Human hantavirus infections, Sweden.The prevalent human hantavirus hantavirus, any of a genus (Hantavirus) of single-stranded RNA viruses that are carried by rodents and transmitted to humans when they inhale vapors from contaminated rodent urine, saliva, or feces. There are many strains of hantavirus. disease in Sweden is nephropathia epidemica Nephropathia epidemica is a virus-infection caused by the Puumala virus. The incubation period is three weeks. It has a sudden onset with fever, headache, backpain and gastrointestinal symptoms, but sometimes worse symptoms such as internal hemorrhaging and it can even lead to , which is caused by Puumala virus Puumala virus is a species of hantavirus, and causes nephropathia epidemica. It is common in northern Europe and Russia. The bank vole acts as a reservoir for the virus, and nephropathia epidemica therefore peaks at the same time the population of these voles, typically and shed by infected bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus). To evaluate temporal and spatial patterns of this disease, we studied 2,468 reported cases from a highly disease-endemic region in northern Sweden. We found that, in particular, middle-aged men living in rural dwellings near coastal areas were overrepresented o·ver·rep·re·sent·ed adj. Represented in excessive or disproportionately large numbers: "Some groups, and most notably some races, may be overrepresented and others may be underrepresented" . The case-patients were most often infected in late autumn, when engaged in activities near or within manmade rodent refuges. Of 862 case-patients confident about the site of virus exposure, 50% were concentrated within 5% of the study area. The incidence of nephropathia epidemica was significantly correlated with bank vole numbers within monitored rodent populations in part of the region. Understanding this relationship may help forestall future human hantavirus outbreaks. ********** Members of the genus Hantavirus (family Bunyaviridae) are commonly transmitted to humans through infected rodent excretions and may cause two severe human diseases: hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome n. See epidemic hemorrhagic fever. and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome hantavirus pulmonary syndrome An often fatal RTI caused by a hantavirus; the first cluster occurred in the Four Corners region of Southwestern US Epidemiology Mean age 32, 61% ♀, 72% Native American Case definition Unexplained bilateral interstitial (1,2). Ecologic factors that mediate hantavirus distribution and maintenance in rodent host populations are not well known, but local variations of hantavirus antibody prevalence within host populations have been observed (3). Approximately 60,000-150,000 humans are hospitalized because of hantavirus infections Hantavirus Infections Definition Hantavirus infection is caused by a group of viruses that can infect humans with two serious illnesses: hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS), and Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS). worldwide each year, and to date, no specific treatment is available (4). Nephropathia epidemica, the less severe form of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome, is found throughout Europe, especially in Fennoscandia and European Russia (5). Nephropathia epidemica is caused by Puumala virus (PUUV), carried naturally and shed by the bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus) (1). PUUV is the only hantavirus isolated so far in Sweden. Approximately 90% of all nephropathia epidemica cases in this country are found in the four northernmost counties, hereafter denoted as the northern region (6-8). In this area, nephropathia epidemica is, second to influenza, the most prevailing serious febrile febrile /feb·rile/ (feb´ril) pertaining to or characterized by fever. feb·rile adj. Of, relating to, or characterized by fever; feverish. viral infection viral infection, n an infection by a pathogenic virus. A virus acts on the cell nucleus, taking over the genetic material within the nucleus and replicating itself. . Incidence rates are, on average, 20 per 100,000 inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. per year (6,7). In a randomized ran·dom·ize tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment. and stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers. strat·i·fied adj. Arranged in the form of layers or strata. study within northern Sweden, the prevalence of PUUV-specific immunoglobulin (Ig) M antibodies was 5.4% in adult humans, implying that approximately one eighth of human PUUV infections were diagnosed and reported (8). During 1998, a record number of nephropathia epidemica cases were reported in Sweden; 562 were serologically confirmed (9). These observations suggest that in 1998 as many as 4,500 persons in the northern region may have been exposed to and infected by PUUV. In this study, we evaluated the demographic patterns and activities in humans that are associated with the likelihood of being diagnosed with nephropathia epidemica in the northern region; examined temporal differences in the incidence of this infection to determine seasonal or periodic patterns; determined how nephropathia epidemica at the local level related to bank vole abundance in a restricted part of the region; and examined distribution of this disease within the region. Materials and Methods From January 1991 to December 1998, numbers, dates of diagnosis, and demographic details of nephropathia epidemica cases within the northern region (i.e., the counties of Norrbotten, Vasterbotten, Jamtland, and Vasternorrland) were obtained from laboratory reports from the Departments of Clinical 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 and Clinical Microbiology Clinical microbiology The adaptation of microbiological techniques to the study of the etiological agents of infectious disease. Clinical