Dengue viruses, single stranded RNA viruses of the family Flaviviridae, are
the most common cause of arboviral disease inthe world. They are
found virtually throughout the tropics (fig1) and
cause an estimated 50-100 million illnesses annually, including
250 000-500 000 cases of dengue haemorrhagic fevera
severe manifestationof dengueand
24 000 deaths.1-3 More than two fifths of the
world'spopulation (2.5 billion) live in areas potentially at risk
fordengue.1 Because travellers to
endemic areas are also at risk,healthcare providers should have an
understanding of the spectrumof infection, how to diagnose it, and
what the appropriate treatmentis.
Come then, let us play at unawares
And see who wins in this sly game of bluff
Man or mosquito
D H Lawrence, The Mosquito
Summary points
Dengue is the most common cause of arboviral disease
The disease is more prevalent now than at any other time, and its
prevalence is expected to increase
A severe manifestation of dengue is dengue haemorrhagic fever, which is
more common after a secondary infection with dengue virus
Dengue is a relatively common cause of fever in travellers to the
tropics, but severe disease is rare
A cost effective vaccine is needed for the prevention and control of
dengue
Our review was prepared from literature on dengue up to 15 April 2002. We
searched Medline (for all English articles usingthe keyword
"dengue"), comprehensive textbooks, the Cochrane Library,the
internet, and our ownfiles.
Four dengue virus serotypes are recognised. Infection with one serotype is
thought to produce lifelong immunity to that serotypebut only a few
months immunity to the others. 14 Humans andmosquitoes are the principal hosts of
dengue virus; the mosquitoremains infected for life, but the viruses
are only known to causeillness in humans. In forest and enzootic
cycles in Africa andAsia the virus is probably sustained through
vertical (transovarial)transmission in the mosquito, with periodic
amplification in non-humanprimates. 35 The virus is transmitted by bites from Aedesmosquito.
The principal vector of dengue, Aedes aegypti, is found worldwide
between latitudes 35°N and 35°S (fig 2). It is an efficientvector for several reasons: it is highly susceptible to dengue
virus; it feeds preferentially on human blood6; it
thrivesin close proximity to humans; it is a daytime feeder; its
biteis almost imperceptible; and it is a restless mosquito as theslightest movement interrupts feeding, thus several people may
be bitten in a short period for one blood meal. 78 Unlikemost mosquitoes, A aegypti
takes more than one blood meal duringa gonotropic cyclethat
is, before the eggs are laid.8 In many
areas, dengue epidemics occur during the warm, humid, rainy seasons,
which favour abundant mosquitoes and shorten the extrinsic incubation
period. 4910
Fig 1. Geographical distribution
of dengue (light shading) and dengue fever plus dengue haemorrhagic
fever (dark shading)
Fig 2. Aedes aegypti
taking blood meal
In the past 60 years the incidence, distribution, and clinical severity of
dengue has increased dramatically. Population growthin the tropics
provides many susceptible hosts. Uncontrolled urbanisationleads to
inadequate management of water and waste, providing arange of large
water stores and disposable, non-biodegradablecontainers that become
habitats for the larvae. Few control programmesare effective against
the mosquitoes.11 In addition, air travelhas enabled infected humans to import viruses. These factors canchange a region from non-endemic (no virus present) to hypoendemic(one serotype present) to hyperendemic (multiple serotypes present).3
In South East Asia the mean number of annual cases of dengue haemorrhagic
fever has increased from below 10 000 in the 1950sand 60s to over
200 000 in the 90s. The same pattern is now unfoldingin the
Americas. In the 80s there were 15 000 cases of denguehaemorrhagic
fever, in the 90s there were 56 000 cases, and in2001 alone there
were 15 000 cases. 1213
The numbers of reportedcases of imported dengue in countries outside
the tropics havealso been increasing.14-16
Nevertheless, dengue is often asymptomaticor causes a non-specific
febrile illness, and dengue is not areportable disease in most
countries.17 Thus, despite the proliferationof reported cases, it is generally accepted that the incidence
of infection and disease is largely under-reported.
