Title
Laboratory findings in patients with probable dengue diagnosis from an endemic area in Colombia in 2018
Date Issued
01 July 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Cardenas J.C.
Giraldo-Parra S.Y.
Gonzalez M.U.
Gutierrez-Silva L.Y.
Jaimes-Villamizar L.
Roa-Parra A.L.
Carvajal D.J.
Colpitts T.M.
Londono-Renteria B.
Unidad de Investigación Médica Naval de EE. UU.
Unidad de Investigación Médica Naval de EE. UU.
Publisher(s)
MDPI AG
Abstract
As demonstrated with the novel coronavirus pandemic, rapid and accurate diagnosis is key to determine the clinical characteristic of a disease and to improve vaccine development. Once the infected person is identified, hematological findings may be used to predict disease outcome and offer the correct treatment. Rapid and accurate diagnosis and clinical parameters are pivotal to track infections during clinical trials and set protection status. This is also applicable for re-emerging diseases like dengue fever, which causes outbreaks in Asia and Latin America every 4 to 5 years. Some areas in the US are also endemic for the transmission of dengue virus (DENV), the causal agent of dengue fever. However, significant number of DENV infections in rural areas are diag-nosed solely by clinical and hematological findings because of the lack of availability of ELISA or PCR-based tests or the infrastructure to implement them in the near future. Rapid diagnostic tests (RDT) are a less sensitive, yet they represent a timely way of detecting DENV infections. The pur-pose of this study was to determine whether there is an association between hematological findings and the probability for an NS1-based DENV RDT to detect the DENV NS1 antigen. We also aimed to describe the hematological parameters that are associated with the diagnosis through each test.
Volume
13
Issue
7
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
VirologÃa
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85111604136
PubMed ID
Source
Viruses
ISSN of the container
19994915
Sponsor(s)
This research was funded by the Department of Entomology at Kansas State University (BLR) and by the US DoD Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division (AFHSD)/Global Emerging Infections Surveillance (GEIS) Branch, PROMIS ID P00144_20_N6_02, 2019-2020 and the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch-Multistate, project 1021430.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción CientÃfica
Scopus