admissions and about 25 000 deaths.<ref name=16abc/>During the period 2000 to 2009, 12 countries in South-East Asia were estimated to have about 3 million infections and 6000 deaths annually.<ref name=39abc>{{cite journal |author=Shepard DS, Undurraga EA, Halasa YA |title=Economic and disease burden of dengue in Southeast Asia |journal=PLoS Negl Trop Dis |volume=7 |issue=2 |pages=e2055 |year=2013 |pmid=23437406 |pmc=3578748 |doi=10.1371/journal.pntd.0002055 |url=http://www.plosntds.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pntd.0002055 |editor1-last=Gubler |editor1-first=Duane J}}</ref> Dengue fever has been reported in at least 22 countries in Africa, but is likely present in most African countries, with 20% of the continental population at risk.<ref name=1abc/>
Most people with dengue recover without any ongoing problems.<ref name="WHOp10"/> The fatality rate is 1–5%,<ref name="Peads10"/> and less than 1% with adequate treatment;<ref name="WHOp10"/> however those who develop significantly low blood pressure may have a fatality rate of up to 26%.<ref name=Peads10/> Dengue is [[endemism|common]] in more than 110 countries.<ref name="Peads10"/> It infects 50 to 528&nbsp;million people worldwide a year, leading to half a million hospitalizations,<ref name=White10/><ref name=Bhatt2013>{{cite journal |author=Bhatt S, Gething PW, Brady OJ, et al. |title=The global distribution and burden of dengue |journal=Nature |volume=496 |issue=7446 |pages=504–7 |date=April 2013 |pmid= 23563266|doi=10.1038/nature12060 |pmc=3651993 }}</ref> and approximately 25,000 deaths.<ref name="India10"/><!-- source cites a 1997 WHO number, are there any more updated stats? --> For the decade of the 2000s, 12 countries in Southeast Asia were estimated to have about 3&nbsp;million infections and 6,000 deaths annually.<ref name=Shepard13>{{cite journal |author=Shepard DS, Undurraga EA, Halasa YA |title=Economic and disease burden of dengue in Southeast Asia |journal=PLoS Negl Trop Dis |volume=7 |issue=2 |pages=e2055 |year=2013 |pmid=23437406 |pmc=3578748 |doi=10.1371/journal.pntd.0002055 |url=http://www.plosntds.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pntd.0002055 |editor1-last=Gubler |editor1-first=Duane J}}</ref> It is reported in at least 22 countries in Africa; but is likely present in all of them with 20% of the population at risk.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Amarasinghe|first=A|author2=Kuritsk, JN |author3=Letson, GW |author4= Margolis, HS |title=Dengue virus infection in Africa.|journal=Emerging Infectious Diseases|date=August 2011|volume=17|issue=8|pages=1349–54|pmid=21801609 |doi=10.3201/eid1708.101515 |pmc=3381573}}</ref> This makes it one of the most common [[vector-borne disease]]s worldwide.<ref name=Yacoub2014>{{cite journal|last1=Yacoub|first1=Sophie|last2=Wills|first2=Bridget|title=Predicting outcome from dengue|journal=BMC Medicine|volume=12|issue=1|year=2014|pages=147||doi=10.1186/s12916-014-0147-9|pmc=4154521|pmid=25259615}}</ref>


Infections are most commonly acquired in the urban environment.<ref name=6abc/> In recent decades, the expansion of villages, towns, and cities in endemic areas and the increased mobility of people have increased the number of epidemics and circulating dengue serotypes. Dengue fever, which was once confined to South-East Asia, has now spread to southern China, as well as countries in the Pacific Ocean, Africa, and the Americas.<ref name=1abc/><ref name=6abc/> It could also pose a threat to Europe.<ref name=15abc/>
Infections are most commonly acquired in the urban environment.<ref name=Gubler2010/> In recent decades, the expansion of villages, towns and cities in the areas in which it is common, and the increased mobility of people has increased the number of epidemics and circulating viruses. Dengue fever, which was once confined to Southeast Asia, has now spread to Southern China, countries in the Pacific Ocean and America,<ref name=Gubler2010/> and might pose a threat to Europe.<ref name="Euro10"/>


The incidence of dengue increased 30-fold between 1960 and 2010.<ref name=40abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 1.1: Dengue epidemiology. p. 3–12. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> This increase is believed to have been due to a combination of urbanization, population growth, increased international travel, and global warming.<ref name=2abc/> The virus is geographically distributed around the equator. Of the 2.5 billion people living in endemic areas, 70% are in Asia and the Pacific.<ref name=41abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 1.1.1: Dengue in Asia and the Pacific. p. 4–6. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> Infection with dengue virus is second only to malaria as a diagnosed cause of fever among travellers returning from the developing world.<ref name=10abc/> It is the most common viral disease transmitted by arthropods,<ref name=21abc/> and the disease burden is estimated to be 1600 disability-adjusted life years per million population.<ref name=22abc/> The WHO counts dengue fever as 1 of 17 neglected tropical diseases.<ref name=42abc>{{cite web |author=Neglected Tropical Diseases |url=http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/en/ |title=The 17 neglected tropical diseases |publisher=[[World Health Organization]] |accessdate=10 April 2013 }}</ref>
Rates of dengue increased 30&nbsp;fold between 1960 and 2010.<ref name="WHOp3">[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], p.&nbsp;3.</ref> This increase is believed to be due to a combination of urbanization, population growth, increased international travel, and [[global warming]].<ref name="White10"/> The geographical distribution is around the equator. Of the 2.5&nbsp;billion people living in areas where it is common 70% are from Asia and the Pacific.<ref name="WHOp3"/> An infection with dengue is second only to malaria as a diagnosed cause of fever among travelers returning from the developing world.<ref name="Chen"/> It is the most common viral disease transmitted by arthropods,<ref name="Life10"/> and has a [[disease burden]] estimated at 1,600 [[disability-adjusted life year]]s per million population.<ref name="Guzman10"/> The World Health Organization counts dengue as one of seventeen [[neglected tropical diseases]].<ref>{{cite web |author=Neglected Tropical Diseases |url=http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/en/ |title=The 17 neglected tropical diseases |publisher=[[World Health Organization]] |accessdate=10 April 2013 }}</ref>


Like most arboviruses, dengue virus is maintained in nature in cycles that involve preferred blood-sucking vectors and vertebrate hosts. The viruses are maintained in the forests of South-East Asia and Africa by transmission from female ''Aedes'' mosquitoes—of species other than ''A. aegypti''—to their offspring and to lower primates. In towns and cities, the virus is primarily transmitted by the highly domesticated ''A. aegypti''. In rural settings, the virus is transmitted to humans by ''A. aegypti'' and other species of ''Aedes'' such as ''A. albopictus''.<ref name=6abc/> Both of these species had expanding ranges in the second half of the 20th century.<ref name=17abc/> In all settings, the infected lower primates or humans greatly increase the number of circulating dengue viruses, in a process called amplification.<ref name=6abc/>
Like most arboviruses, dengue virus is maintained in nature in cycles that involve preferred blood-sucking vectors and vertebrate hosts.<ref name=Gubler2010/> The viruses are maintained in the forests of Southeast Asia and Africa by transmission from female ''Aedes'' mosquitoes—of species other than ''A. aegypti''—to their offspring and to lower primates.<ref name=Gubler2010/> In towns and cities, the virus is primarily transmitted by the highly domesticated ''A. aegypti''. In rural settings the virus is transmitted to humans by ''A. aegypti'' and other species of ''Aedes'' such as ''[[Aedes albopictus|A. albopictus]]''.<ref name=Gubler2010/> Both these species had expanding ranges in the second half of the 20th century.<ref name=NEJM2012/> In all settings the infected lower primates or humans greatly increase the number of circulating dengue viruses, in a process called amplification.<ref name=Gubler2010/>


