| Literature DB >> 29026637 |
Penélope Saldanha Marinho1,2, Antonio José Cunha3, Joffre Amim Junior1,3, Arnaldo Prata-Barbosa3,4.
Abstract
Arboviruses are emerging infectious diseases with the ability to expand geographically and rapidly affect large populations. The recent epidemic caused by the Zika virus in the Americas and congenital Zika syndrome associated with maternal infection has called out attention to the importance of studying arboviruses during pregnancy. This is a review on selected arboviruses infections during gestation, including Zika, Chikungunya, Dengue and Yellow Fever viruses. Issues such as historical overview, pathogenesis, transmission, clinical conditions, diagnosis, treatment and prevention are addressed.Entities:
Keywords: Arboviruses; Chikungunya; Dengue; Pregnancy; Review; Yellow fever; Zika
Year: 2017 PMID: 29026637 PMCID: PMC5625716 DOI: 10.1186/s40748-017-0054-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Health Neonatol Perinatol ISSN: 2054-958X
Comparison of symptoms of symptomatic presentationa between Dengue, Zika and Chikungunya
| Signs/Symptoms | Dengue | Zika | Chikungunya |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fever | Above 38 °C (4 to 7 days) | No fever or subfebrile ≤38 °C | Above 38 °C (2 to 3 days) |
| Rash | Appears from the 4th day | Appears on the 1st or 2nd day | Appears on the 2nd or 5th day 50% of cases |
| Myalgia | +++/+++ | ++/+++ | +/+++ |
| Arthralgia | +/+++ | ++/+++ | +++/+++ |
| Conjunctivitis | Rare | 50–90% of cases | 30% |
| Headache | +++ | ++ | ++ |
| Pruritus | Slight | Moderate/Intense | Slight |
| Blood dyscrasia | Moderate | Absent | Slight |
| Neurological impairment | Rare | More frequent than Dengue and Chikungunya | Rare (predominant in neonates) |
aEstimated symptomatic presentation in 50% of Dengue virus, 20% of Zika virus and 80% of Chikungunya virus infection