Elsevier

Journal of Clinical Virology

Volume 96, November 2017, Pages 20-25
Journal of Clinical Virology

Clinical, laboratory and virological data from suspected ZIKV patients in an endemic arbovirus area

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcv.2017.09.002Get rights and content

Highlights

  • The emergence of Zika virus (ZIKV) presents new challenges to both clinicians and public health authorities.

  • The signs or symptoms in the patients with laboratory-confirmed ZIKV were rash, arthralgia, fever, myalgia, and non-purulent conjunctivitis.

  • In patients with laboratory-confirmed DENV infections, rash, fever, myalgia, headache and arthralgia were observed.

  • Clinical and epidemiological criteria alone are not a good tool for ZIKV and DENV differentiation.

Abstract

Background

The emergence of Zika virus (ZIKV) presents new challenges to both clinicians and public health authorities. Overlapping clinical features between the diseases caused by ZIKV, dengue (DENV) and chikungunya (CHIKV) and the lack of validated serological assays for ZIKV make accurate diagnosis difficult. Brazilian authorities largely rely on clinical and epidemiological data for the epidemiological and clinical classifications of most ZIKV cases.

Objective

: To report the laboratory and clinical profiles of patients diagnosed with Zika fever based only on clinical and epidemiological data.

Study design

We analyzed 433 suspected cases of ZIKV identified by the attending physician based on proposed clinical criteria. The samples were also screened for ZIKV, DENV and CHIKV using PCR.

Results

Of the 433 patients analyzed, 168 (38.8%) were laboratory-confirmed for arboviruses: 96 were positive for ZIKV, 67 were positive for DENV (56 for DENV-2, 9 for DENV-1, and 2 for DENV-4), four were positive for co-infection with ZIKV/DENV-2, and one was positive for CHIKV. The most common signs or symptoms in the patients with laboratory-confirmed ZIKV were rash (100%), arthralgia (77.1%), fever (74.0%), myalgia (74.0%) and non-purulent conjunctivitis (69.8%). In patients with laboratory-confirmed DENV infections, the most frequently observed symptoms were rash (100%), fever (79.1%), myalgia (74.6%), headache (73.1%) and arthralgia (70.1%). The measure of association between clinical manifestations and laboratory manifestations among patients with ZIKV and DENV detected a statistically significant difference only in abdominal pain (p = 0.04), leukopenia (p = 0.003), and thrombocytopenia (p = 0.01).

Conclusion

Our data suggests that clinical and epidemiological criteria alone are not a good tool for ZIKV and DENV differentiation, and that laboratory diagnosis should be mandatory.

Keywords

Zika
Dengue
Arboviruses

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