Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3370785 Journal of Clinical Virology 2008 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundAn outbreak of flavivirus encephalitis occurred in 2005 in Córdoba province, Argentina.ObjectivesTo characterize the epidemiologic and clinical features of that outbreak and provide the serologic results that identified St. Louis encephalitis virus (SLEV) as the etiologic agent.Study designFrom January to May 2005, patients with symptoms of encephalitis, meningitis, or fever with severe headache were evaluated and an etiologic diagnosis achieved by detection of flavivirus-specific antibody sera and cerebrospinal fluid.ResultsThe epidemic curve of 47 cases showed an explosive outbreak starting in January 2005 with one peak in mid-February and a second peak in mid-March; the epidemic ended in May. Cases occurred predominantly among persons 60 years and older. Nine deaths were reported. SLEV antibodies, when detected in 47 patients studied, had a pattern characteristic of a primary SLEV infection.ConclusionsEven though isolated cases of St. Louis encephalitis have been reported in Argentina, this is the first description of a large SLEV encephalitis outbreak in Argentina.

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Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
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