==History==
==History==
The first record of a case of probable dengue fever is in Chinese medical encyclopedia from the Jin dynasty (AD 265–420), which referred to a “water poison” associated with flying insects.<ref name=4abc/><ref name=43abc>{{cite journal|author=Anonymous|title=Etymologia: dengue|journal=Emerg. Infec. Dis.|year=2006|volume=12|page=893|url=http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/12/6/pdfs/et-1206.pdf|issue=6|doi=10.3201/eid1206.ET1206}}</ref> The primary vector, A. aegypti, spread out of Africa in the 15th to 19th centuries in part because of increased globalization secondary to the slave trade.<ref name=17abc/> There have been descriptions of epidemics in the 17th century, but the most plausible early reports of dengue epidemics are from 1779 and 1780, when an epidemic swept Asia, Africa, and North America. From that time until 1940, epidemics were infrequent.<ref name=4abc/>
The first record of a case of probable dengue fever is in a Chinese medical encyclopedia from the [[Jin Dynasty (265–420)|Jin Dynasty]] (265–420&nbsp;AD) which referred to a "water poison" associated with flying insects.<ref name=EID06/><ref name=Gubler98>{{cite journal|author=Gubler DJ|title=Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever|journal=Clin. Microbiol. Rev.|volume=11|issue=3|pages=480–96|date=July 1998|pmid=9665979|pmc=88892|url=http://cmr.asm.org/cgi/content/full/11/3/480}}</ref> The primary vector, ''A. aegypti'', spread out of Africa in the 15th to 19th centuries due in part to increased globalization secondary to the [[slave trade]].<ref name=NEJM2012/> There have been descriptions of epidemics in the 17th century, but the most plausible early reports of dengue epidemics are from 1779 and 1780, when an epidemic swept across Asia, Africa and North America.<ref name=Gubler98/> From that time until 1940, epidemics were infrequent.<ref name=Gubler98/>


In 1906, transmission by the Aedes mosquitoes was confirmed, and in 1907 dengue was the second disease (after yellow fever) that was shown to be caused by a virus.<ref name=44abc>{{cite journal|author=Henchal EA, Putnak JR|title=The dengue viruses|journal=Clin. Microbiol. Rev.|volume=3|issue=4|pages=376–96|date=October 1990|pmid=2224837|pmc=358169|url=http://cmr.asm.org/cgi/reprint/3/4/376|doi=10.1128/CMR.3.4.376}}</ref> Further investigations by John Burton Cleland and Joseph Franklin Siler completed the basic understanding of dengue transmission.<ref name=44abc/>
In 1906, transmission by the ''Aedes'' mosquitoes was confirmed, and in 1907 dengue was the second disease (after yellow fever) that was shown to be caused by a virus.<ref name=Henchal>{{cite journal|author=Henchal EA, Putnak JR|title=The dengue viruses|journal=Clin. Microbiol. Rev.|volume=3|issue=4|pages=376–96|date=October 1990|pmid=2224837|pmc=358169|url=http://cmr.asm.org/cgi/reprint/3/4/376|doi=10.1128/CMR.3.4.376}}</ref> Further investigations by [[John Burton Cleland]] and [[Joseph Franklin Siler]] completed the basic understanding of dengue transmission.<ref name=Henchal/>


The marked spread of dengue during and after the Second World War has been attributed to ecologic disturbances. The same trends also led to the spread of different serotypes of the disease to new areas and to the emergence of dengue hemorrhagic fever. This severe form of the disease was first reported in the Philippines in 1953; by the 1970s, it had become a major cause of child mortality and had emerged in the Pacific and the Americas.<ref name=4abc/> Dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome were first noted in Central and South America in 1981, as DENV-2 was contracted by people who had been infected with DENV-1 several years earlier.<ref name=20abc/>
The marked spread of dengue during and after the [[World War II|Second World War]] has been attributed to ecologic disruption. The same trends also led to the spread of different serotypes of the disease to new areas, and to the emergence of dengue hemorrhagic fever. This severe form of the disease was first reported in the [[Philippines]] in 1953; by the 1970s, it had become a major cause of [[child mortality]] and had emerged in the Pacific and the Americas.<ref name=Gubler98/> Dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome were first noted in Central and South America in 1981, as DENV-2 was contracted by people who had previously been infected with DENV-1 several years earlier.<ref name=Gould/>


===Etymology===
===Etymology===
The origins of the word "dengue" are unclear, but one theory is that it is derived from the Swahili phrase "Ka-dinga pepo," which describes the disease as being caused by an evil spirit.<ref name=43abc/> The Swahili word "dinga" may have its origin in the Spanish word "dengue," meaning "fastidious" or "careful," which would describe the gait of a person suffering the bone pain of dengue fever.<ref name=45abc>Harper D. Dengue. In: [http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=dengue Online etymology dictionary]; c2001–2012. (accessed 2013 Apr 6).</ref> However, it is possible that use of the Spanish word derived from the similar-sounding Swahili word. Slaves in the West Indies who had contracted dengue were said to have the posture and gait of a dandy, and the disease was known there as "dandy fever."<ref name=46abc>{{cite web|author=Anonymous|url=http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=6620|title=Definition of Dandy fever|work=MedicineNet.com|date=15 June 1998|accessdate=25 December 2010}}</ref><ref name=47abc>{{cite book|author=Halstead SB|title=Dengue (Tropical Medicine: Science and Practice)|publisher=Imperial College Press|location=River Edge, N.J|year=2008|pages=1–20|isbn=1-84816-228-6|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=6zLd9mFwxwsC&pg=PA1}}</ref>
The origins of the Spanish word ''dengue'' are not certain, but it is possibly derived from ''dinga'' in the [[Swahili language|Swahili]] phrase ''Ka-dinga pepo'', which describes the disease as being caused by an [[evil spirit]].<ref name=EID06>{{cite journal|author=Anonymous|title=Etymologia: dengue|journal=Emerg. Infec. Dis.|year=2006|volume=12|page=893|url=http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/12/6/pdfs/et-1206.pdf|issue=6|doi=10.3201/eid1206.ET1206}}</ref> Slaves in the West Indies having contracted dengue were said to have the posture and gait of a [[dandy]], and the disease was known as "dandy fever".<ref>{{cite web|author=Anonymous|url=http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=6620|title=Definition of Dandy fever|work=MedicineNet.com|date=15 June 1998|accessdate=25 December 2010}}</ref><ref name=Hal08>{{cite book|author=Halstead SB|title=Dengue (Tropical Medicine: Science and Practice)|publisher=Imperial College Press|location=River Edge, N.J|year=2008|pages=1–10|isbn=1-84816-228-6|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=6zLd9mFwxwsC&pg=PA1}}</ref>


