Ross River virus disease reemergence, Fiji, 2003-2004.We report 2 clinically characteristic and serologically positive cases of Ross River virus Ross River Virus Definition Ross River Virus (RRV) is Australia's most common and widespread mosquito-borne pathogen. Also known as RRV disease, it can cause debilitating polyarthritis, rash, fever, and constitutional symptoms. infection in Canadian tourists who visited Fiji in late 2003 and early 2004. This report suggests that Ross River virus is once again circulating in Fiji, where it apparently disappeared after causing an epidemic in 1979 to 1980. The growing appreciation of travelers as sentinels for the emergence of infectious diseases is based on the immunologic naivete of travelers, their defined exposure in time and space, and sufficient diagnostic resources after their return to an industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es v.tr. 1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example). 2. country. Reports of infectious diseases in travelers in unusual numbers or from new geographic locations can inform a public health response. We report 2 recent apparent cases of Ross River virus disease ("epidemic polyarthritis") in Canadian travelers to Fiji, [approximately equal to] 1,000 miles from the region (Australia, New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands) where the virus is endemic, enzootic en·zo·ot·ic adj. Prevalent among or restricted to animals of a specific geographic area. Used of a disease. n. An enzootic disease. enzootic peculiar to or present constantly in a location. See also endemic. , and often epidemic (1). Ross River virus, a mosquitoborne alphavirus in the family Togaviridae, is a single-stranded, enveloped RNA virus. Other viruses in this family include Chikungunya
see equine viral encephalomyelitis; abbreviated WEE. . In Australia, the major vectors of Ross River virus to humans are various Culex Culex /Cu·lex/ (ku´leks) a genus of mosquitoes found throughout the world, many species of which are vectors of disease-producing organisms. Cu·lex n. and Aedes mosquitoes. Marsupials (especially kangaroos and wallabies) are the most important vertebrate amplifying hosts (1). Several thousand cases of epidemic polyarthritis are reported annually in Australia, making Ross River virus the most important arboviral pathogen in that country (2,3). In 1979, Ross River virus spread dramatically to the South Pacific islands (probably imported by a viremic person arriving from Australia), including Fiji, American Samoa, Wallis and the Cook Islands, causing the largest Ross River virus epidemic ever recorded (4-8). In Fiji alone, [approximately equal to] 500,000 persons were infected, and nearly 50,000 of them became ill (4,7). The evidence suggests that Aedes polynesiensis was the primary vector and that human-mosquito-human transmission predominated without substantial involvement of nonhuman vertebrates in virus amplification (7). Once the epidemic ended, Ross River virus evidently disappeared from the region, possibly because of the lack of suitable marsupial marsupial (märs `pēəl), member of the order Marsupialia, or pouched mammals. reservoir hosts (7,8). In 1999, a
suspected case of Ross River virus disease was reported in a German
traveler returning from Fiji and Rarotonga in the Cook Islands (9). We
present evidence for 2 cases of Ross River virus infection acquired in
Fiji in late 2003 and early 2004.Case 1 A 39-year-old Canadian man flew to Fiji on October 28, 2003, and returned to Canada on November 10, 2003. Immediately on arrival in Canada, he started experiencing generalized body aches, which lasted until November 17. On November 15, he noticed an erythematous erythematous characterized by erythema. maculopapular rash over his whole body, as well as inguinal inguinal /in·gui·nal/ (in´gwi-n'l) pertaining to the groin. in·gui·nal adj. 1. Of or located in the groin. 2. lymphadenopathy lymphadenopathy /lym·phad·e·nop·a·thy/ (-op´ah-the) disease of the lymph nodes. angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy , angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia . The rash and swollen nodes subsided on November 18 and were replaced with the sudden onset of pain and swelling in his right ankle joint and pain without swelling in his right knee and right elbow. Two days later, barely able to walk, the patient sought medical attention at the McGill Centre for Tropical Diseases. He denied any fever or chills and had no history of joint disease. An examination found substantial periarticular periarticular /peri·ar·tic·u·lar/ (-ahr-tik´u-lar) around a joint. per·i·ar·tic·u·lar adj. Surrounding a joint. periarticular situated around a joint. tenderness, warmth, erythema erythema (ĕr'əthē`mə), more or less diffuse redness of the skin due to concentration of an abnormally large amount of blood within the small vessels of the skin (hyperemia), as in burns. , and swelling of his right ankle with essentially full range of motion (Figure). His travel history included an uneventful 4-day trip to Melbourne, Australia, in 1999, involving a trip to the countryside, followed by a week in Bali. In view of his clinical symptoms and recent travel history, a preliminary diagnosis of Ross River virus disease was considered. Laboratory investigations included a complete blood count (CBC (1) (Cell Broadcast Center) See cell broadcast. (2) (Cipher Block Chaining) In cryptography, a mode of operation that combines the ciphertext of one block with the plaintext of the next block. ); urinalysis; and measurement of levels of liver enzymes, serum creatinine, uric acid, rheumatoid factor, antistreptolysin O, and anti-DNase B, all of which were normal. