Engineering
Dengue fever - Causes, symptoms and treatment
According to the World Health Organization, dengue fever is one of the top ten global health threats – it's also the most rapidly spreading. There has been a 30-fold increase in global incidence over the past 50 years. Common symptoms of dengue include fever, rash, nausea, aches, and pains, lasting up to a week. Some people with dengue develop complications that can result in internal bleeding, shock, and even death. Severe dengue requires careful monitoring in the hospital. There are four serotypes of the dengue virus, all of which can cause disease. Prior infection with one dengue serotype is a risk factor for developing later infections.
Causes:
Dengue fever is caused by a virus transmitted primarily by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. These mosquitoes bite during the day, usually just after sunrise and around sunset.
Symptoms:
1. High fever
2. Headache
3. Vomiting
4. Muscle and joint pain
5. Rash
-Symptoms typically last for two to seven days.
How is dengue spread?
Dengue spreads where Aedes aegypti mosquitoes are present. This mosquito is commonly found in and around homes, where it breeds in small water containers. When an Aedes aegypti mosquito bites someone with dengue, it can become infected and transmit the virus to another person when it bites again.
How Dengue is treated?
There is no specific medical treatment for dengue, which has flu-like symptoms. Monitoring for warning signs of severe disease is important. Urgent medical intervention is required if indications of shock or bleeding develop, as these complications can be lethal.
How can we help prevent dengue?
Conventional strategies for dengue control rely heavily on reducing the number of water-holding containers that support mosquito breeding and using insecticides to suppress the mosquito population. However, it is challenging to achieve sustained reductions in mosquito numbers, and dengue outbreaks can still occur. Using personal repellents and wearing protective clothing can help to prevent mosquito bites.
In contrast, the World Mosquito Program’s Wolbachia method doesn't aim to reduce the mosquito population, but rather to replace it with Wolbachia-carrying mosquitoes. This helps block the transmission of dengue, as well as other viruses transmitted by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, such as Zika, chikungunya, and yellow fever.
Conventional strategies for dengue control rely heavily on reducing the number of water-holding containers that support mosquito breeding and using insecticides to suppress the mosquito population. However, it is challenging to achieve sustained reductions in mosquito numbers, and dengue outbreaks can still occur. Using personal repellents and wearing protective clothing can help to prevent mosquito bites.
In contrast, the World Mosquito Program’s Wolbachia method doesn't aim to reduce the mosquito population, but rather to replace it with Wolbachia-carrying mosquitoes. This helps block the transmission of dengue, as well as other viruses transmitted by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, such as Zika, chikungunya, and yellow fever.
Our research shows that in communities where high levels of Wolbachia-carrying mosquitoes are present, the incidence of dengue and other Aedes-borne diseases is significantly reduced.