microbiologists determine the nature of infectious disease and test the ability of various antibiotics to inhibit or kill in Umea and Boden, Sweden, respectively. Diagnosis was confirmed by the detection of IgM to PUUV with either an immunofluorescence Immunofluorescence A technique that uses a fluorochrome to indicate the occurrence of a specific antigen-antibody reaction. The fluorochrome labels either an antigen or an antibody. assay or an 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. (10). For the remaining part of the period studied, January 1999-December 2001, numbers and dates of confirmed eases, without demographic details, were obtained from county medical officers. The distribution of cases by county, sex, and age groups was compared to the corresponding demographic data for the entire population of the region during the study period (11). To characterize exposure sites and possible risk behaviors, a questionnaire was sent to 1991-1998 nephropathia epidemica case-patients concerning activity and location when they were likely exposed to PUUV. If no answer was received within 2 months, a second letter was sent; those persons who still did not respond were contacted by telephone. This complementary telephone survey was restricted to patients whose condition was diagnosed during 1997 and 1998. To determine possible biases concerning sex and age classes in the retrieved answers, compared to data regarding the total human populations on those areas, we used G tests (log-linear likelihood models) for analyses of relative frequencies of received questionnaires (12). The incubation period incubation period n. 1. See latent period. 2. See incubative stage. Incubation period of nephropathia epidemica ranges from 2 to 5 weeks after infection (13). Because of uncertainty among many patients concerning the date of infection, we pooled cases by the season of diagnosis: winter (January-March), spring (April-June), summer (July-September), and autumn (October-December). We used analysis of variance (ANOVA anova see analysis of variance. ANOVA Analysis of variance, see there ) to test for variation of nephropathia epidemica incidence within and between counties, years, and seasons. Where significant F-values were observed, we tested for differences within model effects by the Tukey honest significant difference test (12). The bank vole-trapping data used in the analyses are publicly accessible and originate from a long-term rodent monitoring project in the county of Vasterbotten (available from: URL URL in full Uniform Resource Locator Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program. : http://www.eg.umu.se/personal/hornfeldt_birger/bh/sidor/index2.html). The dataset consists of trapping indices obtained from biannual bi·an·nu·al adj. 1. Happening twice each year; semiannual. 2. Occurring every two years; biennial. bi·an samplings of small mammals. Autumn bank vole abundance was estimated by snap trapping, killing and removing, in late September within a 100 x 100-km area in which 16 trapping areas were regularly distributed, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Swedish National Grid national grid Noun Brit & NZ 1. a network of high-voltage power lines linking major electric power stations 2. the arrangement of vertical and horizontal lines on an ordnance survey map . In each of the 16 5 x 5-km subareas, four 1-ha plots were subject to trapping, unless they were on untrappable sites. In all, 58 of 64 possible 1-ha plots were subject to trapping. Habitats mainly comprised managed conifer conifer (kŏn`ĭfûr) [Lat.,=cone-bearing], tree or shrub of the order Coniferales, e.g., the pine, monkey-puzzle tree, cypress, and sequoia. Most conifers bear cones and most are evergreens, though a few, such as the larch, are deciduous. forests, i.e., Pinus sylvestris and Picea abies (78%), including clearcut areas, plantation, peat bogs (18%), and agricultural land (4%) equivalent to and reflecting the general environmental composition within the main study area. The trapping effort per sampling event was normally 150 trap-nights per 1-ha plot. Five traps were set within a 1-m radius (e.g., in runways, at guidelines, or in holes) of each of 10 permanent stations, centered and spaced 10 m apart along the diagonal of the square 1-ha plot, for three consecutive nights. Traps were checked once each morning. The average total trapping effort per sampling occasion was [approximately equal to] 8.440 trap nights. The traps were baited with unfried Polish wicks, i.e., wicks dipped in cooking oil and rolled in wheat flour (14), together with pieces of dried apples. Trapping indices represent the number of voles captured per 100 trapping nights, a reflection of the relative population size on each sampling occasion. The methods and field procedures for this small mammal sampling have been described (15,16). Bank vole-trapping indices from autumn samplings, in the end of September and early October, were used as a predictor of nephropathia epidemica incidence. Human incidence data were transformed by log-normal transformation [incidence' = log (incidence + 1)] and bank vole autumn trapping indices by arcsine transformation [trapping index' = arcsine {(trapping index + 0.5) [square root of (term)] 0.5}] (12). Only patients who declared that they were confident about the occasion and site of their exposure were included in the individual-based spatial analysis (Data West Research Agency definition: see GIS glossary.) Analytical techniques to determine the spatial distribution of a variable, the relationship between the spatial distribution of variables, and the association of the variables of an area. . Each such site was assigned to the nearest 10 x 10-km node within the Swedish National Grid system, using the geographic information system geographic information system (GIS) Computerized system that relates and displays data collected from a geographic entity