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate Definition The erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), or sedimentation rate (sed rate), is a measure of the settling of red blood cells in a tube of blood during one hour. (ESR ESR - Eric S. Raymond ) was 23 mm/h, and the antinuclear antibody (ANA) test was positive with a speckled pattern. Serum specimens were collected from the patient on days 10, 21, and 141 after the onset of illness; they were screened for elevated immunoglobulin (Ig) M antibody against geographically relevant arboviral antigens by enzyme immunoassays (EIA (Electronic Industries Alliance, Arlington, VA, www.eia.org) A membership organization founded in 1924 as the Radio Manufacturing Association. It sets standards for consumer products and electronic components. ), when EIA was available for a particular arbovirus arbovirus Any of a large group of viruses that develop in arthropods (chiefly mosquitoes and ticks). The name derives from “arthropod-borne virus.” The spheroidal virus particle is encased in a fatty membrane and contains RNA; it causes no apparent harm to the . Positive Ross River virus IgM results were then confirmed by plaque reduction neutralization tests. All serologic tests were performed at the arboviral diseases laboratory of 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. (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice. CDC - Control Data Corporation ) in Fort Collins, Colorado The City of Fort Collins, a home rule municipality situated on the Cache la Poudre River along the Colorado Front Range, is the county seat and most populous city in Larimer County, Colorado. , as previously described (10,11). Results of tests for alphavirus antibodies are shown in the Table. Serologic evidence of a 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. infection was absent in both this patient and the patient described in the next section. [FIGURE OMITTED] Case 2 On March 5, 2004, a 44-year-old Canadian woman returned to Canada after visiting New Zealand for 2 months and Fiji for l month; she did not travel through Australia or another known Ross River virus-endemic area. She had previously visited Fiji uneventfully in 1995. On March 14, she experienced the abrupt onset of fatigue; the next day she was feverish, nauseated nau·se·at·ed adj. Affected with nausea. , and anorexic and had severe arthralgia arthralgia /ar·thral·gia/ (ahr-thral´jah) pain in a joint. ar·thral·gia n. Severe pain in a joint. Also called arthrodynia. in her ankles and feet. For several days, she experienced extreme hypersensitivity to touch, particularly of her soles, severe enough to prevent weight bearing, and had mild ankle swelling. Her joint pains worsened over several days and spread to her knees, hips, and upper extremities. On March 16, she noticed a nonpruritic, erythematous, maculopapular rash, with small vesicular vesicular /ve·sic·u·lar/ (ve-sik´u-ler) 1. composed of or relating to small, saclike bodies. 2. pertaining to or made up of vesicles on the skin. 3. lesions on the palms, which involved the extremities and face but not the trunk; the rash resolved after 4 days. On March 17, she had normal CBC results and serum creatinine kinase level, mildly elevated liver enzymes, and an ESR of 62 mm/h. By day 10 of illness, she was able to resume limited sedentary work. One month after illness onset, fatigue and joint pain persisted, but physical examination results were normal, apart from difficulties in ambulation am·bu·late intr.v. am·bu·lat·ed, am·bu·lat·ing, am·bu·lates To walk from place to place; move about. [Latin ambul due to pain; tests for ANA and rheumatoid factor were negative, C-reactive protein level was normal, and ESR was 30 mm/h. Four months after illness onset, she continued to have gradually resolving arthralgia and fatigue that limited daily activities. At CDC, serologic tests were performed on serum specimens obtained on days 16 and 33 of illness (Table). Conclusions The clinical features and serologic results in these 2 cases provide strong circumstantial evidence for Ross River virus transmission in Fiji during late 2003 and early 2004, which suggests that heightened surveillance is needed as well as epidemiologic and ecologic studies in that region. While both cases were highly clinically compatible with epidemic polyarthritis, and