Dengue haemorrhagic fever is distinguished from dengue by the presence of
increased vascular permeability, not by the presenceof haemorrhage.1
Patients with dengue may have severe haemorrhagewithout meeting WHO
criteria for dengue haemorrhagic fever (seebmj.com). In these cases
the pathogenesis probably derives fromthrombocytopenia or a
consumptive coagulopathy, not from the vascularleak syndrome seen in
dengue haemorrhagic fever.18 Dengue haemorrhagicfever may (grades III and IV) or may not (grades I and II) includeclinical shock, referred to as dengue shock syndrome (see bmj.com).1
Dengue virus antigen has been found in a variety of tissues, predominately
the liver and reticuloendothelial system. 110 Viral replication is thought to occur primarily
in the macrophages,although dendritic cells (Langerhans cells) in
the skin may bean early target of infection.19
As with yellow fever, focalcentral necrosis has been found in the
liver of patients who havedied of dengue. 420 Autopsies of patients who died of denguehaemorrhagic fever show diffuse petechial haemorrhages in most
organs and serous effusions of pericardial, peritoneal, and pleural
spaces. Dengue virus (by isolation and reverse transcription-polymerasechain reaction) and antibody (including IgM) have been identifiedin the cerebrospinal fluid, but direct involvement of dengue virusin neuronal damage is controversial. 421-23 More studies on thisareneeded.
All four serotypes have been associated with dengue haemorrhagic fever.
Variations in virus strains within and between thefour serotypes may
influence disease severity. Secondary infections(particularly with
serotype 2) are more likely to result in severedisease and dengue
haemorrhagic fever. 2425
This is explainedby the theory of antibody dependent enhancement,26
whereby crossreactive but non-neutralising antibodies from a
previous infectionbind to the new infecting serotype and facilitate
virus entryinto cells resulting in higher peak viral titres. In
primary andsecondary infections, higher viral titres are associated
withmore severe disease.25 Higher
titres may result in an amplifiedcascade of cytokines and complement
activation causing endothelialdysfunction, platelet destruction, and
consumption of coagulationfactors, which result in plasma leakage
and haemorrhagic manifestations. 2728
The clinical features of dengue vary with the age of the patient and, in
addition to clinically inapparent infections, canbe classified into
five presentations: non-specific febrile illness,classic dengue,
dengue haemorrhagic fever, dengue haemorrhagicfever with dengue
shock syndrome, and other unusual syndromessuch as encephalopathy
and fulminant liver failure. 4
29
Young children with dengue often have an undifferentiated febrile illness
with a maculopapular rash. Upper respiratory infections,especially
pharyngitis, are common. Most infections in childrenunder 15 years
are asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic; a studyof schoolchildren
in Thailand found only 13% of those infectedmissed more than one day
of school because of illness.17
Classic dengue is more commonly seen among older children, adolescents, and
adults. They are less likely to be asymptomatic.30Dengue is abrupt in onset, typically with high fever accompaniedby severe headache, incapacitating myalgias and arthralgias, nauseaand vomiting, and rash (box 1). Rash, typically macular
or maculopapular,often becoming confluent and sparing small islands
of normal skin,has been reported in over half of infected people.31
Other signsand symptoms include flushed facies, sore throat, cough,
cutaneoushyperaesthesia, and taste aberrations.4
Recovery may be prolongedand include depression.
115
Box 1: Diagnosis of
dengue fever and dengue haemorrhagic fever
Haemorrhagic manifestations (shown by positive tourniquet
test, petechiae, ecchymoses or purpura, or bleeding from mucosa,
gastrointestinal tract, injection sites, or other locations)
Platelet count <100 000/mm3
Objective evidence of plasma leakage due to increased vascular
permeability shown by either fluctuation of packed cell volume
20% during the
course of illness and recovery or clinical signs of plasma leakage
such as pleural effusion, ascites, or hypoproteinaemia
Dengue shock syndrome
Criteria for dengue haemorrhagic fever and either:
Pulse pressure <20 mm Hg or
Hypotension (defined as systolic pressure <80 mm Hg for those
aged <5 years or <90 mm Hg for those
5)
Probable diagnosis
At least one of following:
Supportive serology on single serum sample: titre
1280 with
haemagglutination inhibition test, comparable IgG titre with
enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, or positive for IgM antibody
test
Occurrence at same location and time as confirmed cases of
dengue fever
Confirmed diagnosis
At least one of following:
Isolation of dengue virus from serum or autopsy samples
Fourfold or greater increase in serum IgG (by
haemagglutination inhibition test) or increase in IgM antibody
specific to dengue virus
Detection of dengue virus in tissue, serum, or cerebrospinal
fluid by immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence, or enzyme
linked immunosorbent assay
Detection of dengue virus genomic sequences by reverse
transcription-polymerase chain reaction
Dengue haemorrhagic fever is primarily a disease of children under 15 years
in hyperendemic areas. Black populations may beat decreased risk.32
The disease is characterised by increasedcapillary permeability and
haemostatic changes (see box 1). Ifmajor plasma
leakage occurs, it usually develops 24 hours beforeto 24 hours after
defervescence. Patients may develop effusionsand ascites with a
variable amount of bleeding. Enlargement andtenderness of the liver
has been reported in up to 40% of patients.4Mortality can be as high as 10-20% (over 40% if shock occurs)
without early appropriate treatment, but it is as low as 0.2%in
hospitals with staff experienced in the disease. Warning signsthat
dengue shock syndrome is impending include sustained abdominalpain,
persistent vomiting, change in level of consciousness (irritability
or somnolence), a sudden change from fever to hypothermia, anda
sudden decrease in platelet count. 49
Rare presentations of infection include severe haemorrhage, jaundice,
parotitis, and cardiomyopathy. Unusual neurologicalpresentations
include mononeuropathies, polyneuropathies, encephalitis,and
transverse myelitis.22 Guillain-Barré syndrome has
beenassociated with dengue.33
Encephalopathy occurs occasionallyand may result from cerebral
oedema, cerebral haemorrhage, liverfailure, or electrolyteimbalances.