The term "break-bone fever" was applied by physician and United States Founding Father Benjamin Rush in a 1789 report of the 1780 epidemic in Philadelphia. In the report’s title he also used the term "bilious remitting fever."<ref name=48abc>Vaughn DW, Whitehead SS, Durbin AP. Dengue. In: Barrett AD, Stanberry LR, editors. Vaccines for biodefense and emerging and neglected diseases. San Diego (CA): Academic Press. 2009. History of dengue disease. p. 288–289.</ref> The term "dengue fever" came into general use only after 1828. Other historical terms include "breakheart fever" and "la dengue." Terms for severe disease include "infectious thrombocytopenic purpura" and "Philippine," "Thai," or "Singapore hemorrhagic fever."<ref name=47abc/>
The term "break-bone fever" was applied by physician and [[Founding Fathers of the United States|United States Founding Father]] [[Benjamin Rush]], in a 1789 report of the 1780 epidemic in [[Philadelphia]]. In the report title he uses the more formal term "bilious remitting fever".<ref name=Barrett09>{{cite book|author=Barrett AD, Stanberry LR|title=Vaccines for biodefense and emerging and neglected diseases|publisher=Academic|location=San Diego|year=2009|pages=287–323|isbn=0-12-369408-6|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=6Nu058ZNa1MC&pg=PA289}}</ref> The term dengue fever came into general use only after 1828.<ref name=Hal08/> Other historical terms include "breakheart fever" and "la dengue".<ref name=Hal08/> Terms for severe disease include "infectious thrombocytopenic purpura" and "Philippine", "Thai", or "Singapore hemorrhagic fever".<ref name=Hal08/>


==Research==
==Research==
{{see also|Dengue vaccine}}
{{see also|Dengue vaccine}}
[[File:Equipes usam técnicas de combate à dengue em Brasília.jpg|alt=Two men emptying a bag with fish into standing water; the fish eat the mosquito larvae|thumb|Public health officers releasing ''P.&nbsp;reticulata'' [[Spawn (biology)|fry]] into an [[artificial lake]] in the [[Lago Norte]] district of [[Brasília]], Brazil, as part of a vector control effort]]
[[File:Equipes usam técnicas de combate à dengue em Brasília.jpg|alt=Two men emptying a bag with fish into standing water; the fish eat the mosquito larvae|thumb|Public health officers releasing ''P.&nbsp;reticulata'' [[Spawn (biology)|fry]] into an [[artificial lake]] in the [[Lago Norte]] district of [[Brasília]], Brazil, as part of a vector control effort]]
Research efforts to prevent and treat dengue include various means of vector control,<ref name=49abc>[http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf?ua=1 Dengue: guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. Part 3.2.7: Biological control. p. 71. (accessed 2014 July 27).</ref> vaccine development, and antiviral drugs.<ref name=13abc/>
Research efforts to prevent and treat dengue include various means of vector control,<ref name=WHOp71>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]], p.&nbsp;71.</ref> vaccine development, and antiviral drugs.<ref name=WHOp137>[[#refWHO2009|WHO (2009)]] p. 137–146.</ref>


With regard to vector control, a number of novel methods have been used to reduce mosquito numbers, with some success, including placement of the guppy (Poecilia reticulata) or copepods in standing water to eat the mosquito larvae.<ref name=49abc/> For example, Figure 9 shows public health officers releasing P. reticulata fry into an artificial lake in the Lago Norte district of Brasília, Brazil, as part of a vector-control effort. Attempts are ongoing to infect the mosquito population with bacteria of the Wolbachia genus, which makes the mosquitoes partially resistant to dengue virus.<ref name=17abc/>
With regards to vector control, a number of novel methods have been used to reduce mosquito numbers with some success including the placement of the guppy (''[[Poecilia reticulata]]'') or [[copepods]] in standing water to eat the mosquito larvae.<ref name=WHOp71/> Attempts are ongoing to infect the mosquito population with bacteria of the ''[[Wolbachia]]'' genus, which makes the mosquitoes partially resistant to dengue virus.<ref name=NEJM2012/><ref>{{cite news|title='Bug' could combat dengue fever|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7804326.stm|date=2 January 2009|work=BBC NEWS|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation}}</ref> There are also trials with genetically modified male ''A.&nbsp;aegypti'' that after release into the wild mate with females, and render their offspring unable to fly.<ref>{{cite book|last=Fong|first=I|title=Challenges in Infectious Diseases|year=2013|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-1-4614-4496-1|page=219|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=Sh9ux4LRefsC&pg=PA219}}</ref>


Programs are underway to develop a dengue vaccine that will cover serotypes 1 through 4;<ref name=13abc/> and now that there is a fifth serotype, it will need to be factored in to these efforts.<ref name=9abc/> One of the concerns is that a vaccine could increase the risk of severe disease through antibody-dependent enhancement.<ref name=50abc>{{cite journal|author=Webster DP, Farrar J, Rowland-Jones S|title=Progress towards a dengue vaccine|journal=Lancet Infect Dis|volume=9|issue=11|pages=678–87|date=November 2009|pmid=19850226|doi=10.1016/S1473-3099(09)70254-3}}</ref> The ideal vaccine would be safe, would be effective after 1 or 2 injections, would cover all serotypes, would not contribute to antibody-dependent enhancement, would be easily transported and stored, and would be both affordable and cost-effective.<ref name=50abc/> As of 2012, a number of vaccines were undergoing testing.<ref name=8abc/><ref name=50abc/> The most well developed of these is based on a weakened combination of the yellow fever virus and the first 4 dengue serotypes.<ref name=8abc/><ref name=51abc>{{cite journal |author=Guy B, Barrere B, Malinowski C, Saville M, Teyssou R, Lang J |title=From research to phase III: preclinical, industrial and clinical development of the Sanofi Pasteur tetravalent dengue vaccine |journal=Vaccine |volume=29 |issue=42 |pages=7229–41 |date=September 2011 |pmid=21745521 |doi=10.1016/j.vaccine.2011.06.094}}</ref> It is hoped that the first products will be commercially available by 2016.<ref name=13abc/>
There are ongoing programs working on a dengue vaccine to cover all four serotypes.<ref name=WHOp137/> Now that there is a fifth serotype this will need to be factored in.<ref name=new_type/> One of the concerns is that a vaccine could increase the risk of severe disease through [[antibody-dependent enhancement]] (ADE).<ref name=Webster>{{cite journal|author=Webster DP, Farrar J, Rowland-Jones S|title=Progress towards a dengue vaccine|journal=Lancet Infect Dis|volume=9|issue=11|pages=678–87|date=November 2009|pmid=19850226|doi=10.1016/S1473-3099(09)70254-3}}</ref> The ideal vaccine is safe, effective after one or two injections, covers all serotypes, does not contribute to ADE, is easily transported and stored, and is both affordable and cost-effective.<ref name=Webster/> As of 2012, a number of vaccines were undergoing testing.<ref name=WHO2012>{{cite book|title=Global Strategy For Dengue Prevention And Control|year=2012|publisher=World Health Organization|isbn=978-92-4-150403-4|pages=16–17|url=http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/75303/1/9789241504034_eng.pdf}}</ref><ref name=Webster/> The most developed is based on a weakened combination of the yellow fever virus and each of the four dengue serotypes.<ref name=WHO2012/><ref>{{cite journal |author=Guy B, Barrere B, Malinowski C, Saville M, Teyssou R, Lang J |title=From research to phase III: preclinical, industrial and clinical development of the Sanofi Pasteur tetravalent dengue vaccine |journal=Vaccine |volume=29 |issue=42 |pages=7229–41 |date=September 2011 |pmid=21745521 |doi=10.1016/j.vaccine.2011.06.094}}</ref> One 2014 study of a vaccine found it was 60% effective and prevented more than 90% of severe cases.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Villar|first1=Luis|last2=Dayan|first2=Gustavo Horacio|last3=Arredondo-García|first3=José Luis|last4=Rivera|first4=Doris Maribel|last5=Cunha|first5=Rivaldo|last6=Deseda|first6=Carmen|last7=Reynales|first7=Humberto|last8=Costa|first8=Maria Selma|last9=Morales-Ramírez|first9=Javier Osvaldo|last10=Carrasquilla|first10=Gabriel|last11=Rey|first11=Luis Carlos|last12=Dietze|first12=Reynaldo|last13=Luz|first13=Kleber|last14=Rivas|first14=Enrique|last15=Montoya|first15=Maria Consuelo Miranda|last16=Supelano|first16=Margarita Cortés|last17=Zambrano|first17=Betzana|last18=Langevin|first18=Edith|last19=Boaz|first19=Mark|last20=Tornieporth|first20=Nadia|last21=Saville|first21=Melanie|last22=Noriega|first22=Fernando|title=Efficacy of a Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine in Children in Latin America|journal=New England Journal of Medicine|date=3 November 2014|pages=141103114505002|doi=10.1056/NEJMoa1411037}}</ref> It is hoped that the first products will be commercially available by 2015.<ref name=WHOp137/>


