نتایج جستجو برای: dengue vectors

تعداد نتایج: 87888  

2013
Ashley L St John Abhay PS Rathore Bhuvanakantham Raghavan Mah-Lee Ng Soman N Abraham

Dengue Virus (DENV), a flavivirus spread by mosquito vectors, can cause vascular leakage and hemorrhaging. However, the processes that underlie increased vascular permeability and pathological plasma leakage during viral hemorrhagic fevers are largely unknown. Mast cells (MCs) are activated in vivo during DENV infection, and we show that this elevates systemic levels of their vasoactive product...

2016
Indra Vythilingam Jamal I-C. Sam Yoke F. Chan Loke T. Khaw Wan Y. Wan Sulaiman

Zika virus (ZIKV) has now become a global public health concern. The vectors for ZIKV are Aedes aegypti and A. albopictus. Both these mosquitoes are predominant in Southeast Asia and are also responsible for the spread of other arboviral diseases like dengue virus and chikungunya virus. The incidence of dengue has been increasing over the years and this is of concern to public health workers. S...

Journal: :Science 2009
Conor J McMeniman Roxanna V Lane Bodil N Cass Amy W C Fong Manpreet Sidhu Yu-Feng Wang Scott L O'Neill

Most pathogens require a relatively long period of development in their mosquito vector before they can be transmitted to a new human host; hence, only older insects are of epidemiological importance. The successful transfer of a life-shortening strain of the inherited bacterial symbiont, Wolbachia, into the major mosquito vector of dengue, Aedes aegypti, halved adult life span under laboratory...

2016
Tamara Nunes Lima-Camara Paulo Roberto Urbinatti Francisco Chiaravalloti-Neto

This is the description of how nine Aedes aegypti larvae were found in a natural breeding site in the Pinheiros neighborhood, city of Sao Paulo, SP, Southeastern Brazil. The record was conducted in December 2014, during an entomological surveillance program of dengue virus vectors, with an active search of potential breeding sites, either artificial or natural. FindingAe. aegypti larvae in a tr...

2014
U. THAVARA A. TAWATSIN Y. NAGAO

SUMMARY Infection with dengue, the most prevalent mosquito-borne virus, manifests as dengue fever (DF) or the more fatal dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF). DHF occurs mainly when an individual who has acquired antibodies to one serotype is inoculated with another serotype. It was reported that mosquito control may have increased the incidence of DF and DHF due to age-dependency in manifesting the...

2013
Thomas Jaenisch Anavaj Sakuntabhai Annelies Wilder-Smith

Dengue is a major international public health concern and one of the most important arthropod-borne diseases [1]. Approximately 2.5 billion people—40% of the world’s population, in over 100 countries—are at risk of dengue virus (DENV) infection [2]. In recent years the average annual incidence of dengue-related serious disease in many tropical counties has been rising dramatically, with the inf...

2006
H. L. Lee A. Rohani

The transovarial transmission of dengue virus in field populations of Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus was monitored in an urbanized residential area in Malaysia. The mosquito larval populations were monitored using standard ovitraps and the larvae retrieved were subjected to dengue virus isolation by culturing in C6/36 cells and detected by peroxidase anti peroxidase staining. Data on serologi...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Steven T Stoddard Brett M Forshey Amy C Morrison Valerie A Paz-Soldan Gonzalo M Vazquez-Prokopec Helvio Astete Robert C Reiner Stalin Vilcarromero John P Elder Eric S Halsey Tadeusz J Kochel Uriel Kitron Thomas W Scott

Dengue is a mosquito-borne disease of growing global health importance. Prevention efforts focus on mosquito control, with limited success. New insights into the spatiotemporal drivers of dengue dynamics are needed to design improved disease-prevention strategies. Given the restricted range of movement of the primary mosquito vector, Aedes aegypti, local human movements may be an important driv...

2014
Luke Alphey Nina Alphey

1. Why (and how to) use GM vectors for vector control? Vector-borne diseases cause immense suffering and economic damage. Vector control remains a key element of mitigation and control strategies, particularly for pathogens such as dengue viruses for which there are no specific drugs or vaccines. Yet existing vector control tools are limited; toxic chemicals are the mainstay but difficult to de...

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