Laboratory findings commonly associated with dengue include neutropenia,
lymphocytosis, increased concentration of liver enzymes,and
thrombocytopenia. Diagnosis can be confirmed with severallaboratory
tests; most often the haemagglutination inhibitiontest and IgG or
IgM enzyme immunoassays (see box 1). 13 Thenon-specific presentation and
course of infection underscore theimportance of laboratory testing
for confirmation of cause. Severaldiseases should be considered in
the differential diagnosis (box2).
Travellers may unwittingly be infected with dengue virus because transmission
is maintained even between epidemics; malariashould be ruled out in
those returning with symptoms from an endemicarea.34
In Australia and Germany up to 8% of travellers returningwith
febrile illnesses were found to have dengue.35-37
Becausethe incubation period can vary from 3 to 14 days (typically
between5 and 7 days) and viraemia can persist up to 12 days
(typically4 to 5 days), 925 dengue can be ruled out if symptoms beginmore than 2 to 3 weeks after the patient has left an endemic areaor if the fever lasts more than two weeks.9
Nevertheless, denguehaemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome are
rare in travellers;those with a history of dengue should be advised
to protect themselveswell from mosquitoes when travelling to endemicareas.
No specific therapeutic agents exist for dengue; steroids, antivirals, or
carbazochrome (which decreases capillary permeability)have no proven
role. In patients without shock, oral hydrationshould be started
early. Paracetamol (aspirin and other non-steroidalanti-inflammatory
drugs should be avoided owing to the increasedrisk for Reye's
syndrome and haemorrhage) can be used for feverand analgesia.
Assessment of the patient's condition includespacked cell volume,
platelet count, liver function tests, prothrombintime, partial
thromboplastin time, electrolytes, and blood gasanalysis. The
patient's clinical condition should be monitoreduntil at least
24 hours after defervesence because of the riskof shock.1
Patients with signs of severe dehydration or haemorrhage or those who cannot
be monitored or return quickly if symptoms worsenshould be admitted
to hospital. Invasive procedures should beconsidered carefully
because of the risk of haemorrhage. The choiceof crystalloid or
colloid solutions in dengue shock syndrome isunder debate.38
No studies have found a difference in clinicallysignificant
outcomes, but they do show that appropriate volumerepletion is
effective in dengue shock syndrome and that lactatedRinger's
solution is no better (perhaps worse) than normal saline.38Larger scale studies may be needed if important clinical differencesbetween colloids and crystalloids are to be found (including thepossibility that dextran may worsen bleeding complications).
Box 2: Differential
diagnosis of dengue
Arboviruses
Chikungunya virus (this has often been mistaken for dengue in
South East Asia)
Viral diseases
Hantavirus; measles; rubella; enteroviruses; influenza; hepatitis
A
Current prevention of dengue must focus on the mosquito. Aedes aegypti
is difficult to control owing to its intimacy withhumans. The
mosquito readily finds habitats for its larvae inwater storage
containers and domestic rubbish. Environmental methodsfor control
include the management of water supplies and storageto prevent
breeding, the management of solid waste, and the modificationof
larval habitats created by humans. Vietnam has had some successin
eradicating larvae from water storage containers by using the
predacious copepod, Mesocyclops spp.39
Mosquito bites may beavoided by removing stagnant sources of water
or by using protectiveclothing, repellants, larvicides (especially
for containers thatcannot be eliminated), and, in cases of
epidemics, insecticides.Insect repellants should be used in the
early morning and lateafternoon when Aedes mosquitoes are
mostactive.
