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Cocirculation of dengue serotypes, Delhi, India, 2003.


To the Editor: Delhi, in the northern part of India, has had outbreaks of dengue dengue
 or breakbone fever or dandy fever

Infectious, disabling mosquito-borne fever. Other symptoms include extreme joint pain and stiffness, intense pain behind the eyes, a return of fever after brief pause, and a characteristic rash.
 caused by various dengue virus dengue virus
n.
A virus of the genus Flavivirus that is the cause of dengue.
 types in 1967, 1970, 1982, 1988, and 1996 (1-5). In 1988, for the first time, a few cases of dengue hemorrhagic fever hemorrhagic fever (hĕm'ərăj`ĭk), any of a group of viral diseases characterized by sudden onset, muscle and joint pain, fever, bleeding, and shock from loss of blood.  (DHF DHF dihydrofolate or dihydrofolic acid. ) were seen (4). Subsequently, we reported the largest outbreak of DHF/dengue shock syndrome (DSS (1) (Digital Signature Standard) A National Security Administration standard for authenticating an electronic message. See RSA and digital signature.

(2) (Digital Satellite S
) in Delhi in 1996 and confirmed dengue virus type 2 as the etiologic agent (5).

We report the results of virologic testing of samples received at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences This article or section reads like a and may need a .
Please help [ to improve this article] to make it in tone and meet Wikipedia's . (talk, , )

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 from patients with suspected dengue fever dengue fever (dĕng`gē, –gā), acute infectious disease caused by four closely related viruses and transmitted by the bite of the Aedes mosquito; it is also known as breakbone fever and bone-crusher disease.  or denguelike illness from Delhi and its adjoining areas during a 2003 outbreak of dengue. According to the World Health Organization (6), 2,185 laboratory-confirmed cases were reported during this outbreak.

Of the blood samples received by the virology virology, study of viruses and their role in disease. Many viruses, such as animal RNA viruses and viruses that infect bacteria, or bacteriophages, have become useful laboratory tools in genetic studies and in work on the cellular metabolic control of gene expression  laboratory, 42 were received on ice from patients with acute denguelike illness. Serum was separated aseptically and stored at -70[degrees]C. The standard method of virus cultivation, which used the C6/36 clone of the Aedes albopictus cell line, was followed with some modifications (7). On days 5 and 10, harvested cells were tested by an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA Immunofluorescent assay (IFA)
A blood test sometimes used to confirm ELISA results instead of using the Western blotting. In an IFA test, HIV antigen is mixed with a fluorescent compound and then with a sample of the patient's blood.
) using monoclonal antibodies to dengue virus types 1-4 (provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. , Atlanta, Georgia, USA, during the 1996 outbreak). If IFA results were negative for dengue viruses on first passage, a second passage was made, and cells were again harvested on days 5 and 10 for IFA. The 4 dengue virus types (obtained from the National Institute of Virology, Pune India's Premier Virology Research Institute. Previously known as Virus Research Center. Founded in collabaration with the Rockefeller Foundation. , India) were included as positive controls, and uninfected C6/36 cells were kept as negative controls.

Dengue virus could be isolated in C6/36 cells from 8 (19%) of 42 samples processed for virus isolation (Table). Of the 8 isolates, two each were identified as dengue virus types 1 and 2, three as type 3, and one as type 4. All but one isolate were from patients with uncomplicated dengue fever. One dengue type 2 isolate was obtained from a 7-year-old boy with secondary dengue infection and DHF/DSS. The ages of culture-positive patients ranged from 5 to 62 years, with a median of 22 years. These patients were equally distributed between children (< 12 years) and adults. The male-to-female ratio for these 8 patients was 5:3. The duration of fever at the time of viral isolation was 1-5 days, with a median of 3 days.

All previous outbreaks in Delhi have occurred during the monsoon (rainy) season between August and November and subsided with the onset of winter. We recently reported the results of serologic testing during the 2003 outbreak, which also occurred from September to November, with a peak in mid-October 2003 (8). This outbreak was milder than the 1996 outbreak, with less illness and death; most patients had uncomplicated dengue fever, and only a few had DHF/DSS. Of the 874 serum samples that we tested, 456 (52.3%) were positive for dengue-specific immunoglobulin M immunoglobulin M
n. Abbr. IgM
The class of antibodies found in circulating body fluids and the first antibodies to appear in response to an initial exposure to an antigen.
 antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
n.
ELISA.


Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)
A diagnostic blood test used to screen patients for AIDS or other viruses.
 (Panbio, Sinnamon Park, Queensland Sinnamon Park is a suburb of Brisbane, Australia located 14km south-west of the Brisbane CBD. Sinnamon Park is named for the pioneering Sinnamon Family. The land occupied by Sinnamon Village retirement complex and the river flats east of the Centenary Freeway were formerly the , Australia), and more than one third of these were from patients in the 21- to 30-year age group (8).