in the form of a map. The ability of GIS to overlay existing data with new information and display it in colour on a computer screen is used primarily to ArcView (ESRI (Environmental Systems Research Institute, Inc., Redlands, CA, www.esri.com) The world's leading developer of geographic information systems (GIS) software, including programs that plot ZIP codes and addresses, demographic information and detailed, color-coded data. , Redlands, CA). Density estimations of the distribution of these case-patients within the northern region were then calculated by fixed kernels of 95%, 75%, and 50% probabilities (17). The kernel method is a nonparametric statistical tool to recognize spatial patterns and areas of defined probability and estimated range for the distribution of study objects, e.g. nephropathia epidemica cases, and was most explicitly pictured by Worton (18) as the following: "A scaled-down probability density function Probability density function The function that describes the change of certain realizations for a continuous random variable. , namely the kernel, is placed above each data point and the estimator is constructed by adding the n components. Thus, where there is a concentration of points the kernel estimate has a higher density than where there are few points. Because each kernel is a density the resulting estimate is a true probability density function itself." Results From 1991 to 1998, a total of 1,724 persons were identified with serologically verified hantavirus infection (1,075 males, 649 females). We received answers to the questionnaires and telephone surveys from 1,305 persons (76%). Of these, 862 were confident about the time and location of hantavirus exposure, and information from them was used for more reliable exposure site identification. There was no bias in the received answers as compared to available human census data regarding county (G = 4.33, df = 3, p = 0.22), age group (G = 10.35, df = 13, p = 0.67, age groups <15 years and >79 years were respectively pooled) or sex (G = 0.78, df = 1, p = 0.38). Nephropathia epidemica occurred in persons of all age groups (range 3-92 years, mean age 47.4 years), but the age distribution of patients was significantly different from the mean age distribution of the entire human population in the region during the study period (G = 813.00, df = 1, p < 0.001, 1). Men aged 25 to 74 years and women aged 45 to 59 years were overrepresented among the case-patients, and persons of both sexes <25 years of age were underrepresented un·der·rep·re·sent·ed adj. Insufficiently or inadequately represented: the underrepresented minority groups, ignored by the government. (Figure 1). Male patients were over-represented compared to female patients (G = 103.0, df = 1, p < 0.001). Of the case-patients who answered the questionnaire and were confident about the exposure event, 82% claimed that it had occurred in or adjacent to a dwelling (year-round residence [54%] or a holiday house [28%]) and that they were engaged in handling firewood (27%), cleaning or redecorating the residence (19%), gardening or handling hay (18%). [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] When incidence data from 1999 to 2001 were added, a total of 2,468 serologically verified nephropathia epidemica cases were identified in the northern region from January 1, 1991, to December 31, 2001, giving a yearly average incidence of 25 cases per 100,000 inhabitants during the study period (Table, Figure 2). ANOVA showed that the incidence of nephropathia epidemica was not uniformly distributed between counties (F-value = 25.9154, df = 3, p < 0.001), years (F-value = 8.3595, df = 10, p < 0.001) or seasons (F-value = 19.0528, df = 3, p < 0.001), but without interaction of counties and years (F-value = 0.8801, df = 30, p = 0.6474). Tukey tests showed that, on the county level, the inland county Jamtland (Table, Figure 2) had a significantly lower incidence than Vasterbotten and Norrbotten (Tukey p < 0.05), and Vasternorrland had significantly lower incidence than Vasterbotten (Tukey p < 0.05). Of the 11 years included in the study, 1995, 1998, 1999, and 2001 had a higher incidence of infection than other years (Tukey p < 0.05). Of the four seasons, autumn and winter had significantly higher incidence than spring (Tukey p < 0.05), but autumn also differed from summer (Tukey p < 0.05). The seasonal periods that had significantly highest incidence, i.e., autumn and winter, were further evaluated in relation to the Vasterbotten bank vole-trapping indices. We compared the preceding bank vole-sampling results of the current autumn to nephropathia epidemica incidence in autumn and winter. The highest coefficient of determination Coefficient of determination A measure of the goodness of fit of the relationship between the dependent and independent variables in a regression analysis; for instance, the percentage of variation in the return of an asset explained by the market portfolio return. Also known as R-square. of nephropathia epidemica incidence from the bank vole index was found during autumn in Vasterbotten [Vasterbotten incidence' = -0.1907 + 0.8538 (trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.7526, p < 0.001], followed by Jamtland [Jamtland incidence' = -0.4046 + 0.8348 (trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.6004, p = 0.0051]; Norrbotten [Norrbotten incidence' = -0.3632 + 0.9372 (trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.5049, p = 0.0143], and Vasternorrland [Vasternorrland incidence' = -0.4489 + 0.9372 (trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.5049, p = 0.0143] (Figure 3). The winter period had high incidence, but the coefficients of determination between bank vole indices and incidences of nephropathia epidemica were very low and statistically significant only for Vasterbotten [Vasterbotten incidence' = -0.0230 + 0.6998 (trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.3753, p = 0.0451], whereas the rest were nonsignificant non·sig·nif·i·cant adj. 1. Not significant. 