Authors
Tom Solomon, Nguyen Minh Dung, David W Vaughn, Rachel Kneen, Boonyos Raengsakulrach, Ha Thi Loan, Nicholas PJ Day, Jeremy Farrar, Khin SA Myint, Mary J Warrell, William S James, Amanda Nisalak, Nicholas J White
Publication date
2000/3/25
Journal
The Lancet
Volume
355
Issue
9209
Pages
1053-1059
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Background
Severe forms of dengue, the most important arboviral infection of man, are associated with haemorrhagic disease and a generalised vascular leak syndrome. The importance of dengue as a cause of neurological disease is uncertain.
Methods
During 1995, all patients with suspected CNS infections admitted to a referral hospital in southern Vietnam were investigated by culture, PCR, and antibody measurement in serum and CSF for dengue and other viruses.
Findings
Of 378 patients, 16 (4·2%) were infected with dengue viruses, compared with four (1·4%) of 286 hospital controls (odds ratio [95% CI] 3·1 [1·7–5·8]). Five additional dengue positive patients with CNS abnormalities were studied subsequently. No other cause of CNS infection was identified. Seven infections were primary dengue, 13 secondary, and one was not classified. Ten patients had dengue viruses isolated or detected by PCR, and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T Solomon, NM Dung, DW Vaughn, R Kneen… - The Lancet, 2000