News

Dengue Edges In to U.S., Especially Texas, Florida


 

MIAMI — From 1977 to 2004, there were 3,806 suspected cases of dengue imported to the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Many more cases probably go unreported each year because surveillance in the United States is passive and relies on physicians to recognize the disease, inquire about the patient's travel history, obtain proper diagnostic samples, and report the case,” according to the CDC.

“We are starting to see more and more cases of dengue fever,” Dr. Christian C. Patrick said at a pediatric update sponsored by Miami Children's Hospital, “particularly in south Texas.”

Following a case report of a woman in Brownsville, Tex., infected with dengue without traveling in July 2005 and an outbreak of 1,251 reported cases in Tamaulipas, Mexico, an investigation identified 24 additional cases in Texas in October, including 2 more infections not associated with travel (MMWR 2007;56:785–9). A review of hospitalization records in December revealed that 16 of 25 (64%) eventual infections in Texas developed the more serious dengue hemorrhagic fever, compared with 34 of 104 cases (33%) identified in Mexico.

Results of another study suggest dengue is endemic along the southern Texas-Mexico border (Emerg. Infect. Dis. 2007;13:1477–83). Investigators found 2% of Brownsville residents had serologic evidence of recent dengue infection, compared with 7.3% of residents in the bordering city of Matamoros in Tamaulipas in 2004. The cross-sectional survey with 600 participants also showed that 40% of Brownsville residents and 78% of Matamoros residents had a past dengue infection. Relevant mosquito larvae were found in 30% of households in both cities, they reported.

The Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads this disease is now found throughout central and southern United States, he said.

Dr. David Morens and Dr. Anthony Fauci also described dengue and hemorrhagic fever as a potential public health threat to residents of the continental United States in a Jan. 9, 2008, commentary in JAMA (2008;299:214–6). Dr. Fauci is the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, where Dr. Morens is the dengue program officer.

“The range of Aedes albopictus (Asian tiger mosquito), a secondary dengue vector related to the classical vector, Aedes aegypti, has been expanding globally at an alarming rate. Since its introduction into the United States in 1985, Aedes albopictus has spread to 36 states,” they wrote.

“We don't talk much about [dengue] in the United States, but we have it in our differential,” said Dr. Patrick, chief medical officer and senior vice president for medical and academic affairs, Miami Children's Hospital.

In 1997–1998, there were 18 cases of confirmed imported dengue reported in Florida, higher than the previously reported 10-year mean of 1.3 cases per year (MMWR 1999;48:1150–2).

The incubation period for dengue fever generally is 4–7 days after a mosquito bite (range, 3–14 days) with a characteristic high fever. “Temperature and the virus go hand in hand,” Dr. Patrick said.

Infected patients also typically experience abrupt headaches, retrobulbar eye pain, marked muscle and joint pain, and a variety of rashes, both macular and maculopapular. Respiratory symptoms include cough, sore throat, and congestion; each is observed in approximately one-third of patients, he said.

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