2. Having, producing, or being a value obtained from a statistical test that lies within the limits for being of random occurrence. ; Jamtland [Jamtland incidence' = 0. 1733 + 0.2216 (trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.0627, p = 0.4576]; Norrbotten [Norrbotten incidence' = -0.2749 + 0.8698 (trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.3052, p = 0.0780] and Vasternorrland [Vasternorrland incidence' = -0.0209 + 0.5392(trapping index'), [R.sup.2] = 0.1266, p = 0.2829] (Figure 4). [FIGURES 2,3,4 OMITTED] On the fine-tuned spatial distribution, based on the 862 confident nephropathia epidemica patients, the Kernel density estimates were strongly skewed skewed curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean. skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data towards the coastal areas of the region (Figure 5). Ninety-five percent of the cases were found within 55% of the northern region (158,209 [km.sup.2]), the 75% Kernel covers 15% of the study area (42,762 [km.sup.2]); 50% of cases were concentrated within 5% (14,329 [km.sup.2]) of the study area. [FIGURE 5 OMITTED] Discussion We found that the persons at highest risk of having clinical nephropathia epidemica were middle-aged men, a result also observed in other European studies European studies is a field of study offered by many academic colleges and universities that focuses on the current development of European integration. It basically consists of a combination of several subjects, including European history, European law, economics and sociology. (19-21). However, an earlier study on a stratified and randomly selected number of people from Vasterbotten and Norrbotten showed no differences between sexes in the actual prevalence of PUUV infection, and the highest prevalence of IgM antibodies was observed in persons [greater than or equal to] 55 years of age (8). Our finding that middle-aged men were overrepresented in relation to sex and age groups, respectively, may reflect age- or sex-related difference in, for example, risk behaviors, likelihood of seeking medical attention, symptoms, or a combination of these that merit further studies. The years of the highest incidence of nephropathia epidemica show a periodic pattern similar to that of small mammal population dynamics Population dynamics is the study of marginal and long-term changes in the numbers, individual weights and age composition of individuals in one or several populations, and biological and environmental processes influencing those changes. of northern Sweden, with approximately 3-year intervals between peaks (15,16,22). During these, and most other, years the incidence of this disease peaked in the autumn, with winters also showing high incidence. However, PUUV transmission among the sexually mature bank voles, within the studied system (23) and in a similar endemic region (24), had been shown to be highest during their reproductive summer period. Within the studied populations, few newly recruited young ant immature bank voles had PUUV antibodies (23). The temporal discrepancy on PUUV transmission between conspecific con·spe·cif·ic adj. Of or belonging to the same species. n. An organism belonging to the same species as another. Noun 1. voles vs. voles to humans is likely due to bank voles' abandoning their territoriality Territoriality Behavior patterns in which an animal actively defends a space or some other resource. One major advantage of territoriality is that it gives the territory holder exclusive access to the defended resource, which is generally associated with in autumn (25), with subsequent extensive individual movements and risk of human dwellings being entered and infested in·fest tr.v. in·fest·ed, in·fest·ing, in·fests 1. To inhabit or overrun in numbers or quantities large enough to be harmful, threatening, or obnoxious: by infected rodents when the climate becomes more harsh (26,27). That rodents invade dwellings is also an observation made from the system of deer mouse deer mouse or white-footed mouse Any of about 60 species (genus Peromyscus, family Cricetidae) of small, delicate rodents that are active at night and are found in habitats from Alaska to South America. They often outnumber all other mammals in an area. (Peromyscus maniculatus) and Sin Nombre virus The Sin Nombre virus (literally "unnamed virus" in Spanish) (SNV) is the prototypical etiologic agent of hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS). It was first isolated from rodents collected near the home of one of the initial patients with hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (28). This increased risk for human exposure to PUUV in autumn due to infestation infestation /in·fes·ta·tion/ (-fes-ta´shun) parasitic attack or subsistence on the skin and/or its appendages, as by insects, mites, or ticks; sometimes used to denote parasitic invasion of the organs and tissues, as by helminths. of dwellings by bank voles is consistent with the fact that the within-year vole vole, name for a large number of mouselike rodents, related to the lemmings. Most range in length from 3 1-2 to 7 in. (9–18 cm) and have rounded bodies with gray or brown coats, blunt muzzles, small ears concealed in the long fur, and short tails. population usually peaks in autumn (16), when the PUUV-infected bank voles generally appear in highest numbers (23,29). The significant linear correlations of the incidence of nephropathia epidemica within the four counties to the bank vole-trapping indices from Vasterbotten demonstrate a spatiotemporal spa·ti·o·tem·po·ral adj. 1. Of, relating to, or existing in both space and time. 2. Of or relating to space-time. [Latin spatium, space + temporal1. synchronization for the region in bank vole dynamics. Although the strongest association was found in Vasterbotten, the