tests for Ross River virus-specific serum IgM antibody were positive in both, the first case is the most convincing serologically because seroconversion (i.e., a 4-fold titer change) in neutralization tests was also observed. The subsequent decrease in this patient's Ross River virus-specific IgM reactivity and neutralizing antibody titer within a few months also argues for a recent Ross River virus infection. In the second case, the high but stable anti-Ross River virus neutralizing antibody titer may reflect the fact that the earliest sample available for testing was obtained >2 weeks after illness onset when the patient's anti-Ross River virus neutralizing antibody titer may have already peaked. If Ross River virus was circulating in Fiji in 2003 and 2004, at least 2 basic hypotheses may explain its reemergence there. The first of these, which seems the most plausible, involves occasional reintroduction of this virus from the known disease-endemic region (e.g., by viremic persons arriving from Australia), sometimes resulting in local transmission, ultimately followed by local extinction. Circumstantial evidence to support this hypothesis includes the fact that, during the same period that the 2 patients described here traveled to Fiji, Australia was experiencing its usual summer surge in Ross River virus incidence (3). The second hypothesis, considered unlikely (7), is that Ross River virus became established in Fiji after the 1979-1980 epidemic but remained undetected while causing sporadic and largely unrecognized human cases. No recent serosurveys or other data are available to address this question. The ability of arboviruses arboviruses (ar´bōvī´r n. to be moved from one region to another, even from one continent or hemisphere to another, has long been appreciated (12). This occurrence may be more frequent than is apparent. Fortunately, the conditions for local transmission and long-term survival of an arbovirus in a new area are often highly complex, so that most such introductions are probably abortive. The recent introduction of West Nile virus West Nile virus, microorganism and the infection resulting from it, which typically produces no symptoms or a flulike condition. The virus is a flavivirus and is related to a number of viruses that cause encephalitis. to North America and its permanent establishment there, however, is a sobering demonstration that newly introduced arboviruses sometimes achieve long-term survival in new areas where preadapted vectors and suitable vertebrate amplifying hosts are available (13). Ross River virus is almost certainly imported into North America fairly frequently because this virus is endemic and often epidemic in Australia, human travel between Australia and North America is frequent, high levels of viremia viremia /vi·re·mia/ (vi-re´me-ah) the presence of viruses in the blood. vi·re·mi·a n. The presence of viruses in the bloodstream. lasting several days often develop in Ross River virus-infected persons, and cases of Ross River virus disease among visitors to Australia are commonly reported (14,15). Notably, [approximately equal to] 100 viremic travelers enter New Zealand every year from Queensland alone (16). Fortunately, however, to date all such importations into North America evidently have been abortive, and if an introduction of Ross River virus to North America should ever result in local amplification and transmission by preadapted vectors (e.g., Ae. aegypti or Ae. albopictus [8], activity would probably be short-lived and remain localized, and a lack of optimal vertebrate reservoirs would probably keep the virus from becoming established. The recent North American experience with West Nile virus, however, emphasizes how uncertain such predictions can be. Therefore, travel medicine specialists and other healthcare providers in North America (and other disease-nonendemic areas) should be familiar with the clinical features of Ross River virus disease, as well as its potential public health importance, and realize that diagnostic tests for this infection currently are available at only a few public health reference laboratories (e.g., CDC).
Table. Results of tests of patients' serum for antibodies
to selected alphaviruses *
IgM results PRNT titers
([dagger]) ([double dagger])
Interval (d)
Patient ([section]) RRV BFV RRV BFV SINV
1 10 Positive Negative 320 <10 <10
21 Positive Negative 1,280 <10 <10
141 Equivocal Negative 160 ND ND
2 16 Positive Negative 5,120 <10 ND
33 Positive Negative 5,120 <10 ND
* Ig, immunoglobulin; PRNT, plaque-reduction neutralization test; RRV,
Ross River virus; BFV, Barmah Forest virus; SINV, Sindbis virus; ND,
not done.
([dagger]) IgM-capture enzyme immunoassay; samples tested at 1:400
dilution; positive samples had a positive-to-negative (P/N)
absorbance ratio >3.0; equivocal samples had a P/N ratio 2.0-3.0
(10); no test for and-SINV IgM was available.
([double dagger]) $90% plaque-reduction endpoints; >10 is considered
positive (11).
([section]) From onset of illness to serum collection.
