In early April 1998 the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) in Darwin was notified of a case with positive dengue serology. The illness appeared to have been acquired in the Northern Territory (NT). Because dengue is not endemic to the NT locally acquired infection has significant public health implicationst particularly for vector identification and control to limit the spread of infection. Dengue IgM serology was positive on two occasions but the illness was eventually presumptively identified as Kokobera infection. This case illustrates some important points about serology. The interpretation of flavivirus serology is complex and can be? misleadingt despite recent improvements. The best method of determining the cause of infection is still ...
Objective: To describe the demographics, patterns of assessment and treatment of people visiting a ...
In north Queensland, recurring epidemics of dengue fever are a public health concern. Each epidemic ...
Dengue fever is caused by infection with one of the four serotypes of dengue virus (I to 4). Clinica...
In early April 1998 the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) in Darwin was notified of a case with posit...
In early April 1998 the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) in Darwin was notified of a case with posit...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
Reported cases of dengue are rising in South Australia (SA) in travellers returning from dengue-ende...
(NT) is currently regarded as free of the vectors of dengue [1]. The vector Aedes aegypti was presen...
Dengue is an increasingly significant vector-borne infectious disease, with over 50 million cases re...
The Northern Territory of Australia (NT) is currently regarded as free of the vectors of dengue. T...
In October 2013, a locally-acquired case of dengue virus (DENV) infection was reported in Western Au...
Dengue is an increasingly common mosquito-borne, flaviviral disease of significant public health con...
Objective: To describe the demographics, patterns of assessment and treatment of people visiting a ...
In north Queensland, recurring epidemics of dengue fever are a public health concern. Each epidemic ...
Dengue fever is caused by infection with one of the four serotypes of dengue virus (I to 4). Clinica...
In early April 1998 the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) in Darwin was notified of a case with posit...
In early April 1998 the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) in Darwin was notified of a case with posit...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
In early April 1998, the Centre for Disease Control in Darwin was notified of a possible case of den...
Reported cases of dengue are rising in South Australia (SA) in travellers returning from dengue-ende...
(NT) is currently regarded as free of the vectors of dengue [1]. The vector Aedes aegypti was presen...
Dengue is an increasingly significant vector-borne infectious disease, with over 50 million cases re...
The Northern Territory of Australia (NT) is currently regarded as free of the vectors of dengue. T...
In October 2013, a locally-acquired case of dengue virus (DENV) infection was reported in Western Au...
Dengue is an increasingly common mosquito-borne, flaviviral disease of significant public health con...
Objective: To describe the demographics, patterns of assessment and treatment of people visiting a ...
In north Queensland, recurring epidemics of dengue fever are a public health concern. Each epidemic ...
Dengue fever is caused by infection with one of the four serotypes of dengue virus (I to 4). Clinica...