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Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities

Colombia is an endemic country for dengue fever where the four serotypes of virus dengue (DENV1–4) circulate simultaneously, and all types are responsible for dengue cases in the country. The control strategies are guided by entomological surveillance. However, heterogeneity in aedic indices is not...

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Autores principales: Peña-García, Víctor Hugo, Triana-Chávez, Omar, Mejía-Jaramillo, Ana María, Díaz, Francisco J., Gómez-Palacio, Andrés, Arboleda-Sánchez, Sair
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4962275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27455289
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13070734
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author Peña-García, Víctor Hugo
Triana-Chávez, Omar
Mejía-Jaramillo, Ana María
Díaz, Francisco J.
Gómez-Palacio, Andrés
Arboleda-Sánchez, Sair
author_facet Peña-García, Víctor Hugo
Triana-Chávez, Omar
Mejía-Jaramillo, Ana María
Díaz, Francisco J.
Gómez-Palacio, Andrés
Arboleda-Sánchez, Sair
author_sort Peña-García, Víctor Hugo
collection PubMed
description Colombia is an endemic country for dengue fever where the four serotypes of virus dengue (DENV1–4) circulate simultaneously, and all types are responsible for dengue cases in the country. The control strategies are guided by entomological surveillance. However, heterogeneity in aedic indices is not well correlated with the incidence of the disease in cities such as Riohacha, Bello and Villavicencio. As an alternative, molecular detection of dengue virus in mosquitoes has been proposed as a useful tool for epidemiological surveillance and identification of serotypes circulating in field. We conducted a spatiotemporal fieldwork in these cities to capture adult mosquitoes to assess vector infection and explain the differences between Breteau indices and disease incidence. DENV infection in females and DENV serotype identification were evaluated and infection rates (IR) were estimated. The relationship between density, dengue cases and vector index was also estimated with logistic regression modeling and Pearson’s correlation coefficient. The lack of association between aedic indices and dengue incidence is in agreement with the weak associations between the density of the mosquitoes and their infection with DENV in the three cities. However, association was evident between the IR and dengue cases in Villavicencio. Furthermore, we found important negative associations between temperature and lag time from two to six weeks in Riohacha. We conclude that density of mosquitoes is not a good predictor of dengue cases. Instead, IR and temperature might explain better such heterogeneity.
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spelling pubmed-49622752016-08-01 Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities Peña-García, Víctor Hugo Triana-Chávez, Omar Mejía-Jaramillo, Ana María Díaz, Francisco J. Gómez-Palacio, Andrés Arboleda-Sánchez, Sair Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Colombia is an endemic country for dengue fever where the four serotypes of virus dengue (DENV1–4) circulate simultaneously, and all types are responsible for dengue cases in the country. The control strategies are guided by entomological surveillance. However, heterogeneity in aedic indices is not well correlated with the incidence of the disease in cities such as Riohacha, Bello and Villavicencio. As an alternative, molecular detection of dengue virus in mosquitoes has been proposed as a useful tool for epidemiological surveillance and identification of serotypes circulating in field. We conducted a spatiotemporal fieldwork in these cities to capture adult mosquitoes to assess vector infection and explain the differences between Breteau indices and disease incidence. DENV infection in females and DENV serotype identification were evaluated and infection rates (IR) were estimated. The relationship between density, dengue cases and vector index was also estimated with logistic regression modeling and Pearson’s correlation coefficient. The lack of association between aedic indices and dengue incidence is in agreement with the weak associations between the density of the mosquitoes and their infection with DENV in the three cities. However, association was evident between the IR and dengue cases in Villavicencio. Furthermore, we found important negative associations between temperature and lag time from two to six weeks in Riohacha. We conclude that density of mosquitoes is not a good predictor of dengue cases. Instead, IR and temperature might explain better such heterogeneity. MDPI 2016-07-21 2016-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4962275/ /pubmed/27455289 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13070734 Text en © 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Peña-García, Víctor Hugo
Triana-Chávez, Omar
Mejía-Jaramillo, Ana María
Díaz, Francisco J.
Gómez-Palacio, Andrés
Arboleda-Sánchez, Sair
Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities
title Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities
title_full Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities
title_fullStr Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities
title_full_unstemmed Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities
title_short Infection Rates by Dengue Virus in Mosquitoes and the Influence of Temperature May Be Related to Different Endemicity Patterns in Three Colombian Cities
title_sort infection rates by dengue virus in mosquitoes and the influence of temperature may be related to different endemicity patterns in three colombian cities
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4962275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27455289
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13070734
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