Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2510073 Antiviral Research 2013 26 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Chikungunya fever is caused by a mosquito-borne alphavirus originating in East Africa.•During the past 7 years, the disease has spread to islands of the Indian Ocean, Asia and Europe.•Its spread has been facilitated by a mutation favouring replication in the mosquito Ae. albopictus.•No vaccines or antiviral drugs are available to prevent or treat chikungunya fever.•This paper provides an extensive review of the virus and disease, including Supplementary Tables.

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is the aetiological agent of the mosquito-borne disease chikungunya fever, a debilitating arthritic disease that, during the past 7 years, has caused immeasurable morbidity and some mortality in humans, including newborn babies, following its emergence and dispersal out of Africa to the Indian Ocean islands and Asia. Since the first reports of its existence in Africa in the 1950s, more than 1500 scientific publications on the different aspects of the disease and its causative agent have been produced. Analysis of these publications shows that, following a number of studies in the 1960s and 1970s, and in the absence of autochthonous cases in developed countries, the interest of the scientific community remained low. However, in 2005 chikungunya fever unexpectedly re-emerged in the form of devastating epidemics in and around the Indian Ocean. These outbreaks were associated with mutations in the viral genome that facilitated the replication of the virus in Aedes albopictus mosquitoes. Since then, nearly 1000 publications on chikungunya fever have been referenced in the PubMed database. This article provides a comprehensive review of chikungunya fever and CHIKV, including clinical data, epidemiological reports, therapeutic aspects and data relating to animal models for in vivo laboratory studies. It includes Supplementary Tables of all WHO outbreak bulletins, ProMED Mail alerts, viral sequences available on GenBank, and PubMed reports of clinical cases and seroprevalence studies.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Virology
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