In addition to attempts to control the spread of Aedes mosquitos and work to develop a vaccine against dengue, efforts are being made to develop antiviral drugs that would be used to treat attacks of dengue fever and prevent severe complications.<ref name=52abc>{{cite journal|author=Sampath A, Padmanabhan R|title=Molecular targets for flavivirus drug discovery|journal=Antiviral Res.|volume=81|issue=1|pages=6–15|date=January 2009|pmid=18796313|pmc=2647018|doi=10.1016/j.antiviral.2008.08.004}}</ref><ref name=53abc>{{cite journal|author=Noble CG, Chen YL, Dong H, et al.|title=Strategies for development of Dengue virus inhibitors|journal=Antiviral Res.|volume=85|issue=3|pages=450–62|date=March 2010|pmid=20060421|doi=10.1016/j.antiviral.2009.12.011}}</ref> Discovery of the structure of the viral proteins may aid in the development of effective drugs.<ref name=53abc/> There are several plausible targets. One approach uses nucleoside analogues to inhibit the viral RNA–dependent RNA polymerase (within the NS5 protein), which copies the viral genetic material. It may also be possible to develop specific inhibitors of the viral protease (within the NS3 protein), which cleaves functional proteins from the viral polyprotein.<ref name=54abc>{{cite journal|author=Tomlinson SM, Malmstrom RD, Watowich SJ|title=New approaches to structure-based discovery of dengue protease inhibitors|journal=Infectious Disorders Drug Targets|volume=9|issue=3|pages=327–43|date=June 2009|pmid=19519486|doi=10.2174/1871526510909030327}}</ref> Finally, it may be possible to develop entry inhibitors that will prevent the virus from entering cells or inhibitors of the 5′ capping process that is required for viral replication.<ref name=52abc/>
Apart from attempts to control the spread of the ''Aedes'' mosquito and work to develop a vaccine against dengue, there are ongoing efforts to develop [[antiviral drug]]s that would be used to treat attacks of dengue fever and prevent severe complications.<ref name=Sampath>{{cite journal|author=Sampath A, Padmanabhan R|title=Molecular targets for flavivirus drug discovery|journal=Antiviral Res.|volume=81|issue=1|pages=6–15|date=January 2009|pmid=18796313|pmc=2647018|doi=10.1016/j.antiviral.2008.08.004}}</ref><ref name=Noble>{{cite journal|author=Noble CG, Chen YL, Dong H, et al.|title=Strategies for development of Dengue virus inhibitors|journal=Antiviral Res.|volume=85|issue=3|pages=450–62|date=March 2010|pmid=20060421|doi=10.1016/j.antiviral.2009.12.011}}</ref> Discovery of the structure of the viral proteins may aid the development of effective drugs.<ref name=Noble/> There are several plausible targets. The first approach is inhibition of the viral [[RNA-dependent RNA polymerase]] (coded by NS5), which copies the viral genetic material, with [[nucleoside analog]]s. Secondly, it may be possible to develop specific [[Protease inhibitor (pharmacology)|inhibitors]] of the viral [[protease]] (coded by NS3), which [[protein splicing|splices]] viral proteins.<ref name="pmid19519486">{{cite journal|author=Tomlinson SM, Malmstrom RD, Watowich SJ|title=New approaches to structure-based discovery of dengue protease inhibitors|journal=Infectious Disorders Drug Targets|volume=9|issue=3|pages=327–43|date=June 2009|pmid=19519486|doi=10.2174/1871526510909030327}}</ref> Finally, it may be possible to develop [[entry inhibitor]]s, which stop the virus entering cells, or inhibitors of the [[Five prime cap|5′ cap]]ping process, which is required for viral replication.<ref name=Sampath/>


==Conclusions==
==Notes==
{{Reflist|30em}}
The world has seen large increases in the rates of dengue fever over the past 50 years. Although this disease occurs most commonly in the tropics and subtropics, many cases are now being seen among returning travellers in all areas of the world.<p>Most cases can be managed with oral rehydration and close follow-up. Occasionally, the judicious use of intravenous fluids is required to maintain sufficient urinary output and perfusion. Even less commonly, dengue may cause severe disease requiring blood transfusions and admission for intensive care.<p>While efforts are being made to develop a vaccine, prevention currently relies primarily on reducing the habitat of the vector, ''A. aegypti'', and avoiding its bite. Habitat reduction involves decreasing mosquitos’ access to stagnant bodies of water or, if that is not possible, applying insecticide.


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Refbegin}}
* <span id="refWHO2009" class="citation">{{cite book|author=WHO|url=http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547871_eng.pdf|title=Dengue Guidelines for Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention and Control|location=Geneva|publisher=World Health Organization|year=2009|isbn=92-4-154787-1}}</span>
{{Refend}}

==External links==
==External links==
{{PubMed Indexed Talk}}
{{PubMed Indexed Talk}}

Revision as of 08:46, 5 January 2015

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Dengue fever (UK: /ˈdɛŋɡ/ or US: /ˈdɛŋɡ/), also known as breakbone fever, is a mosquito-borne tropical disease caused by the dengue virus. Symptoms include fever, headache, muscle and joint pains, and a characteristic skin rash that is similar to measles. In a small proportion of cases the disease develops into the life-threatening dengue hemorrhagic fever, resulting in bleeding, low levels of blood platelets and blood plasma leakage, or into dengue shock syndrome, where dangerously low blood pressure occurs.

Dengue is transmitted by several species of mosquito within the genus Aedes, principally A. aegypti. The virus has five different types;[1] infection with one type usually gives lifelong immunity to that type, but only short-term immunity to the others. Subsequent infection with a different type increases the risk of severe complications. As there is no commercially available vaccine, prevention is sought by reducing the habitat and the number of mosquitoes and limiting exposure to bites.

Treatment of acute dengue is supportive, using either oral or intravenous rehydration for mild or moderate disease, and intravenous fluids and blood transfusion for more severe cases. The number of cases of dengue fever has increased dramatically since the 1960s, with between 50 and 528 million people infected yearly.[2][3] Early descriptions of the condition date from 1779, and its viral cause and transmission were understood by the early 20th century. Dengue has become a global problem since the Second World War and is endemic in more than 110 countries. Apart from eliminating the mosquitoes, work is ongoing on a vaccine, as well as medication targeted directly at the virus.