Dengue virus types 1, 2, and 3 have all been isolated during previous dengue outbreaks in Delhi, but a particular type has always predominated. During the 1996 outbreak of DHF/DSS, we had 26 isolates of dengue virus type 2, but only 1 isolate was identified as dengue type 1 (5). However, we subsequently showed that dengue virus type 1 continued to circulate during the postepidemic period and became the predominant strain (9). Dengue virus type 3 has recently reemerged in South Asia, including north India (10). We now report this culture-confirmed outbreak of dengue from Delhi, during which the simultaneous transmission of all 4 dengue virus types has been demonstrated for the first time in India, with no particular type predominating. This finding suggests that dengue is now truly endemic in this region.

Acknowledgments

We thank Duane J. Gubler, Chet Ram, Milan Chakraborty, and Raj Kumar for for providing monoclonal antibodies to the dengue serotypes and technical support.

Lalit Dar, * Ekta Gupta * Priyanka Narang, * and Shobha Broor *

* All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India

References

(1.) Balaya S, Paul SD, D'Lima LV, Pavri KM. Investigations on an outbreak of dengue in Delhi in 1967. Indian J Med Res. 1969;57:767-74.

(2.) Diesh P, Pattanayak S, Singha P, Arora DD, Mathur PS, Ghosh TK, et al. An outbreak of dengue fever in Delhi--1970. J Commun Dis. 1972;4:13-8.

(3.) Rao CVRM CVRM Coachella Valley Rescue Mission (Indio, California)
CVRM customer value relationship model
CVRM Customer/Vendor Relationship Management
, Bagchi SK, Pinto BD, Ilkal MA, Bharadwaj M, Shaikh BH, et al. The 1982 epidemic of dengue fever in Delhi. Indian J Med Res. 1985;82:271-5.

(4.) Kabra SK, Verma IC, Arora NK, Jain Y, Kalra V. Dengue haemorrhagic fever in children in Delhi. Bull World Health Organ. 1992;70:105-8.

(5.) Dar L, Broor S, Sengupta S, Xess I, Seth P. The first major outbreak of dengue hemorrhagic fever in Delhi, India. Emerg Infect Dis. 1999;5:353.

(6.) World Health Organization. Dengue fever in India--update. [cited 12 Nov 2003]. Available from http://who.int/csr/don/ 2003_11_12/en/]

(7.) Gubler DJ, Kuno G, Sather GE, Valez M, Oliver A. Mosquito cell and specific monoclonal antibodies in surveillance for dengue viruses. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1984;33: 158-65.

(8.) Gupta E, Dar L, Narang P, Srivastava VK, Broor S. Serodiagnosis serodiagnosis /se·ro·di·ag·no·sis/ (-di?ag-no´sis) diagnosis of disease based on serologic tests.serodiagnos´tic

se·ro·di·ag·no·sis
n. pl.
 of dengue during an outbreak at a tertiary care hospital in Delhi. Indian J Med Res. 2005;121:36-8.

(9.) Vajpayee M, Mohankumar K, Wali JP, Dar L, Seth P, Broor S. Dengue virus infection during post-epidemic period in Delhi, India. Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health. 1999;30:507-10.

(10.) Dash PK, Saxena P, Abhyankar A, Bhargava R, Jana AM. Emergence of dengue virus type-3 in northern India. Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health. 2005;36:370-7.

Address for correspondence: Shobha Broor, Department of Microbiology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Ansari Nagar
  • Nagar, Syria
  • Nagar, Jaiveer
  • Jaiveer, Nagar
  • Jaivir, Nagar
  • Nagar, Pakistan
  • Nagar Valley, Pakistan
  • Former State of Nagar in Pakistan
  • Nagar, Bangladesh
, New Delhi-110029, India; fax: +91-11-26588663; email: shobha.broor@gmail.com
Table. Culture-positive dengue patients *

                                Secondary infection
              Dengue type   (anti--dengue IgG antibodies   Duration of
Age (y)/sex    isolated             + by ELISA)             fever (d)

9/M             DENY-1                  Yes                     4
25/F            DENY-3                   No                     4
7/M             DENV-2                  Yes                     5
7/F             DENV-4                   No                     1
40/F            DENV-1                  Yes                     3
62/M            DENV-2                  Yes                     3
39/M            DENV-3                  Yes                     2
5/M             DENV-3                   No                     3

* ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; IgG, immunoglobulin G.
COPYRIGHT 2006 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Title Annotation:dengue hemorrhagic fever is in progression
Author:Broor, Shobha
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:9INDI
Date:Feb 1, 2006
Words:1082
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