KEY FACTS
•
Dengue is a mosquito-borne infection that causes a
severe flu-like illness, and sometimes a potentially
lethal complication called dengue haemorrhagic fever.
• Global incidence of dengue has grown dramatically
in recent decades.
• About two fifths of the world's population
are now at risk.
• Dengue is found in tropical and sub-tropical
climates worldwide, mostly in urban and semi-urban
areas.
• Dengue haemorrhagic fever is a leading cause
of serious illness and death among children in some
Asian countries.
• There is no specific treatment for dengue,
but appropriate medical care frequently saves the
lives of patients with the more serious dengue haemorrhagic
fever.
• The only way to prevent dengue virus transmission
is to combat the disease-carrying mosquitoes.
Dengue is a mosquito-borne infection
that in recent decades has become a major international
public health concern. Dengue is found in tropical
and sub-tropical regions around the world, predominantly
in urban and semi-urban areas.
Dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF), a potentially lethal
complication, was first recognized in the 1950s during
dengue epidemics in the Philippines and Thailand.
Today DHF affects most Asian countries and has become
a leading cause of hospitalization and death among
children in the region.
There are four distinct, but closely related, viruses
that cause dengue. Recovery from infection by one
provides lifelong immunity against that virus but
confers only partial and transient protection against
subsequent infection by the other three viruses. There
is good evidence that sequential infection increases
the risk of developing DHF.
Global burden of dengue
The incidence of dengue has
grown dramatically around the world in recent decades.
Some 2.5 billion people – two fifths of the
world's population – are now at risk from dengue.
WHO currently estimates there may be 50 million dengue
infections worldwide every year.
In 2007 alone, there were more than 890 000 reported
cases of dengue in the Americas, of which 26 000 cases
were DHF.
The disease is now endemic in more than 100 countries
in Africa, the Americas, the Eastern Mediterranean,
South-east Asia and the Western Pacific. South-east
Asia and the Western Pacific are the most seriously
affected. Before 1970 only nine countries had experienced
DHF epidemics, a number that had increased more than
four-fold by 1995.
Not only is the number of cases increasing as the
disease is spreading to new areas, but explosive outbreaks
are occurring. In 2007, Venezuela reported over 80
000 cases, including more than 6 000 cases of DHF.
Some other statistics:
• During epidemics of dengue, infection rates
among those who have not been previously exposed to
the virus are often 40% to 50%, but can reach 80%
to 90%.
• An estimated 500 000 people with DHF require
hospitalization each year, a very large proportion
of whom are children. About 2.5% of those affected
die.
• Without proper treatment, DHF fatality rates
can exceed 20%. Wider access to medical care from
health providers with knowledge about DHF - physicians
and nurses who recognize its symptoms and know how
to treat its effects - can reduce death rates to less
than 1%.
The spread of dengue is attributed to expanding geographic
distribution of the four dengue viruses and their
mosquito vectors, the most important of which is the
predominantly urban species Aedes aegypti. A rapid
rise in urban mosquito populations is bringing ever
greater numbers of people into contact with this vector,
especially in areas that are favourable for mosquito
breeding, e.g. where household water storage is common
and where solid waste disposal services are inadequate.
Transmission
Dengue viruses are transmitted to humans through the
bites of infective female Aedes mosquitoes. Mosquitoes
generally acquire the virus while feeding on the blood
of an infected person. After virus incubation for
eight to 10 days, an infected mosquito is capable,
during probing and blood feeding, of transmitting
the virus for the rest of its life. Infected female
mosquitoes may also transmit the virus to their offspring
by transovarial (via the eggs) transmission, but the
role of this in sustaining transmission of the virus
to humans has not yet been defined.
Infected humans are the main carriers and multipliers
of the virus, serving as a source of the virus for
uninfected mosquitoes. The virus circulates in the
blood of infected humans for two to seven days, at
approximately the same time that they have a fever;
Aedes mosquitoes may acquire the virus when they feed
on an individual during this period. Some studies
have shown that monkeys in some parts of the world
play a similar role in transmission.