Signs and symptoms

Outline of a human torso with arrows indicating the organs affected in the various stages of dengue fever
Schematic depiction of the symptoms of dengue fever

Typically, people infected with dengue virus are asymptomatic (80%) or only have mild symptoms such as an uncomplicated fever.[2][4][5] Others have more severe illness (5%), and in a small proportion it is life-threatening.[2][5] The incubation period (time between exposure and onset of symptoms) ranges from 3 to 14 days, but most often it is 4 to 7 days.[6] Therefore, travelers returning from endemic areas are unlikely to have dengue if fever or other symptoms start more than 14 days after arriving home.[7] Children often experience symptoms similar to those of the common cold and gastroenteritis (vomiting and diarrhea)[8] and have a greater risk of severe complications,[7][9] though initial symptoms are generally mild but include high fever.[9]

Clinical course

Clinical course of dengue fever[10]

The characteristic symptoms of dengue are sudden-onset fever, headache (typically located behind the eyes), muscle and joint pains, and a rash. The alternative name for dengue, "breakbone fever", comes from the associated muscle and joint pains.[2][11] The course of infection is divided into three phases: febrile, critical, and recovery.[10]

The febrile phase involves high fever, potentially over 40 °C (104 °F), and is associated with generalized pain and a headache; this usually lasts two to seven days.[10][11] Nausea and vomiting may also occur.[9] A rash occurs in 50–80% of those with symptoms[11][12] in the first or second day of symptoms as flushed skin, or later in the course of illness (days 4–7), as a measles-like rash.[12][13] A rash described as "islands of white in a sea of red" has also been described.[14] Some petechiae (small red spots that do not disappear when the skin is pressed, which are caused by broken capillaries) can appear at this point,[10] as may some mild bleeding from the mucous membranes of the mouth and nose.[7][11] The fever itself is classically biphasic or saddleback in nature, breaking and then returning for one or two days.[13][14]

The rash of dengue fever in the acute stage of the infection

In some people, the disease proceeds to a critical phase as fever resolves.[9] During this period there is leakage of plasma from the blood vessels which typically lasts one to two days.[10] This may result in fluid accumulation in the chest and abdominal cavity as well as depletion of fluid from the circulation and decreased blood supply to vital organs.[10] There may also be organ dysfunction and severe bleeding, typically from the gastrointestinal tract.[7][10] Shock (dengue shock syndrome) and hemorrhage (dengue hemorrhagic fever) occur in less than 5% of all cases of dengue,[7] however those who have previously been infected with other serotypes of dengue virus ("secondary infection") are at an increased risk.[7][15] This critical phase, while rare, occurs relatively more commonly in children and young adults.[9]

The rash that commonly forms during the recovery from dengue fever with its classic islands of white in a sea of red.

The recovery phase occurs next, with resorption of the leaked fluid into the bloodstream.[10] This usually lasts two to three days.[7] The improvement is often striking, and can be accompanied with severe itching and a slow heart rate.[7][10] Another rash may occur with either a maculopapular or a vasculitic appearance, which is followed by peeling of the skin.[9] During this stage, a fluid overload state may occur; if it affects the brain, it may cause a reduced level of consciousness or seizures.[7] A feeling of fatigue may last for weeks in adults.[9]

Associated problems

Dengue can occasionally affect several other body systems,[10] either in isolation or along with the classic dengue symptoms.[8] A decreased level of consciousness occurs in 0.5–6% of severe cases, which is attributable either to inflammation of the brain by the virus or indirectly as a result of impairment of vital organs, for example, the liver.[8][14][16]

Other neurological disorders have been reported in the context of dengue, such as transverse myelitis and Guillain-Barré syndrome.[8][16] Infection of the heart and acute liver failure are among the rarer complications.[7][10]

Cause

Virology

A transmission electron microscopy image showing dengue virus
A TEM micrograph showing dengue virus virions (the cluster of dark dots near the center)

Dengue fever virus (DENV) is an RNA virus of the family Flaviviridae; genus Flavivirus. Other members of the same genus include yellow fever virus, West Nile virus, St. Louis encephalitis virus, Japanese encephalitis virus, tick-borne encephalitis virus, Kyasanur forest disease virus, and Omsk hemorrhagic fever virus.[14] Most are transmitted by arthropods (mosquitoes or ticks), and are therefore also referred to as arboviruses (arthropod-borne viruses).[14]

The dengue virus genome (genetic material) contains about 11,000 nucleotide bases, which code for the three different types of protein molecules (C, prM and E) that form the virus particle and seven other types of protein molecules (NS1, NS2a, NS2b, NS3, NS4a, NS4b, NS5) that are only found in infected host cells and are required for replication of the virus.[15][17] There are five[1] strains of the virus, called serotypes, of which the first four are referred to as DENV-1, DENV-2, DENV-3 and DENV-4.[4] The fifth type was announced in 2013.[1] The distinctions between the serotypes are based on their antigenicity.[18]

Transmission

Close-up photograph of an Aedes aegypti mosquito biting human skin
The mosquito Aedes aegypti feeding on a human host

Dengue virus is primarily transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, particularly A. aegypti.[4] These mosquitoes usually live between the latitudes of 35° North and 35° South below an elevation of 1,000 metres (3,300 ft).[4] They typically bite during the day, particularly in the early morning and in the evening,[19][20] but they are able to bite and thus spread infection at any time of day all during the year.[21] Other Aedes species that transmit the disease include A. albopictus, A. polynesiensis and A. scutellaris.[4] Humans are the primary host of the virus,[4][14] but it also circulates in nonhuman primates.[22] An infection can be acquired via a single bite.[23] A female mosquito that takes a blood meal from a person infected with dengue fever, during the initial 2–10 day febrile period, becomes itself infected with the virus in the cells lining its gut.[24] About 8–10 days later, the virus spreads to other tissues including the mosquito's salivary glands and is subsequently released into its saliva. The virus seems to have no detrimental effect on the mosquito, which remains infected for life.[6] Aedes aegypti is particularly involved, as it prefers to lay its eggs in artificial water containers, to live in close proximity to humans, and to feed on people rather than other vertebrates.[6]

Dengue can also be transmitted via infected blood products and through organ donation.[25][26] In countries such as Singapore, where dengue is endemic, the risk is estimated to be between 1.6 and 6 per 10,000 transfusions.[27] Vertical transmission (from mother to child) during pregnancy or at birth has been reported.[28] Other person-to-person modes of transmission have also been reported, but are very unusual.[11] The genetic variation in dengue viruses is region specific, suggestive that establishment into new territories is relatively infrequent, despite dengue emerging in new regions in recent decades.[9]

Predisposition

Severe disease is more common in babies and young children, and in contrast to many other infections it is more common in children that are relatively well nourished.[7] Other risk factors for severe disease include female sex, high body mass index,[9] and viral load.[29] While each serotype can cause the full spectrum of disease,[15] virus strain is a risk factor.[9] Infection with one serotype is thought to produce lifelong immunity to that type, but only short-term protection against the other three.[4][11] The risk of severe disease from secondary infection increases if someone previously exposed to serotype DENV-1 contracts serotype DENV-2 or DENV-3, or if someone previously exposed to DENV-3 acquires DENV-2.[17] Dengue can be life-threatening in people with chronic diseases such as diabetes and asthma.[17]