pattern was similar for the other counties, albeit with a lower coefficient of determination. Nevertheless, vole abundance in the autumn is a good predictor on the risk of nephropathia epidemica outbreaks during the subsequent autumn and winter. This observation is valuable since a large proportion of cases were identified adjacent to the sampling area of the long-term small mammal study. The ongoing long-term small mammal studies in the Four Corners region of the southwestern United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. rapidly detected changes in population densities of the monitored rodent species, several of which were hantavirus hosts (30). Findings like these highlight the relevance of long-term surveys of natural hosts of significant zoonoses Zoonoses Infections of humans caused by the transmission of disease agents that naturally live in animals. People become infected when they unwittingly intrude into the life cycle of the disease agent and become unnatural hosts. . A study during 1985 to 1991 in Vasterbotten indicated a highly significant relationship between bank vole trapping indices and nephropathia epidemica incidence during July through December (31). But the period January--June also showed a highly significant correlation between the number of bank voles in the previous autumn and the incidence of this disease (32). The same relationship, concerning the January--March period in Vasterbotten, was significant in our study. However, dynamics of the local bank vole populations have changed in the sense that annual winter declines have become more precipitous (B. Hornfeldt, pers. comm.). We are not certain what causes the overall lower incidences in the counties of Vasternorrland and Jamtland, compared to the two northernmost counties, Norrbotten and Vasterbotten. A likely explanation may be a regional difference in absolute numbers of bank voles, though it is the most common small mammal species throughout the region. That the people who became infected and answered the questionnaire may or may not constitute a random sample of the population available in the respective counties with regard to behavior outside urban settlements is another factor to be considered. Any such differences may cause disparities in frequency of contacts between humans and bank voles and the subsequent risks in acquiring a PUUV infection. Administrative limitations at the county level are inadequate to describe the actual occurrence of nephropathia epidemica in northern Sweden with any accuracy. An accurate estimate could be made by using the patterns of geographic distribution of the 862 cases (Figure 5), as described herein. Most cases in patients confident about the site of exposure were distributed along the coastal areas of the Gulf of Bothnia Noun 1. Gulf of Bothnia - a northern arm of the Baltic Sea; between Sweden and Finland Aaland islands, Ahvenanmaa, Aland islands - an archipelago of some 6,000 islands in the Gulf of Bothnia under Finnish control , where 50% of the cases clustered within 5% of the study area. This finding coincides with the actual distribution of humans in the region, and so may best explain the spatial occurrence of nephropathia epidemica. However, while the major cities and towns are located within this area, the cases are not associated with urban settlements (8,32). The remaining residents here, in rural areas, represent [less than or equal to]30% of the total population in the northern region (11). The occurrence of nephropathia epidemica in relation to the actual distribution of humans within the region needs to be further evaluated to establish whether the observed pattern is merely a reflection of human population density per se, or if environmental factors also favor and promote hantavirus circulation within local bank vole populations and encounters with humans. Lack of sheltering snow cover should force bank voles to use manmade vole refuges to avoid the harsh climate and predators (33). Thus, the more maritime climate along the coast, in which the period of adequate snow cover is delayed and shortened in comparison to the more continental inland climate, may be a contributing factor to the regional differences in incidence (34). [FIGURE 5 OMITTED] In reply to our inquiry, persons often stated that sites of human PUUV exposure were woodsheds and woodpiles, where many may have become infected while handling firewood, which stirred up PUUV-contaminated dust particles. These peridomestic bank vole harborages provide a refuge against most predators and shelter from flooding during times of heavy rainfall. Korpela and Lahdevirta (27) observed a correlation between nephropathia epidemica and small rodent occurrence inside rural dwellings, particularly in cupboards, where rodent excretions were deposited. In the present study, cleaning and redecorating were among the activities reported when exposure to PUUV was thought to have occurred. These activities also put persons at risk of inhaling PUUV-contaminated dust particles. In conclusion, middle-aged persons engaged in activities in or near manmade vole refuges were overrepresented among patients diagnosed with nephropathia epidemica. Most cases were diagnosed during autumn; this finding was more pronounced after an eruption in bank vole numbers the preceding summer and autumn. The spatial distribution of asserted sites of exposure to PUUV was skewed towards the coastal areas of the region, Bank vole dynamics and behaviors, with larger scale movements in autumn and subsequent invasion of human dwellings, together with dense human population in these areas, are among the likely candidates for the observed temporal and spatial patterns. The high human incidence and well-studied rodent community in the present system make it feasible for use as a model system to evaluate environmental factors that may influence PUUV circulation, persistence, and transmission to humans.