Characteristics
Dengue fever is a severe, flu-like illness that affects
infants, young children and adults, but seldom causes
death.
The clinical features of dengue fever vary according
to the age of the patient. Infants and young children
may have a fever with rash. Older children and adults
may have either a mild fever or the classical incapacitating
disease with abrupt onset and high fever, severe headache,
pain behind the eyes, muscle and joint pains, and
rash.
Dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) is a potentially deadly
complication that is characterized by high fever,
often with enlargement of the liver, and in severe
cases circulatory failure. The illness often begins
with a sudden rise in temperature accompanied by facial
flush and other flu-like symptoms. The fever usually
continues for two to seven days and can be as high
as 41°C, possibly with convulsions and other complications.
In moderate DHF cases, all signs and symptoms abate
after the fever subsides. In severe cases, the patient's
condition may suddenly deteriorate after a few days
of fever; the temperature drops, followed by signs
of circulatory failure, and the patient may rapidly
go into a critical state of shock and die within 12
to 24 hours, or quickly recover following appropriate
medical treatment.
Treatment
There is no specific treatment for dengue fever.
For DHF, medical care by physicians and nurses experienced
with the effects and progression of the complicating
haemorrhagic fever can frequently save lives - decreasing
mortality rates from more than 20% to less than 1%.
Maintenance of the patient's circulating fluid volume
is the central feature of DHF care.
Immunization
There is no vaccine to protect against dengue. Although
progress is underway, developing a vaccine against
the disease - in either its mild or severe form -
is challenging.
• With four closely related viruses that can
cause the disease, the vaccine must immunize against
all four types to be effective.
• There is limited understanding of how the
disease typically behaves and how the virus interacts
with the immune system.
• There is a lack of laboratory animal models
available to test immune responses to potential vaccines.
Despite these challenges, two vaccine candidates have
advanced to evaluation in human subjects in countries
with endemic disease, and several potential vaccines
are in earlier stages of development. WHO provides
technical advice and guidance to countries and private
partners to support vaccine research and evaluation.
Prevention and control
At present, the only method of controlling or preventing
dengue virus transmission is to combat the vector
mosquitoes.
In Asia and the Americas, Aedes aegypti breeds primarily
in man-made containers like earthenware jars, metal
drums and concrete cisterns used for domestic water
storage, as well as discarded plastic food containers,
used automobile tyres and other items that collect
rainwater. In Africa the mosquito also breeds extensively
in natural habitats such as tree holes, and leaves
that gather to form "cups" and catch water.
In recent years, Aedes albopictus, a secondary dengue
vector in Asia, has become established in the United
States, several Latin American and Caribbean countries,
parts of Europe and Africa. The rapid geographic spread
of this species is largely attributed to the international
trade in used tyres, a breeding habitat.
Vector control is implemented using environmental
management and chemical methods. Proper solid waste
disposal and improved water storage practices, including
covering containers to prevent access by egg-laying
female mosquitoes are among methods that are encouraged
through community-based programmes.
The application of appropriate insecticides to larval
habitats, particularly those that are useful in households,
e.g. water storage vessels, prevents mosquito breeding
for several weeks but must be re-applied periodically.
Small, mosquito-eating fish and copepods (tiny crustaceans)
have also been used with some success.
During outbreaks, emergency vector control measures
can also include broad application of insecticides
as space sprays using portable or truck-mounted machines
or even aircraft. However, the mosquito-killing effect
is transient, variable in its effectiveness because
the aerosol droplets may not penetrate indoors to
microhabitats where adult mosquitoes are sequestered,
and the procedure is costly and operationally difficult.
Regular monitoring of the vectors' susceptibility
to widely used insecticides is necessary to ensure
the appropriate choice of chemicals. Active monitoring
and surveillance of the natural mosquito population
should accompany control efforts to determine programme
effectiveness.
For more information contact:
WHO Media centre
Telephone: +41 22 791 2222
E-mail: mediainquiries@who.int
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