Travel Safety Hub - WorldNomads.com

Travel Advice And Travel Safety. Stay informed on the road.

What you need to know about Dengue Fever

WORLDWIDE | Thursday, 19 February 2009 | Views [1755] | Comments [5]

WorldNomads.com's roving medical expert Dr. Erik McLaughlin MD  explains why tropical travelers should get up to speed on Dengue Fever.

Nicknamed "breakbone fever", Dengue is known for its severe muscle aches and fevers.  Being the most widespread Arborvirus in the world and effecting over 100 million people annually, Dengue should be no stranger to seasoned tropical travelers.  The havoc a tiny mosquito and a simple virus can wreak is amazing, isn't it? 

A vaccine against Dengue Fever is reaching late-stage clinical trials shortly and researchers are still trying to determine two things;  does it protect people from Dengue and will is increase their risk for death by Dengue?

Symptoms

Dengue fever is a disease that features muscular aches and pains, fevers and often is accompanied by a fine petechial or "pin-point" rash.  Severe cases of Dengue can progress to Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF) where the victim suffers from massive bleeding, frequently from IV sites, gums and rectum.   People generally progress to DHF when they have been previously infected by Dengue, earlier in their life. 

Basically, the more times you get Dengue, the greater your risk of death.

Dengue Sero-types

Part of the Arbovirus group, which just means they are spread via arthropods (insects), Dengue is divided into four serotypes, numbered 1-4.  When a person gets infected with Dengue for the first time, the patient suffers the typical "dengue like" symptoms.  

The real risk begins when the same person gets infected with another strain of Dengue, different than their previous illness.  This is what leads to a more severe illness and progression to DHF where mortality can reach 50%.  Then third time a person gets Dengue... well, you get the picture.  Unfortunately, the first Dengue infection frequently goes unnoticed or is attributed to an "influenza like" virus.

Watch out for repeat infections!

The concept that multiple, subsequent infections of Dengue leads to worse disease is exactly the difficulty vaccine researchers are dealing with. 

Researchers are still not sure what causes the second infection of Dengue to be more severe but it appears confusion of the immune system is to blame.  When the body encounters something foreign and deemed a threat, like a virus, it produces antibodies to attack the invader.  These antibodies often travel with white blood cells riding along side, ready to attack the virus, bacteria, etc. 

When Dengue virus is first encountered, this is exactly what happens and the body generally defends itself well.  A few copies of the successful antibody are then stored, in case the body runs into that same virus again.  When the second and different strain of dengue is encountered, the antibodies and white blood cells go to attack.  However, this new virus is just a little bit different and the antibody has trouble attaching properly.  Unfortunately, the antibody can attach just well enough to allow the virus access to its white blood cell passenger, introducing the virus to a whole new type of cell and a great opportunity to rapidly reproduce.

Vaccine problems

The question vaccine researchers are concerned about is simple.  If we vaccinate a person against dengue, are we increasing their chances of going right to DHF and skipping their first (safer) infection?  Fortunately, this is why researchers are not yet producing a vaccine for the public, yet. 

Researchers have recently published (Clinical and Vaccine Immunology) that they have identified a test that looks specifically at this issue, working with cell cultures.   Much more research needs to be done, before a decent vaccine is available for general use.  However, I will be watching their efforts, along with the 112 other countries where Dengue is endemic.

Prevention

Methods of Dengue prevention center on not getting bit by mosquitoes.  This is best done with a multi-step approach of using a bed net if sleeping outdoors or with open windows, applying insect repellent to skin (DEET) and clothing (permethrin) and wearing long sleeves and pants when outdoors.

You might like to read a previous SafetyHub post about Mosquitoes and bite prevention

Have you caught Dengue Fever whilst travelling?  Feel free to share your story in the comments below

When it comes to Dengue Fever, prevention is better than treatment.  Don't get bitten by one of these tiny, dangerous and very common creatures!

When it comes to Dengue Fever, prevention is better than treatment. Don't get bitten by one of these tiny, dangerous and very common creatures!

Tags: travel health, dengue, mosquito, vaccine

  

Comments

1

are all mozzies the same? do they all carry the same risk?

  christy Feb 23, 2009 12:56 PM

2

Very good question! Mosquitoes transmit disease to roughly 700 million people in just one year. They are by far, the most dangerous insects on the planet. The three types of mosquitoes to know are Aedes, Culex and Anopheles.

Mosquitoes are basically the same, when it comes to disease spread, with a few variations in biting habits and living preferences. Some mosquito species are known to be "day biters" while others prefer the typical dusk/dawn time. Other species prefer to live in more urban environments versus a rural or forest area.

Overall,a small precentage of the 3,500 different species are capable of carrying diseases that infect humans. Perhaps the most important thing to know about mosquitoes is that they are capable of carrying disease and steps should be taken to reduce bites.

  Erik Feb 23, 2009 4:21 PM

3

While I would agree with most of what the previous poster said, he didn't really answer the question which was "are all mossies the same and do they carry the same risk?" Well the answer to that is NO!

They are not really teh same with regards disease spread as different pathogens are carried by specific subsets of mossies. For example, dengue and yellow fever are transmitted by Aedes mossies, West Nile by Culex and malaria by Anopheles. The term "mosquito competence" refers to the ability of one mosquito species to transmit a particular pathogen and this isn't the same across all the different types of mossies.

But I would certainly agree with the comment about taking precautions against being bitten at all!

  PAul Apr 3, 2009 11:23 AM

4

Well we should try to eliminate the growth of dengue fever by preventing the adult mosquito from laying eggs. This would mean that community participation is needed to reduce number of breeding sites within the community.
Also, the utilization of bio-control predators are to be study for the population control of immature mosquito species.

  Faaloloi Teo Jul 31, 2009 8:27 AM

5

WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF THE SECOND ATTACK. IS IT FROM A DIFFRENT STRAIN

  RAVI Aug 10, 2009 2:27 PM

Add your comments

In order to avoid spam on these blogs, please enter the code you see in the image.
Comments identified as spam will be deleted.



About safetyhub


See all my tags

Follow Me

      


Subscribe to safetyhub's RSS feed.

Where I've been

Favourites

Photo Galleries

Highlights

My trip journals


Travel Insurance. Simple. Flexible.

Travel insurance for adventurous travellers. Buy, extend & claim online even after you've left home.

You can extend your policy while you are away

Sign in to:

  • Collect your policy documents
  • Extend your policy
  • Make a claim
insurers

  Learn the Lingo on your iPod - Our free language guides

Find us on these social networks  Flickr YouTube Vimeo Facebook Twitter