Table 1. Quarterly incidence of nephropathia epidemica per year and
county, and autumn trapping indices of bank voles
Incidence of notified Nephropathia
epidemica cases
Counties and Populations Season 1991 1992 1993
Norrbotten Jan-March 10.20 7.89 14.60
Inhabitants: 263.891 April-June 5.66 5.26 0.00
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 3 (c) July-Sept 1.51 4.51 4.12
Oct-Dec 10.57 12.03 0.75
Vasterbotten Jan-March 12.21 8.98 12.01
Inhabitants: 257.860 April-June 1.97 1.95 3.10
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 5 July-Sept 8.27 8.98 1.94
Oct-Dec 11.03 7.03 3.10
Vastemorrland Jan-March 4.98 3.07 6.91
Inhabitants: 256.777 April-June 1.53 0.77 1.54
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 11 July-Sept 0.77 2.68 0.38
Oct-Dec 4.21 4.60 1.92
Jamtland Jan-March 1.47 3.68 3.67
Inhabitants: 134.324 April-June 0.74 0.74 0.73
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 3 July-Sept 0.00 2.21 0.73
Oct-Dec 8.09 2.21 1.47
No. Bank voles/100 nights (d) Sept 4.19 1.94 0.55
Incidence of notified Nephropathia
epidemica cases
Counties and Populations 1994 1995 1996 1997
Norrbotten 0.75 6.01 9.08 2.67
Inhabitants: 263.891 0.75 1.13 4.92 3.81
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 3 (c) 0.75 3.01 8.32 1.52
4.11 8.27 7.57 9.15
Vasterbotten 2.69 7.68 5.00 4.63
Inhabitants: 257.860 1.92 3.46 3.46 3.86
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 5 3.85 12.29 9.62 3.86
8.47 10.37 3.85 8.49
Vastemorrland 1.15 17.04 2.34 2.36
Inhabitants: 256.777 2.69 2.71 0.78 1.57
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 11 4.61 4.26 1.95 1.18
8.07 4.65 3.12 4.32
Jamtland 2.20 1.48 3.72 0.75
Inhabitants: 134.324 0.00 0.00 0.74 0.75
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 3 1.47 2.95 0.00 0.00
5.87 5.16 2.23 5.26
No. Bank voles/100 nights (d) 2.61 5.09 2.51 1.75
Incidence of notified Nephropathia
epidemica cases
Counties and Populations 1998 1999 2000 2001
Norrbotten 15.74 23.25 1.17 11.38
Inhabitants: 263.891 18.43 5.42 3.12 1.57
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 3 (c) 13.44 1.16 1.17 7.46
19.20 2.32 10.93 12.95
Vasterbotten 10.09 35.84 4.30 9.81
Inhabitants: 257.860 13.96 13.24 3.52 8.63
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 5 18.23 3.51 3.91 5.49
30.26 6.23 9.39 10.60
Vastemorrland 7.54 16.04 0.41 8.98
Inhabitants: 256.777 7.94 8.02 0.00 5.71
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 11 16.28 2.81 2.03 9.38
30.57 1.60 10.53 17.55
Jamtland 2.28 3.06 0.00 2.33
Inhabitants: 134.324 0.76 2.30 0.00 0.78
Inhabitants/[km.sup.2]: 3 8.35 0.77 0.77 3.89
14.42 1.53 5.40 7.00
No. Bank voles/100 nights (d) 8.39 2.61 2.82 3.49
(a) No. of reported nephropathia epidemica cases per 100,000
inhabitants.
(b) No. of bank voles trapped per 100 trapnights.
(c) Average population density 1991-2001 from census.
(d) Bank vole trapping indices from Vasterbotten.
Acknowledgments We thank Goran Ericsson and Paul Haemig for their comments, which greatly improved oar article. This project was supported by grants from the Center for Environmental Research (CMF CMF Christian Medical Fellowship CMF Compressed Mortality File CMF Content Management Framework CMF Council of Michigan Foundations CMF Congressional Management Foundation (Washington DC, USA) CMF Code Monétaire et Financier 952114), the Swedish Medical Research Council (K-2000-06X-10382-08A), the County Council of Vasterbotten, and the European Community European Community: see European Union. European Community (EC) Organization formed in 1967 with the merger of the European Economic Community, European Coal and Steel Community, and European Atomic Energy Community. (contract no. BMH BMH Blount Memorial Hospital BMH Base Message Host BMH British Motor Holdings 4-CT97-2499). The Research Ethics Research ethics involves the application of fundamental ethical principles to a variety of topics involving scientific research. These include the design and implementation of research involving human participants (human experimentation); animal experimentation; various aspects of Committee of Umea University approved the part of the study involving nephropathia epidemica cases. Mr. Olsson is currently finishing a doctorate in infectious diseases infectious diseases: see communicable diseases. and animal ecology at Umea University and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences The university has four faculties: Faculty of Landscape Planning, Horticulture and Agricultural Science, Faculty of Natural Resources and Agriculture Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science and Faculty of Forest Sciences. in Umea, Sweden. His research interests focus mainly on the distribution of hantavirus infections among humans and rodents in relation to rodent population dynamics and environmental factors. References (1.) Brummer-Korvenkontio M, Vaheri A, Hovi T, von Bonsdorff CH, Vuorimies J, Manni T, et al. Nephropathia epidemica: detection of antigen in bank voles and serological serological pertaining to or emanating from serology. serological test one involving examination of blood serum usually for antibody. diagnosis of human infection. J Infect Dis 1980;141:131-4. (2.) Childs