Polymorphisms (normal variations) in particular genes have been linked with an increased risk of severe dengue complications. Examples include the genes coding for the proteins known as TNFα, mannan-binding lectin,[2] CTLA4, TGFβ,[15] DC-SIGN, PLCE1, and particular forms of human leukocyte antigen from gene variations of HLA-B.[9][17] A common genetic abnormality, especially in Africans, known as glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, appears to increase the risk.[29] Polymorphisms in the genes for the vitamin D receptor and FcγR seem to offer protection against severe disease in secondary dengue infection.[17]

Mechanism

When a mosquito carrying dengue virus bites a person, the virus enters the skin together with the mosquito's saliva. It binds to and enters white blood cells, and reproduces inside the cells while they move throughout the body. The white blood cells respond by producing a number of signaling proteins, such as cytokines and interferons, which are responsible for many of the symptoms, such as the fever, the flu-like symptoms and the severe pains. In severe infection, the virus production inside the body is greatly increased, and many more organs (such as the liver and the bone marrow) can be affected. Fluid from the bloodstream leaks through the wall of small blood vessels into body cavities due to capillary permeability. As a result, less blood circulates in the blood vessels, and the blood pressure becomes so low that it cannot supply sufficient blood to vital organs. Furthermore, dysfunction of the bone marrow due to infection of the stromal cells leads to reduced numbers of platelets, which are necessary for effective blood clotting; this increases the risk of bleeding, the other major complication of dengue fever.[29]

Viral replication

Once inside the skin, dengue virus binds to Langerhans cells (a population of dendritic cells in the skin that identifies pathogens).[29] The virus enters the cells through binding between viral proteins and membrane proteins on the Langerhans cell, specifically the C-type lectins called DC-SIGN, mannose receptor and CLEC5A.[15] DC-SIGN, a non-specific receptor for foreign material on dendritic cells, seems to be the main point of entry.[17] The dendritic cell moves to the nearest lymph node. Meanwhile, the virus genome is translated in membrane-bound vesicles on the cell's endoplasmic reticulum, where the cell's protein synthesis apparatus produces new viral proteins that replicate the viral RNA and begin to form viral particles. Immature virus particles are transported to the Golgi apparatus, the part of the cell where some of the proteins receive necessary sugar chains (glycoproteins). The now mature new viruses bud on the surface of the infected cell and are released by exocytosis. They are then able to enter other white blood cells, such as monocytes and macrophages.[15]

The initial reaction of infected cells is to produce interferon, a cytokine that raises a number of defenses against viral infection through the innate immune system by augmenting the production of a large group of proteins mediated by the JAK-STAT pathway. Some serotypes of dengue virus appear to have mechanisms to slow down this process. Interferon also activates the adaptive immune system, which leads to the generation of antibodies against the virus as well as T cells that directly attack any cell infected with the virus.[15] Various antibodies are generated; some bind closely to the viral proteins and target them for phagocytosis (ingestion by specialized cells and destruction), but some bind the virus less well and appear instead to deliver the virus into a part of the phagocytes where it is not destroyed but is able to replicate further.[15]

Severe disease

It is not entirely clear why secondary infection with a different strain of dengue virus places people at risk of dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome. The most widely accepted hypothesis is that of antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). The exact mechanism behind ADE is unclear. It may be caused by poor binding of non-neutralizing antibodies and delivery into the wrong compartment of white blood cells that have ingested the virus for destruction.[15][17] There is a suspicion that ADE is not the only mechanism underlying severe dengue-related complications,[2][16] and various lines of research have implied a role for T cells and soluble factors such as cytokines and the complement system.[29]

Severe disease is marked by the problems of capillary permeability (an allowance of fluid and protein normally contained within blood to pass) and disordered blood clotting.[8][9] These changes appear associated with a disordered state of the endothelial glycocalyx, which acts as a molecular filter of blood components.[9] Leaky capillaries (and the critical phase) are thought to be caused by an immune system response.[9] Other processes of interest include infected cells that become necrotic—which affect both coagulation and fibrinolysis (the opposing systems of blood clotting and clot degradation)—and low platelets in the blood, also a factor in normal clotting.[29]

Diagnosis

Warning signs[9][30]
Worsening abdominal pain
Ongoing vomiting
Liver enlargement
Mucosal bleeding
High hematocrit with low platelets
Lethargy or restlessness
Serosal effusions

The diagnosis of dengue is typically made clinically, on the basis of reported symptoms and physical examination; this applies especially in endemic areas.[2] However, early disease can be difficult to differentiate from other viral infections.[7] A probable diagnosis is based on the findings of fever plus two of the following: nausea and vomiting, rash, generalized pains, low white blood cell count, positive tourniquet test, or any warning sign (see table) in someone who lives in an endemic area.[30] Warning signs typically occur before the onset of severe dengue.[10] The tourniquet test, which is particularly useful in settings where no laboratory investigations are readily available, involves the application of a blood pressure cuff at between the diastolic and systolic pressure for five minutes, followed by the counting of any petechial hemorrhages; a higher number makes a diagnosis of dengue more likely with the cut off being more than 10 to 20 per 1 inch2 (6.25 cm2).[10][31]

The diagnosis should be considered in anyone who develops a fever within two weeks of being in the tropics or subtropics.[9] It can be difficult to distinguish dengue fever and chikungunya, a similar viral infection that shares many symptoms and occurs in similar parts of the world to dengue.[11] Often, investigations are performed to exclude other conditions that cause similar symptoms, such as malaria, leptospirosis, viral hemorrhagic fever, typhoid fever, meningococcal disease, measles, and influenza.[7][32]

The earliest change detectable on laboratory investigations is a low white blood cell count, which may then be followed by low platelets and metabolic acidosis.[7] A moderately elevated level of aminotransferase (AST and ALT) from the liver is commonly associated with low platelets and white blood cells.[9] In severe disease, plasma leakage results in hemoconcentration (as indicated by a rising hematocrit) and hypoalbuminemia.[7] Pleural effusions or ascites can be detected by physical examination when large,[7] but the demonstration of fluid on ultrasound may assist in the early identification of dengue shock syndrome.[2][7] The use of ultrasound is limited by lack of availability in many settings.[2] Dengue shock syndrome is present if pulse pressure drops to ≤ 20 mm Hg along with peripheral vascular collapse.[9] Peripheral vascular collapse is determined in children via delayed capillary refill, rapid heart rate, or cold extremities.[10] While warning signs are an important aspect for early detection of potential serious disease, the evidence for any specific clinical or laboratory marker is weak.[33]

Classification

The World Health Organization's 2009 classification divides dengue fever into two groups: uncomplicated and severe.[2][30] This replaces the 1997 WHO classification, which needed to be simplified as it had been found to be too restrictive, though the older classification is still widely used[30] including by the World Health Organization's Regional Office for South-East Asia as of 2011.[34] Severe dengue is defined as that associated with severe bleeding, severe organ dysfunction, or severe plasma leakage while all other cases are uncomplicated.[30] The 1997 classification divided dengue into undifferentiated fever, dengue fever, and dengue hemorrhagic fever.[7][35] Dengue hemorrhagic fever was subdivided further into grades I–IV. Grade I is the presence only of easy bruising or a positive tourniquet test in someone with fever, grade II is the presence of spontaneous bleeding into the skin and elsewhere, grade III is the clinical evidence of shock, and grade IV is shock so severe that blood pressure and pulse cannot be detected.[35] Grades III and IV are referred to as "dengue shock syndrome".[30][35]

