| Literature DB >> 30736362 |
Mohamed Fawzy1, Yosra A Helmy2,3.
Abstract
Rift Valley fever (RVF) is an emerging transboundary, mosquito-borne, zoonotic viral disease caused high morbidity and mortality in both human and ruminant populations. It is considered an important threat to both agriculture and public health in African and the Middle Eastern countries including Egypt. Five major RVF epidemics have been reported in Egypt (1977, 1993, 1994, 1997, and 2003). The virus is transmitted in Egypt by different mosquito's genera such as Aedes, Culex, Anopheles, and Mansonia, leading to abortions in susceptible animal hosts especially sheep, goat, cattle, and buffaloes. Recurrent RVF outbreaks in Egypt have been attributed in part to the lack of routine surveillance for the virus. These periodic epizootics have resulted in severe economic losses. We posit that there is a critical need for new approaches to RVF control that will prevent or at least reduce future morbidity and economic stress. One Health is an integrated approach for the understanding and management of animal, human, and environmental determinants of complex problems such as RVF. Employing the One Health approach, one might engage local communities in surveillance and control of RVF efforts, rather than continuing their current status as passive victims of the periodic RVF incursions. This review focuses upon endemic and epidemic status of RVF in Egypt, the virus vectors and their ecology, transmission dynamics, risk factors, and the ecology of the RVF at the animal/human interface, prevention, and control measures, and the use of environmental and climate data in surveillance systems to predict disease outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: Egypt; One Health approach; Rift Valley Fever (RVF); vaccine; zoonotic virus
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30736362 PMCID: PMC6410127 DOI: 10.3390/v11020139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1The RVF virus tripartite RNA genome structure. S-segment encodes for nucleoprotein (N) and a non-structural protein (NSs) that determine the virus virulence. M-segment encodes two envelope glycoproteins, Gn and Gc, and two uncharacterized polypeptides (NSm1, and NSm2). L-segment encodes L protein (viral polymerase).
Figure 2The life cycle of the RVF virus in Egypt and the role of the mosquito vectors. There are two transmission cycles for RVFV in nature: (1) an enzootic cycle that can occur during the normal rainfall and involves the Aedes mosquitoes, which transmit the virus vertically to their offsprings, and (2) an epidemic-epizootic cycle that occurs during abnormally heavy rainfall and flooding of dams or during the warm season. The virus is transmitted transovarially and the Culex mosquitoes distribute the virus and induce the emergence of outbreaks. The transmission of the virus to humans occurs by direct contact with infected animals. The continuous line represents the direct transmission, while the dashed line represents the vertical transmission.
Figure 3Distribution of RVF epidemics in Egypt. Egypt map shows different Egyptian provinces including: (1) Damietta, (2) Kafr El-Sheikh, (3) El-Dakahlia, (4) El-Gharbia, (5) El-Menofia, (6) El-Beheira, (7) Alexandria, (8) El-Sharquia, (9) El-Qalubia, (10) six of October, (11) Cairo (12) El-Suez, (13) Helwan, (14) El-Faiyoum, (15) Beni-Suef, (16) El-Menia, (17) Assiut, (18) Sohaj, (19) Qena, (20) Aswan, (21) Luxur, (22) Marsa Matrouh, (23) Giza, and (24) Ismailia. Blue dots represent the first outbreak (1977–1978), red dots represent the 1993–1994 outbreak, purple dots represent the 1997 outbreak, and the green dots represent the 2003 outbreak.
Egyptian RVFV outbreaks.
| Outbreaks | Presumable Source of Infection | Affected Areas | Main Vectors | Human Cases | Affected Animals | Used Vaccine | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1977 (August–December) to 1978 (July–December) | The infected person returns back from Africa and importation of infected camels from Sudan-Zimbabwe | Belbies, El-Sharquia province, then spread to the Nile valley, delta, and Sudan |
| 1977: up to 20,000 cases, with 598 deaths | Domestic animals (sheep, cattle, camels, goats, horses), rats and humans | No available vaccines | [ |
| 1993–1994 (May–August) | The virus either remains endemic after 1977 outbreak or reintroduced in 1993 from the same source (Sudan) | Aswan, then spread to Nile Delta provinces, El-Faiyum and Damietta |
| Up to 1500 estimated cases, with 128 confirmed cases | Domestic animals (cattle and buffaloes) and humans | Live attenuated Smithburn strain | [ |
| 1997 (April–August) | Importation of animals especially camels from Africa with the absence of effective control measure | Upper Egypt, then spread to all Egyptian provinces | - | 7 confirmed cases | Domestic animals (sheep and cattle) and humans | Live attenuated Smithburn strain | [ |
| 2003 (June–October) | RVFV appeared in the main market of livestock animals in Egypt, where animals were collected from all over the country | Began to appear in four provinces (Kafr El-Sheikh, El-Sharquiya, El-Dakahliya and El-Beheira) in the Nile Delta |
| 373 confirmed cases, with 112 deaths | Domestic animals (cattle and sheep) and humans | Live attenuated Smithburn strain | [ |