JE, Ksiazek TG, Spiropoulou CF, Krebs JW, Morzunov S, Maupin GO, et al. Serological and genetic identification of Peromyscus maniculatus as the primary rodent reservoir for a new hantavirus in the southwestern United States. J Infect Dis 1994;169:1271-80. (3.) Hjelle B, Yates T. Modeling hantavirus maintenance and transmission in rodent communities. In: Schmaljohn CS, Nichol ST, editors. Current topics in microbiology and immunology. Vol. 256 Hantavirus. Berlin: Springer; 2001. p. 77-90. (4.) Lee HW. Epidemiology and pathogenesis of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome. In: Elliott RM, editor. The Bunyaviridae. New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of : Plenum Press; 1996. p. 253-67. (5.) Settergren B. Clinical aspects of nephropathia epidemica (Puamala virus infection) in Europe: a review. Scand J Infect Dis 2000;32:125-32. (6.) Niklasson B, LeDuc J, Nystrom K, Nyman L. Nephropathia epidemica: incidence of clinical cases and antibody prevalence in an endemic area Endemic area A geographical region where a particular disease is prevalent. Mentioned in: Leprosy, Scrub Typhus of Sweden. Epidemiol Infect 1987;99:595-62. (7.) Settergren B, Juto P, Wadell G, Trollfors B, Norrby SR. Incidence and geographic distribution of serologically verified cases of nephropathia epidemica in Sweden. Am J Epidemiol 1988;127:801-7. (8.) Ahlm C, Linderholm M, Juto P. Stegmayr B, Settergren B. Prevalence of serum IgG antibodies to Puumala virus (hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome) in Northern Sweden. Epidemiol Infect 1994;113:129-6. (9.) Swedish Institute The Swedish Institute (Svenska Institutet, SI) is a Swedish government agency with the responsibility to spread information about Sweden abroad, to promote Swedish interests, and to organise exchanges with other countries in different areas of public life, in particular in for Infectious Diseases and Control. Communicable diseases communicable diseases, illnesses caused by microorganisms and transmitted from an infected person or animal to another person or animal. Some diseases are passed on by direct or indirect contact with infected persons or with their excretions. in Sweden 1999. The annual report of the Department of Epidemiology. Solna, Sweden: The Institute; 1999. (10.) Elgh F, Linderholm M, Wadell G. Juto P. The clinical usefulness of a Puumala virus recombinant nucleocapsid nucleocapsid /nu·cleo·cap·sid/ (noo?kle-o-kap´sid) a unit of viral structure, consisting of a capsid with the enclosed nucleic acid. nu·cle·o·cap·sid n. protein based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in the diagnosis of nephropathia epidemica as compared with an immunofluorescence assay. Clinical and Diagnostic Virology 1996;6:17-26. (11.) Statistics Sweden Statistics Sweden, or Statistiska centralbyrån (SCB), is the government agency responsible for producing official statistics on Sweden. National statistics in Sweden date back to 1686 when the parishes of the Church of Sweden were ordered to start keeping records on the . Statistical yearbook of Sweden 1999, volume 85. Stockholm: Statistics Sweden; 1998. (12.) Sokal RR, Rohlf JF. Biometry biometry /bi·om·e·try/ (bi-om´e-tre) the application of statistical methods to biological phenomena. bi·om·e·try n. The statistical analysis of biological data. Also called biometrics. . 3rd edition. New York; W, H. Freeman and Co.; 1995. (13.) Kulagin CM, Fedorova H, Ketiladze EC. Laboratory outbreak of 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. with a renal syndrome (clinico-epidemiological characteristics). Journal of Microbiology, Epidemiology and Immunology 1962;33:121-6 [in Russian with English summary]. (14.) Grodzinski W. Pucek Z. Ryzkowski L. Estimation of rodent numbers by means of prebaiting and intense removal. Acta Theriol 1966: 11:297-314. (15.) Hornfeldt, B. Synchronous population fluctuations in voles, small game, owls and tularemia tularemia (t lərē`mēə) or rabbit fever, acute, infectious disease caused by Francisella tularensis (Pasteurella tularensis). in northern Sweden. Oecologia 1978;32:
141-52.(16.) Hornfeldt B. Delayed density dependence as a determinant of vole cycles. Ecology 1994;75:791-806. (17.) Hooge PN, Eichenlaub B. Animal movement extension to ArcView, version 1.1. Anchorage: Alaska Science Center, Biological Science Office; 1997. (18.) Worton BJ. Kernel methods Kernel Methods (KMs) are a class of algorithms for pattern analysis, whose best known element is the Support Vector Machine (SVM). The general task of pattern analysis is to find and study general types of relations (for example clusters, rankings, principal components, for estimating the utilization distribution A utilization distribution is a probability distribution constructed from data providing the location of an individual in space at different points in time. See also
(19.) Sommer Sommer is a surname, from the German and Danish word for the season "summer". It may refer to:
