1. The First Case of Zika Virus Disease in Guinea: Description, Virus Isolation, Sequencing, and Seroprevalence in Local Population.
- Author
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Bayandin RB, Makenov MT, Boumbaly S, Stukolova OA, Gladysheva AV, Shipovalov AV, Skarnovich MO, Camara O, Toure AH, Svyatchenko VA, Shvalov AN, Ternovoi VA, Boiro MY, Agafonov AP, and Karan LS
- Subjects
- Infant, Newborn, Animals, Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Guinea epidemiology, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Immunoglobulin M, Zika Virus Infection diagnosis, Zika Virus Infection epidemiology, Zika Virus genetics, Culicidae
- Abstract
The Zika virus (ZIKV) is a widespread mosquito-borne pathogen. Phylogenetically, two lineages of ZIKV are distinguished: African and Asian-American. The latter became the cause of the 2015-2016 pandemic, with severe consequences for newborns. In West African countries, the African lineage was found, but there is evidence of the emergence of the Asian-American lineage in Cape Verde and Angola. This highlights the need to not only monitor ZIKV but also sequence the isolates. In this article, we present a case report of Zika fever in a pregnant woman from Guinea identified in 2018. Viral RNA was detected through qRT-PCR in a serum sample. In addition, the seroconversion of anti-Zika IgM and IgG antibodies was detected in repeated blood samples. Subsequently, the virus was isolated from the C6/36 cell line. The detected ZIKV belonged to the African lineage, the Nigerian sublineage. The strains with the closest sequences were isolated from mosquitoes in Senegal in 2011 and 2015. In addition, we conducted the serological screening of 116 blood samples collected from patients presenting to the hospital of Faranah with fevers during the period 2018-2021. As a result, it was found that IgM-positive patients were identified each year and that the seroprevalence varied between 5.6% and 17.1%.
- Published
- 2023
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