Laboratory tests

Graph of when laboratory tests for dengue fever become positive. Day zero refers to the start of symptoms, 1st refers to in those with a primary infection, and 2nd refers to in those with a secondary infection.[9]

The diagnosis of dengue fever may be confirmed by microbiological laboratory testing.[30][36] This can be done by virus isolation in cell cultures, nucleic acid detection by PCR, viral antigen detection (such as for NS1) or specific antibodies (serology).[17][32] Virus isolation and nucleic acid detection are more accurate than antigen detection, but these tests are not widely available due to their greater cost.[32] Detection of NS1 during the febrile phase of a primary infection may be greater than 90% sensitive however is only 60–80% in subsequent infections.[9] All tests may be negative in the early stages of the disease.[7][17] PCR and viral antigen detection are more accurate in the first seven days.[9] In 2012 a PCR test was introduced that can run on equipment used to diagnose influenza; this is likely to improve access to PCR-based diagnosis.[37]

These laboratory tests are only of diagnostic value during the acute phase of the illness with the exception of serology. Tests for dengue virus-specific antibodies, types IgG and IgM, can be useful in confirming a diagnosis in the later stages of the infection. Both IgG and IgM are produced after 5–7 days. The highest levels (titres) of IgM are detected following a primary infection, but IgM is also produced in reinfection. IgM becomes undetectable 30–90 days after a primary infection, but earlier following re-infections. IgG, by contrast, remains detectable for over 60 years and, in the absence of symptoms, is a useful indicator of past infection. After a primary infection IgG reaches peak levels in the blood after 14–21 days. In subsequent re-infections, levels peak earlier and the titres are usually higher. Both IgG and IgM provide protective immunity to the infecting serotype of the virus.[6][11][17] In testing for IgG and IgM antibodies there may be cross-reactivity with other flaviviruses which may result in a false positive after recent infections or vaccinations with yellow fever virus or Japanese encephalitis.[9] The detection of IgG alone is not considered diagnostic unless blood samples are collected 14 days apart and a greater than fourfold increase in levels of specific IgG is detected. In a person with symptoms, the detection of IgM is considered diagnostic.[6]

Prevention

A black and white photograph of people filling in a ditch with standing water
A 1920s photograph of efforts to disperse standing water and thus decrease mosquito populations

There are no approved vaccines for the dengue virus.[2] Prevention thus depends on control of and protection from the bites of the mosquito that transmits it.[19][38] The World Health Organization recommends an Integrated Vector Control program consisting of five elements:[19]

  1. Advocacy, social mobilization and legislation to ensure that public health bodies and communities are strengthened;
  2. Collaboration between the health and other sectors (public and private);
  3. An integrated approach to disease control to maximize use of resources;
  4. Evidence-based decision making to ensure any interventions are targeted appropriately; and
  5. Capacity-building to ensure an adequate response to the local situation.

The primary method of controlling A. aegypti is by eliminating its habitats.[19] This is done by getting rid of open sources of water, or if this is not possible, by adding insecticides or biological control agents to these areas.[19] Generalized spraying with organophosphate or pyrethroid insecticides, while sometimes done, is not thought to be effective.[5] Reducing open collections of water through environmental modification is the preferred method of control, given the concerns of negative health effects from insecticides and greater logistical difficulties with control agents.[19] People can prevent mosquito bites by wearing clothing that fully covers the skin, using mosquito netting while resting, and/or the application of insect repellent (DEET being the most effective).[23] However, these methods appear not to be sufficiently effective, as the frequency of outbreaks appears to be increasing in some areas, probably due to urbanization increasing the habitat of A. aegypti. The range of the disease appears to be expanding possibly due to climate change.[1]

Management

There are no specific antiviral drugs for dengue, however maintaining proper fluid balance is important.[9] Treatment depends on the symptoms.[39] Those who are able to drink, are passing urine, have no "warning signs" and are otherwise healthy can be managed at home with daily follow up and oral rehydration therapy.[39] Those who have other health problems, have "warning signs" or who cannot manage regular follow up should be cared for in hospital.[7][39] In those with severe dengue care should be provided in an area where there is access to an intensive care unit.[39]

Intravenous hydration, if required, is typically only needed for one or two days.[39] The rate of fluid administration is titrated to a urinary output of 0.5–1 mL/kg/h, stable vital signs and normalization of hematocrit.[7] The smallest amount of fluid required to achieve this is recommended.[39] Invasive medical procedures such as nasogastric intubation, intramuscular injections and arterial punctures are avoided, in view of the bleeding risk.[7] Paracetamol (acetaminophen) is used for fever and discomfort while NSAIDs such as ibuprofen and aspirin are avoided as they might aggravate the risk of bleeding.[39] Blood transfusion is initiated early in people presenting with unstable vital signs in the face of a decreasing hematocrit, rather than waiting for the hemoglobin concentration to decrease to some predetermined "transfusion trigger" level.[40] Packed red blood cells or whole blood are recommended, while platelets and fresh frozen plasma are usually not.[40] There is not enough evidence to determine if corticosteroids have a positive or negative effect in dengue fever.[41]

During the recovery phase intravenous fluids are discontinued to prevent a state of fluid overload.[7] If fluid overload occurs and vital signs are stable, stopping further fluid may be all that is needed.[40] If a person is outside of the critical phase, a loop diuretic such as furosemide may be used to eliminate excess fluid from the circulation.[40]

Epidemiology

World map showing the countries where the Aedes mosquito is found (the southern US, eastern Brazil and most of sub-Saharan Africa), as well as those where Aedes and dengue have been reported (most of Central and tropical South America, South and Southeast Asia and many parts of tropical Africa).
Dengue distribution in 2006
  Epidemic dengue and A. aegypti
  A. aegypti, without epidemic dengue

Most people with dengue recover without any ongoing problems.[30] The fatality rate is 1–5%,[7] and less than 1% with adequate treatment;[30] however those who develop significantly low blood pressure may have a fatality rate of up to 26%.[7] Dengue is common in more than 110 countries.[7] It infects 50 to 528 million people worldwide a year, leading to half a million hospitalizations,[2][3] and approximately 25,000 deaths.[8] For the decade of the 2000s, 12 countries in Southeast Asia were estimated to have about 3 million infections and 6,000 deaths annually.[42] It is reported in at least 22 countries in Africa; but is likely present in all of them with 20% of the population at risk.[43] This makes it one of the most common vector-borne diseases worldwide.[33]

Infections are most commonly acquired in the urban environment.[6] In recent decades, the expansion of villages, towns and cities in the areas in which it is common, and the increased mobility of people has increased the number of epidemics and circulating viruses. Dengue fever, which was once confined to Southeast Asia, has now spread to Southern China, countries in the Pacific Ocean and America,[6] and might pose a threat to Europe.[5]

Rates of dengue increased 30 fold between 1960 and 2010.[44] This increase is believed to be due to a combination of urbanization, population growth, increased international travel, and global warming.[2] The geographical distribution is around the equator. Of the 2.5 billion people living in areas where it is common 70% are from Asia and the Pacific.[44] An infection with dengue is second only to malaria as a diagnosed cause of fever among travelers returning from the developing world.[11] It is the most common viral disease transmitted by arthropods,[15] and has a disease burden estimated at 1,600 disability-adjusted life years per million population.[17] The World Health Organization counts dengue as one of seventeen neglected tropical diseases.[45]

Like most arboviruses, dengue virus is maintained in nature in cycles that involve preferred blood-sucking vectors and vertebrate hosts.[6] The viruses are maintained in the forests of Southeast Asia and Africa by transmission from female Aedes mosquitoes—of species other than A. aegypti—to their offspring and to lower primates.[6] In towns and cities, the virus is primarily transmitted by the highly domesticated A. aegypti. In rural settings the virus is transmitted to humans by A. aegypti and other species of Aedes such as A. albopictus.[6] Both these species had expanding ranges in the second half of the 20th century.[9] In all settings the infected lower primates or humans greatly increase the number of circulating dengue viruses, in a process called amplification.[6]

History

The first record of a case of probable dengue fever is in a Chinese medical encyclopedia from the Jin Dynasty (265–420 AD) which referred to a "water poison" associated with flying insects.[46][47] The primary vector, A. aegypti, spread out of Africa in the 15th to 19th centuries due in part to increased globalization secondary to the slave trade.[9] There have been descriptions of epidemics in the 17th century, but the most plausible early reports of dengue epidemics are from 1779 and 1780, when an epidemic swept across Asia, Africa and North America.[47] From that time until 1940, epidemics were infrequent.[47]

In 1906, transmission by the Aedes mosquitoes was confirmed, and in 1907 dengue was the second disease (after yellow fever) that was shown to be caused by a virus.[48] Further investigations by John Burton Cleland and Joseph Franklin Siler completed the basic understanding of dengue transmission.[48]

The marked spread of dengue during and after the Second World War has been attributed to ecologic disruption. The same trends also led to the spread of different serotypes of the disease to new areas, and to the emergence of dengue hemorrhagic fever. This severe form of the disease was first reported in the Philippines in 1953; by the 1970s, it had become a major cause of child mortality and had emerged in the Pacific and the Americas.[47] Dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome were first noted in Central and South America in 1981, as DENV-2 was contracted by people who had previously been infected with DENV-1 several years earlier.[14]

Etymology

The origins of the Spanish word dengue are not certain, but it is possibly derived from dinga in the Swahili phrase Ka-dinga pepo, which describes the disease as being caused by an evil spirit.[46] Slaves in the West Indies having contracted dengue were said to have the posture and gait of a dandy, and the disease was known as "dandy fever".[49][50]

The term "break-bone fever" was applied by physician and United States Founding Father Benjamin Rush, in a 1789 report of the 1780 epidemic in Philadelphia. In the report title he uses the more formal term "bilious remitting fever".[51] The term dengue fever came into general use only after 1828.[50] Other historical terms include "breakheart fever" and "la dengue".[50] Terms for severe disease include "infectious thrombocytopenic purpura" and "Philippine", "Thai", or "Singapore hemorrhagic fever".[50]

Research

Two men emptying a bag with fish into standing water; the fish eat the mosquito larvae
Public health officers releasing P. reticulata fry into an artificial lake in the Lago Norte district of Brasília, Brazil, as part of a vector control effort

Research efforts to prevent and treat dengue include various means of vector control,[52] vaccine development, and antiviral drugs.[38]

With regards to vector control, a number of novel methods have been used to reduce mosquito numbers with some success including the placement of the guppy (Poecilia reticulata) or copepods in standing water to eat the mosquito larvae.[52] Attempts are ongoing to infect the mosquito population with bacteria of the Wolbachia genus, which makes the mosquitoes partially resistant to dengue virus.[9][53] There are also trials with genetically modified male A. aegypti that after release into the wild mate with females, and render their offspring unable to fly.[54]

There are ongoing programs working on a dengue vaccine to cover all four serotypes.[38] Now that there is a fifth serotype this will need to be factored in.[1] One of the concerns is that a vaccine could increase the risk of severe disease through antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE).[55] The ideal vaccine is safe, effective after one or two injections, covers all serotypes, does not contribute to ADE, is easily transported and stored, and is both affordable and cost-effective.[55] As of 2012, a number of vaccines were undergoing testing.[20][55] The most developed is based on a weakened combination of the yellow fever virus and each of the four dengue serotypes.[20][56] One 2014 study of a vaccine found it was 60% effective and prevented more than 90% of severe cases.[57] It is hoped that the first products will be commercially available by 2015.[38]

Apart from attempts to control the spread of the Aedes mosquito and work to develop a vaccine against dengue, there are ongoing efforts to develop antiviral drugs that would be used to treat attacks of dengue fever and prevent severe complications.[58][59] Discovery of the structure of the viral proteins may aid the development of effective drugs.[59] There are several plausible targets. The first approach is inhibition of the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (coded by NS5), which copies the viral genetic material, with nucleoside analogs. Secondly, it may be possible to develop specific inhibitors of the viral protease (coded by NS3), which splices viral proteins.[60] Finally, it may be possible to develop entry inhibitors, which stop the virus entering cells, or inhibitors of the 5′ capping process, which is required for viral replication.[58]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Normile D (2013). "Surprising new dengue virus throws a spanner in disease control efforts". Science. 342 (6157): 415. doi:10.1126/science.342.6157.415. PMID 24159024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Whitehorn J, Farrar J (2010). "Dengue". Br. Med. Bull. 95: 161–73. doi:10.1093/bmb/ldq019. PMID 20616106.
  3. ^ a b Bhatt S, Gething PW, Brady OJ; et al. (April 2013). "The global distribution and burden of dengue". Nature. 496 (7446): 504–7. doi:10.1038/nature12060. PMC 3651993. PMID 23563266. {{cite journal}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g WHO (2009), pp. 14–16.
  5. ^ a b c d Reiter P (11 March 2010). "Yellow fever and dengue: a threat to Europe?". Euro Surveill. 15 (10): 19509. PMID 20403310.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Gubler DJ (2010). "Dengue viruses". In Mahy BWJ, Van Regenmortel MHV (ed.). Desk Encyclopedia of Human and Medical Virology. Boston: Academic Press. pp. 372–82. ISBN 0-12-375147-0.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Ranjit S, Kissoon N (January 2011). "Dengue hemorrhagic fever and shock syndromes". Pediatr. Crit. Care Med. 12 (1): 90–100. doi:10.1097/PCC.0b013e3181e911a7. PMID 20639791.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Varatharaj A (2010). "Encephalitis in the clinical spectrum of dengue infection". Neurol. India. 58 (4): 585–91. doi:10.4103/0028-3886.68655. PMID 20739797.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Simmons CP, Farrar JJ, Nguyen vV, Wills B (April 2012). "Dengue". N Engl J Med. 366 (15): 1423–32. doi:10.1056/NEJMra1110265. PMID 22494122.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Cite error: The named reference "NEJM2012" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n WHO (2009) p. 25–27 Cite error: The named reference "WHOp25" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Chen LH, Wilson ME (October 2010). "Dengue and chikungunya infections in travelers". Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases. 23 (5): 438–44. doi:10.1097/QCO.0b013e32833c1d16. PMID 20581669.
  12. ^ a b Wolff K, Johnson RA (eds.) (2009). "Viral infections of skin and mucosa". Fitzpatrick's color atlas and synopsis of clinical dermatology (6th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill Medical. pp. 810–2. ISBN 978-0-07-159975-7. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  13. ^ a b Knoop KJ, Stack LB, Storrow A, Thurman RJ (eds.) (2010). "Tropical medicine". Atlas of emergency medicine (3rd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill Professional. pp. 658–9. ISBN 0-07-149618-1. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Gould EA, Solomon T (February 2008). "Pathogenic flaviviruses". The Lancet. 371 (9611): 500–9. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60238-X. PMID 18262042.
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