A condition resulting in massive, difficult-to-control bleeding. Mentioned in: Hantavirus Infections hemorrhagic pertaining to or characterized by hemorrhage. lever with renal syndrome (nephropathia epidemica) in Norway: seroepidemiology 1981-1985. Scand J Infect Dis 1988:20:267 74. (20.) Brummer-Korvenkontio M, Vapalahti O, Henttonen H. Koskela P, Kuusisto P, Vaheri A. Epidemiological study An Epidemiological study is a statistical study on human populations, which attempts to link human health effects to a specified cause. of nephropathia epidemica in Finland 1989-96. Scand J Infect Dis 1999;31:427-5. (21.) Van Loock F, Thomas I, Clement J, Ghoos S, Colson P. A case-control study case-control study, n an investigation employing an epidemiologic approach in which previously existing incidents of a medical condition are used in lieu of gathering new information from a randomized population. after a hantavirus infection outbreak in the south of Belgium: who is at risk? Clin Infect Dis 1999;28:834-9. (22.) Hansson L, Henttonen H. Gradients in density variations of small rodents: the importance of latitude and snow cover. Oecologia 1985;67:394-402. (23.) Olsson GE, White N, Ahlm C, Elgh F, Verlemyr A-C A-C Air Conditioning , Juto P, et al. Demographic factors associated with hantavirus infection in Bank Voles (Clethrionomys glareolus). Emerg Infect Dis 2002;8:924-9. (24.) Bernshtein AD, Apekina NS, Mikhailova TV, Myasnikov YA, Khlyap LA, Korotkov YS, et al. Dynamics of Puumala hantavirus infection in naturally infected bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus). Arch Virol 1999;144:2415 28. (25.) Karlsson F, As S. The use of winter home ranges in a low density Clethrionomys glareolus population. Oikos 1987;50:213-7. (26.) Lahdevirta J. Nephropathia epidemica in Finland. A clinical, histological and epidemiological study. Ann Clin Res 1971;3(Suppl 8):1-154. (27.) Korpela H, Lahdevirta J. The role of small rodents and patterns of living in the epidemiology of nephropathia epidemica. Scand J Infect Dis 1978;10:303-5. (28.) Glass GE, Johnson JS, Hodenbach GA, Disalvo CLJ CLJ Constitutional Loya Jirga CLJ Cambridge Law Journal CLJ Crime, Law, and Justice CLJ Cluj, Romania - Cluj (Airport Code) CLJ Capacity Limitation Jumper CLJ Cyberspace Law Journal CLJ Court of Limited Jurisdiction , Peters CJ, Childs JE, et al. Experimental evaluation of rodent exclusion methods to reduce hantavirus transmission to humans in rural housing. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1997;56:359-64. (29.) Olsson GE, Ahlm C, Elgh F, Verlemyr A-C, White N, Juto P, et al. Hantavirus antibody occurrence in bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) during a vole population cycle. J Wildl Dis 2003:39:299 305, (30.) Parmenter CA, Yates TL, Parmenter RR, Dunnum JL. Long-term field studies of small mammals for hantavirus prevalence: statistical sensitivity for detection of spatial and temporal patterns in rodent population densities. Emerg Infect Dis 1999;5:118-25. (31.) Niklasson B, Hornfeldt B, Lundkvist A, Bjorsten S, LeDuc J. Temporal dynamics of Puumala virus antibody prevalence in voles and of nephropathia epidemica incidence in humans Am J Trop Med Hyg 1995;53:134-40. (32.) Nystrom K. Incidence and prevalence of endemic benign (epidemic) nephropathy nephropathy /ne·phrop·a·thy/ (ne-frop´ah-the) disease of the kidneys.nephropath´ic analgesic nephropathy in AC country [Vasterbotten], Sweden, in relation to population density and prevalence of small rodents. [Dissertation] Acta Medica medica (māˑ·dē·k Scandinavica (Suppl) 1977;609:1-92. (33.) West SD, Dublin HT. Behavioural strategies of small mammals under winter conditions, In: Merritt JF, editor. Winter ecology of small mammals. Pub. no. 10. Pittsburgh (PA): Carnegie Museum of Natural History: 1984. p. 293-9. (34.) Raab B. Vedin H. National atlas of Sweden: climate, lakes and rivers. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International; 1995. Address for correspondence: Gert E. Olsson, Dept. of Animal Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SE-901 83 Umea, Sweden; tax: +46(0)90 786 68: 17; email: Gert.Olsson@szooek.slu.se Gert E. Olsson, * [dagger] Fredrik Dalerum, * (1) Birger Hornfeldt, [dagger] Fredrik Elgh, [dagger] Thomas R. Palo,* (2) Per Juto, [dagger] and Clas Ahlm [dagger] * Swedish University of Agricultural Science Agricultural science is a broad multidisciplinary field that encompasses the parts of exact, natural, economic and social sciences that are used in the practice and understanding of agriculture. (Veterinary science, but not animal science, is often excluded from the definition. , Umea, Sweden, and [dagger] University, Umea Sweden (1) Present address: Stockholm University Stockholm University (Stockholms universitet) is a state university in Stockholm, Sweden. It has about 37,000 students studying at four faculties. History In 1878, the university college Stockholm högskola , Stockholm, Swden. (2) Present address: Mid Sweden University Mid Sweden University (Mittuniversitetet) is a Swedish university with four campuses in Östersund, Sundsvall, Härnösand and Örnsköldsvik. Created on July 1, 1993, the institution was originally called Mid Sweden University College (Mitthögskolan , Sundsvall, Sweden. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

lərē`mēə)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion