1. No Evidence of O'nyong-nyong Viremia among Children with Febrile Illness in Kenya (2015-2018).
- Author
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Shah MM, Ndenga BA, Mutuku FM, Okuta V, Ronga CO, Chebii PK, Maina P, Jembe Z, Sahoo MK, Huang C, Weber J, Pinsky BA, and LaBeaud AD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Alphavirus Infections blood, Child, Child, Preschool, Communicable Diseases, Emerging blood, Communicable Diseases, Emerging epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks, Fever etiology, Humans, Infant, Kenya epidemiology, O'nyong-nyong Virus immunology, O'nyong-nyong Virus pathogenicity, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Viremia etiology, Alphavirus Infections epidemiology, Fever epidemiology, Viremia epidemiology
- Abstract
O'nyong-nyong virus (ONNV) is a little-known arbovirus causing intermittent, yet explosive, outbreaks in Africa. It is closely related to chikungunya virus, an emerging infectious disease. O'nyong-nyong virus causes a self-limited illness characterized by bilateral polyarthritis, rash, low-grade fever, and lymphadenopathy. In 1959, an extensive outbreak of ONNV occurred in East Africa, and decades later, another large outbreak was documented in Uganda in 1996. Limited evidence for interepidemic transmission is available, although serologic studies indicate a high prevalence of exposure. 1,045 febrile child participants in western and coastal Kenya were tested for the presence of ONNV using a multiplexed real-time reverse transcriptase-PCR assay. More than half of the participants had malaria parasitemia, and there was no evidence of active ONNV viremia in these participants. Further work is required to better understand the interepidemic circulation of ONNV and to reconcile evidence of high serologic exposure to ONNV among individuals in East Africa.
- Published
- 2021
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