Symptoms
of Dengue Fever
Dengue fever
is a painful, debilitating mosquito-borne disease caused by any one of four
closely related dengue viruses. These viruses are related to the viruses that
cause West Nile infection and yellow fever.
An
estimated 390 dengue infections occur worldwide each year, with about 96
million resulting in illness. Most cases occur in tropical areas of the world.
Most
cases in the United States occur in people who contracted the infection while
traveling abroad. But the risk is increasing for people living along the
Texas-Mexico border and in other parts of the southern United States. In 2009,
an outbreak of dengue fever was identified in Key West, Fla.
Dengue
fever is transmitted by the bite of an Aedes mosquito infected with a dengue
virus. The mosquito becomes infected when it bites a person with dengue virus
in their blood. It can’t be spread directly from one person to another person.
Symptoms,
which usually begin four to six days after infection and last for up to 10
days, may include
·
Sudden, high fever
·
Severe headaches
·
Pain behind the eyes
·
Severe joint and muscle pain
·
Fatigue
·
Nausea
·
Vomiting
·
Skin rash, which appears two to five days after
the onset of fever
·
Mild bleeding (such a nose bleed, bleeding gums,
or easy bruising)
Sometimes,
symptoms are mild and can be mistaken for those of the flu or another viral
infection. Younger children and people who have never had the infection before
tend to have milder cases than older children and adults. However, serious
problems can develop. These include dengue hemorrhagic fever, a rare
complication characterized by high fever, damage to lymph and blood vessels,
bleeding from the nose and gums, enlargement of the liver, and failure of the
circulatory system. The symptoms may progress to massive bleeding, shock, and
death. This is called dengue shock syndrome (DSS).
People
with weakened immune systems as well as those with a second or subsequent
dengue infection are believed to be at greater risk for developing dengue
hemorrhagic fever.
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