Acknowledgments We thank Denise Martin and Olga Kosoy for laboratory support. References (1.) Russell RC. Ross River virus ecology and distribution. Annu Rev Entomol. 2002;471-31. (2.) Harley D, Sleigh A, Ritchie S. Ross River virus transmission, infection, and disease: cross-disciplinary review. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2001; 14:909-32. (3.) Australian Government, Department of Health and Ageing Health and Ageing is a research programme set up by the Geneva Association, also known as the International Association for the Study of Insurance Economics. The Geneva Association Research Programme on Health and Ageing seeks to bring together facts, figures and analyses . Communicable disease surveillance. Highlights for I st quarter, 2004. Communicable Disease Intelligence. 2004;28:281-99. (4.) Aaskov JG, Mataika JU, Lawrence GW, Rabukawaqa V, Tucker MM, Miles JA, et al. An epidemic of Ross River virus infection in Fiji, 1979. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1981;30:1053-9. (5.) Tesh RB, McLean RG, Shroyer DA, Calisher CH, Rosen L. Ross River virus (Togaviridae: Alphavirus) infection (epidemic polyarthritis) in American Samoa. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 1981;75:426-31. (6.) Rosen L, Gubler DJ, Bennett PH. Epidemic polyarthritis (Ross River) virus infection in the Cook Islands. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1981;30:1294-302. (7.) Marshall ID, Miles JAR. Ross River virus and epidemic polyarthritis. In: Harris KF, editor. Current topics in vector research. New York: Praeger; 1984. p. 31-56. (8.) Kay BH, Aaskov JG. Ross River virus (epidemic polyarthritis). In: Monath TP, editor. The arboviruses: epidemiology and ecology, vol IV. Boca Raton (FL): CRC (Cyclical Redundancy Checking) An error checking technique used to ensure the accuracy of transmitting digital data. The transmitted messages are divided into predetermined lengths which, used as dividends, are divided by a fixed divisor. Press; 1989. p. 93-112. (9.) Proll S, Dobler G, Pfeffer M, Jelinek T, Nothdurft HD, Loscher T. Persistent arthralgias in Ross-River-virus disease after travel to the South Pacific [article in German]. Dtsch Med Wochenschr. 1999;124:759-62. (10.) Martin DA, Muth DA, Brown T, Johnson A J, Karabatsos N, Roehrig JT. Standardization of immunoglobulin M capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for routine diagnosis of arboviral infections. J Clin Microbiol. 2000;38:1823-6. (11.) Beaty BJ, Calisher CH, Shope RE. Arboviruses. In: Lennette EH, Lennette DA, Lennette ET, editors. Diagnostic procedures for viral, rickettsial rickettsial /rick·ett·si·al/ (ri-ket´se-al) pertaining to or caused by rickettsiae. rick·ett·si·al adj. Relating to, or caused by a member of the genus Rickettsia. , and chlamydial infections. 7th ed. Washington: American Public Health Association The American Public Health Association (APHA) is Washington, D.C.-based professional organization for public health professionals in the United States. Founded in 1872 by Dr. Stephen Smith, APHA has more than 30,000 members worldwide. ; 1995. p. 189-212. (12.) Messer WB, Gubler DJ, Harris E, Sivananthan K, de Silva AM. Emergence and global spread of a dengue serotype 3, subtype III virus. Emerg Infect Dis. 2003;9:800-9. (13.) Campbell GL, Marfin AA, Lanciotti RS, Gubler DJ. West Nile virus. Lancet Infect Dis. 2002;2:519-29. (14.) Hueston L, Yund A, Cope S, Monteville M, Marchetti M, Haniotis J, et al. Ross River virus in a joint military exercise. Commun Dis Intell. 1997;21:193. (15.) Kelly-Hope LA, Purdie DM, Kay BH. Risk of mosquito-borne epidemic polyarthritis disease among international visitors to Queensland, Australia. J Travel Med. 2002;9:211-3. (16.) Kelly-Hope LA, Kay BH, Purdie DM, Williams GM. The risk of Ross River and Barmah Forest virus Barmah Forest virus is a virus currently found only in Australia. According to a Queensland Public Health Services fact sheet, "there is no specific drug treatment" for the virus, but the disease is non-fatal and relatively mild. disease in Queensland: implications for New Zealand. Aust N Z J Public Health. 2002;26:69-77. Philipp Klapsing, * ([dagger]) J. Dick MacLean, * Sarah Glaze, ([double dagger]) Karen L. McClean, ([double dagger]) Michael A. Drebot, ([section]) Robert S. Lanciotti, ([paragraph]) and Grant L. Campbell ([paragraph]) * Montreal General Hospital The Montreal General Hospital is a hospital in Montreal, Canada, first established on May 1, 1819 and an early teaching hospital. The hospital has moved several times in the past, and is currently situated on Mount Royal, at the intersection of Cedar Avenue and Cote des Neiges , Montreal, Quebec, Canada; ([dagger]) McGill University Health Centre The McGill University Health Centre (MUHC) (in French, Centre universitaire de santé McGill) is a network of five teaching hospitals in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, all of which are affiliated with McGill University. , Montreal, Quebec, Canada; ([double dagger]) Royal University Hospital, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada; ([section]) Health Canada, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; and ([paragraph]) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA Dr. Klapsing is an internal medicine resident at the Klinikum Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany. He was on rotation with the Rheumatology Department of the McGill University Hospital Centre, Montreal, at the time of this investigation. His interests are in outcome research. Address for correspondence: J. Dick MacLean, McGill Centre for Tropical Diseases, 1650 Cedar Ave, Room D7-153, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3G 1A4; fax: 514-934-8224; email: dick.maclean@mcgill.ca |
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