نتایج جستجو برای: west nile virus

تعداد نتایج: 489850  

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2000
D. K. Lvov A. M. Butenko V. L. Gromashevsky V. P. Larichev S. Y. Gaidamovich O. I. Vyshemirsky A. N. Zhukov V. V. Lazorenko V. N. Salko A. I. Kovtunov K. M. Galimzyanov A. E. Platonov T. N. Morozova N. V. Khutoretskaya E. O. Shishkina T. M. Skvortsova

From July to September 1999, a widespread outbreak of meningoencephalitis associated with West Nile virus (Flavivirus, Flaviviridae) occurred in southern Russia, with hundreds of cases and dozens of deaths. Two strains of West Nile virus isolated from patient serum and brain-tissue samples reacted in hemagglutination-inhibition and neutralization tests with patients' convalescent-phase sera and...

2006
Kathleen Y. Haaland Joseph Sadek Steven Pergam Leonor A. Echevarria Larry E. Davis Diane Goade Joanne Harnar Robert A. Nofchissey C. Mack Sewel Paul Ettestad

Mental status after acute West Nile virus infection has not been examined objectively. We compared Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status scores of 116 patients with West Nile fever or West Nile neuroinvasive disease. Mental status was poorer and cognitive complaints more frequent with West Nile neuroinvasive disease (p = 0.005).

2013
Mattia Calzolari Paolo Bonilauri Romeo Bellini Alessandro Albieri Francesco Defilippo Marco Tamba Massimo Tassinari Antonio Gelati Paolo Cordioli Paola Angelini Michele Dottori

BACKGROUND The circulation of West Nile virus and Usutu virus was detected in the Emilia-Romagna region in 2008 and 2009. To evaluate the extent of circulation of both viruses, environmental surveillance, based on bird and mosquito testing, was conducted in 2008 and gradually improved over the years. METHODS In February-March 2009-2011, 5,993 hibernating mosquitoes were manually sampled, out ...

Journal: :Annals of internal medicine 2004
Juan Gea-Banacloche Richard T Johnson Anto Bagic John A Butman Patrick R Murray Amy Guillet Agrawal

West Nile virus, a member of the family Flaviviridae, has spread throughout the United States. With more than 9000 cases and 200 deaths in 2003, West Nile virus has become the most common cause of viral encephalitis in several states. West Nile virus encephalitis is a zoonosis. The life cycle of the virus includes mainly birds as hosts and mosquitoes as vectors. Humans are accidental hosts, ins...

2013
Kshitiz

Introduction: West Nile virus is an RNA virus that was first isolated in a patient in the West Nile province of Uganda 1937 and has since than spread to the Middle East, Europe, and found its way to the United States in 1999 when the first case of West Nile Virus was reported in Queens, NY. From 1999 to 2008, there have been a total of about 29,000 cases of which about 12,000 had neuroinvasive ...

2012
Melinda J. Frost Jing Zhang Judith H. Edmonds Natalie A. Prow Xingnian Gu Rodney Davis Christine Hornitzky Kathleen E. Arzey Deborah Finlaison Paul Hick Andrew Read Jody Hobson-Peters Fiona J. May Stephen L. Doggett John Haniotis Richard C. Russell Roy A. Hall Alexander A. Khromykh Peter D. Kirkland

To determine the cause of an unprecedented outbreak of encephalitis among horses in New South Wales, Australia, in 2011, we performed genomic sequencing of viruses isolated from affected horses and mosquitoes. Results showed that most of the cases were caused by a variant West Nile virus (WNV) strain, WNV(NSW2011), that is most closely related to WNV Kunjin (WNV(KUN)), the indigenous WNV strain...

Journal: :MLO: medical laboratory observer 2004
Stuart Hazell

2007
Jordi Figuerola Ramon Soriguer Gema Rojo Concepción Gómez Tejedor Miguel Angel Jimenez-Clavero

A serosurvey for neutralizing antibodies against West Nile virus (WNV) in common coots (Fulica atra) was conducted in Doñana, Spain. Antibody prevalence was highest in 2003, intermediate in 2004, and lowest in 2005. Some birds seroreverted <1 year after first capture. Seroconversion of birds suggests local circulation of the virus.

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2000
J. H. Rappole S. R. Derrickson Z. Hubálek

West Nile virus, an Old World flavivirus related to St. Louis encephalitis virus, was first recorded in the New World during August 1999 in the borough of Queens, New York City. Through October 1999, 62 patients, 7 of whom died, had confirmed infections with the virus. Ornithophilic mosquitoes are the principal vectors of West Nile virus in the Old World, and birds of several species, chiefly m...

Journal: :The new microbiologica 2013
Paolo Gaibani Anna Pierro Giovanna Lunghi Claudio Farina Vincenzo Toschi Caterina Matinato Anna Orlandi Antonella Zoccoli Daniela Almini Maria Paola Landini Erminio Torresani Vittorio Sambri

A seroprevalence study for anti-West Nile virus-specific antibodies was carried out in healthy blood donors resident in the metropolitan area of Milan in two different years, 2009 and 2011. In 2009 no positive sera were found, whereas 5 positive sera were found in 2011, revealing viral circulation in this naive area. The seroprevalence rate identified in 2011 was 0.57%, suggesting that the area...

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