The lack of a dengue animal model has been an obstacle in vaccine
development. Also, safety and efficacy tests on dengue vaccinesmust
consider antibody dependent enhancement, thus necessitatingthe
development of a tetravalent vaccine. Live attenuated tetravalent
vaccines are being evaluated in phase 2 trials. New approachesto
vaccine development being studied include infectious cloneDNA and
naked DNA vaccines that may offer simpler and cheapermethods of
manufacturing in conjunction with the possibility ofgreater
stability andsafety.
It may still be many years before a vaccine is available. The factors
contributing to the increased incidence of dengue andemergence of
dengue haemorrhagic fever are intensifying. Untilthe Aedes
mosquito can be effectively controlled or a cost effectivevaccine
developed, dengue can be expected to continue to escalate.
Additional educational
resources
Useful websites
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/dengue/)home
page for dengue fever. Includes a new section on information for
healthcare providers
World Health Organization (www.who.int/ctd/dengue/)information
on status of dengue and its control, with links to WHO documents and
relevant publications
Pan American Health Organization (www.paho.org)website
contains presentation of 63 slides related to dengue
Useful books
Gubler DJ, Kuno G, eds. Dengue and dengue haemorrhagic fever.
New York: CAB, 1997
Innis BL. Dengue and dengue haemorrhagic fever. In: Porterfield JS,
ed. Kass handbook of infectious diseases: exotic virus infections.
London: Chapman and Hall, 1995:103-46
Information for patients
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (www.cdc.gov/travel/)page
specifically dealing with diseases that can affect traveller
World Health Organization (www.who.int/inf-fs/en/fact117.html)fact
sheet on dengue, with links to information on countries where outbreaks
have occurred. Describes prevention and control
Acknowledgments
Figure 2 was provided by Ed Rowton. The opinions contained
herein are those of the authors and should not be construed as
representing the official policies of the Department of the Armyor
the Department ofDefense.
Footnotes
Competing interests: Nonedeclared.
Criteria for dengue fever and dengue haemorrhagic fever appear on bmj.com
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aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) feed preferentially and frequently on human
blood? J Med Entomol 2001; 38: 411-422[Medline].
Gubler DJ. Aedes aegypti and Aedes aegypti-borne disease
control in the 1990s: top down or bottom up? Charles Franklin Craig Lecture.
Am J Trop Med Hyg 1989; 40: 571-578[Medline].
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center
for Infectious Diseases, Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases.
Dengue fever home page
www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/dengue/slideset/index.htm (accessed 3 Apr
2002).
Rigau-Perez JG, Gubler DJ, Vorndam AV, Clark GG. Dengue: a
literature review and case study of travelers from the United States,
1986-1994. J Travel Med 1997; 4: 65-71[Medline].
Wu SJ, Grouard-Vogel G, Sun W, Mascola JR, Brachtel E,
Putvatana R, et al. Human skin Langerhans cells are targets of dengue virus
infection. Nat Med 2000; 6: 816-820[Medline].
Cam BV, Fonsmark L, Hue NB, Phuong NT, Poulsen A, Heegaard
ED. Prospective case-control study of encephalopathy in children with dengue
hemorrhagic fever. Am J Trop Med Hyg 2001; 65: 848-851[Medline].
Kurane I, Takasaki T. Dengue fever and dengue haemorrhagic
fever: challenges of controlling an enemy still at large. Rev Med Virol
2001; 11: 301-311[Medline].
Isturiz RE, Gubler DJ, Brea del Castillo J. Dengue and
dengue hemorrhagic fever in Latin America and the Caribbean. Infect Dis
Clin North Am 2000; 14: 121-140[Medline].
Sharp TW, Wallace MR, Hayes CG, Sanchez JL, DeFraites RF,
Arthur RR, et al. Dengue fever in US troops during Operation Restore Hope,
Somalia, 1992-1993. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1995; 53: 89-94[Medline].
Gaultier C, Angibaud G, Laille M, Lacassin F. [Probable
Miller Fisher syndrome during dengue fever type 2]. Rev Neurol (Paris)
2000; 156: 169-171[Medline].
O'Brien D, Tobin S, Brown GV, Torresi J. Fever in returned
travelers: review of hospital admissions for a 3-year period. Clin Infect
Dis 2001; 33: 603-609[Medline].
Nhan NT, Cao XT, Kneen R, Wills B, Nguyen VM, Nguyen TQ, et
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Nam VS, Yen NT, Holynska M, Reid JW, Kay BH. National
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
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