Dengue 3 Virus Family: Flaviviridae Genus: Flavivirus
Power:
Major epidemics of
dengue have occurred in the Caribbean, South America, the Pacific, Asia,
and Africa. Dengue is a powerful health concern in many countries,
especially in areas with urban slums and breeding places for mosquitos.
The power of the virus is increased by that fact that at the present time,
prospects for control are poor.
Offences:
Dengue is caused by one
of four closely related, but antigenically distinct, virus serotypes (DEN-1,
DEN-2, DEN-3, and DEN-4). Infection with one of these serotypes does not
provide cross-protective immunity, so people living in a dengue-endemic
area can have four dengue infections during their lifetimes. Dengue is
transmitted through the Aedes aegyptia, a domestic day biting mosquito
common in the tropics. The incubation period is about two to seven days.
Infection with dengue viruses produces a spectrum of clinical illness ranging
from a nonspecific viral syndrome to severe and fatal hemorrhagic disease.
The three clinical profiles include dengue fever, dengue hemorrhagic fever,
and dengue shock syndrome. Dengue fever is a painful but non lethal
syndrome characterized by rash, sudden onset of fever, severe headache,
and other flu-like symptoms. Dengue hemorrhagic fever results in
fluid loss through leaky blood vessels, leading to dyhydration, hypotension,
severe jaundice, gastrointestinal hemorrhages and kidney failure.
This can sometimes worsen to dengue shock syndrome which is the most severe
form of the disease in which a child can die of shock in hours. Important
risk factors include the strain and serotype of the infecting virus, as
well as the age, immune status, and genetic predisposition of the patient.
Defences:
As shown by the doctrine
of original antigenic sin, the body has the same immune response as its
first infection, even if this is not the appropriate response. This
is the problem with dengue infections. Dengue only causes serious
problems such as hemorrhagic fever and shock syndrome during the second
infection of a different strain of the dengue virus. Antibody dependent
enhancement increases the ability for uptake of the dengue virus via Fc
receptors, enhances virion replication, and therefore makes the second
infection of a different strain of the dengue virus much more serous then
the first strain.
? Because of the lack of cross protection between the dengue viruses,
it is necessary to develop a vaccine protecting against all four dengue
serotypes. There is no licensed vaccine for dengue because none of
them guard against all for strains of the virus. The most common
method for control is mosquito control, however it is hard to spray using
insecticides because the Aedes aegypti live in places hard to reach with
pesticides. Other problems with this methods is the appearance of
pesticide resistant mosquitos. Control of mosquito breeding is possible
by draining stagnant water supplies.
Game action: Ooops! You forgot your insect repellent…
you lose!
Reference:
Medical Virology by White and Fenner p 434-443