5 results match your criteria: "WHO Collaborating Center for Arbovirus Reference and Research[Affiliation]"

The Pandemic Experience in Southeast Asia: Interface Between SARS-CoV-2, Malaria, and Dengue.

Front Trop Dis

November 2021

Laboratory of Malaria and Vector Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, MD, United States.

Southeast Asia (SEA) emerged relatively unscathed from the first year of the global SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, but as of July 2021 the region is experiencing a surge in case numbers primarily driven by Alpha (B.1.1.

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Melao virus (MELV) strains BE AR8033 and BE AR633512 were isolated from pools of Ochlerotatus scapularis mosquitoes in Belém, Pará State (1955), and Alta Floresta, Rondônia State (2000), Brazil, respectively. The aim of the present study was to molecularly characterize these strains and to describe the histopathological, biochemical and immunological changes in golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) following intraperitoneal injection of MELV strains. Hamsters were susceptible to both of the MELV strains studied.

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Isolations of yellow fever virus from Haemagogus leucocelaenus in Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil.

Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg

September 2003

WHO Collaborating Center for Arbovirus Reference and Research, Instituto Evandro Chagas, Fundação Nacional de Saúde (FUNASA), Ministério da Saúde (MS), Av. Almirante Barroso, 491, 66090-000, Belém, PA, Brazil.

Following howling monkey (Alouatta caraya) deaths and yellow fever (YF) antigen detection by immunohistochemistry in the liver sample of a dead monkey in April and May 2001 in the municipalities of Garruchos and Santo Antônio das Missões, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil, epidemiological field investigations were initiated. Two strains of YF virus were isolated in suckling mice from 23 Haemagogus (Conopostegus) leucocelaenus Dyar & Shannon mosquitoes collected from the study sites. The YF virus was isolated from this species in the 1930s in Brazil and in the 1940s in Colombia.

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Epidemic of jungle yellow fever in Brazil, 2000: implications of climatic alterations in disease spread.

J Med Virol

November 2001

WHO Collaborating Center for Arbovirus Reference and Research, Seção de Arbovírus do Instituto Evandro Chagas, Fundação Nacional de Saúde (FUNASA), Ministério da Saúde (MS), 66090-000, Belém, PA, Brazil.

Seventy-seven human cases of sylvatic yellow fever were reported in Brazil during the period January-June 2000. The first cases were reported 1 week after New Year's day and originated at Chapada dos Veadeiros, a tourist canyon site in Goiás state, near Brasília, the Brazilian capital. The laboratory procedures used for diagnoses included serology with an IgM capture assay and plaque reduction neutralization test, virus isolation in suckling mice and C6/36 cells, and immunohistochemistry.

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Three cases of dengue fever involving the central nervous system (CNS) are reported. All occurred in 1994 during a dengue (DEN) epidemic caused by serotypes DEN-1 and DEN-2. The first case examined was a 17-year-old girl who complained of fever, nuchal rigidity and genital bleeding.

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