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dengue
(redirected from dengue fever)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.06 sec.

dengue

Tropical viral fever transmitted by mosquitoes and accompanied by joint pains, headache, rash, and glandular swelling. The incubation time is a week and the fever also lasts about a week. A more virulent form, dengue haemorrhagic fever, is thought to be caused by a second infection on top of the first, and causes internal bleeding. It affects mainly children. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that there are more than 50 million cases annually in the tropics causing over 10,000 deaths(2006).

In the late 1990s an increase in dengue fever was observed in some areas where it is not normally a problem. The increase is believed to result from a growing spread of mosquitoes as global warming raises temperatures, widening the geographical range of their habitats. Two-fifths of the world population are now at risk (2006).

The island of Maui, Hawaii, had 26 confirmed cases of dengue fever in October 2001, and tests were carried out on more than 100 suspected cases on Maui and the other Hawaiian islands of Oahu and Kauai. The cases were Hawaii's first outbreak of dengue in more than half a century.



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We wanted to describe characteristic clinical features (such as association of onset of visual symptoms with resolution of fever and nadir of thrombocytopenia) and propose epidemiologic explanations for the sudden rise in the incidence of observed ocular complications of dengue fever in our population.
The Stern Review presents evidence that rising sea levels threaten to displace one-sixth of the world's population; declining crop yields will affect global food supply; and deaths from heat, malnutrition and vector borne diseases such as malaria and dengue fever will rise as global temperatures increase.
Sixteen people in Brownsville contracted this severe form of dengue fever late in 2005, and another nine people had a less severe form of dengue infection at that time, says physician Bryan K.
 
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