Etiology of the 1965 epidemic of febrile illness in Nagpur city, Maharashtra State, India.
- 1 January 1972
- journal article
- Vol. 46 (2) , 173-9
Abstract
An investigation of an extensive outbreak of febrile illness during the months of April, May, and June 1965, in the city of Nagpur, Maharashtra State, showed that the main etiological agent was chikungunya virus. Dengue type 4 and Chandipura viruses were also active during this period. In all, 26 strains of virus were isolated from 60 acute phase human sera, and of these strains, 23 were identified as chikungunya virus, 2 as Chandipura, and 1 as dengue type 4. Five strains of chikungunya virus and 9 strains of dengue type 4 virus were isolated from 34 pools of Aedes aegypti collected from the affected areas. Results of complement fixation tests with acute-convalescent paired serum samples and single convalescent sera confirmed that chikungunya virus was the main etiological agent. The significance of these findings is discussed.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experimental transmission of Chandipura virus by mosquitoes.1967
- CHANDIPURA - A NEW ARBOVIRUS ISOLATED IN INDIA FROM PATIENTS WITH FEBRILE ILLNESS1967
- VIROLOGICAL AND SEROLOGICAL STUDIES ON AN OUTBREAK OF DENGUE-LIKE ILLNESS IN VISAKHAPATNAM ANDHRA PRADESH1965
- ISOLATION OF WEST NILE VIRUS FROM CULEX FATIGANS MOSQUITOES FROM WESTERN INDIA1965
- ISOLATION OF DENGUE VIRUSES IN PRIMARY CULTURES OF MACACA RADIATA RENAL EPITHELIAL CELLS1965
- SEROLOGICAL RESPONSE TO RUSSIAN SPRING-SUMMER ENCEPHALITIS VIRUS VACCINE AS MEASURED WITH KYASANUR FOREST DISEASE VIRUS1962
- Techniques for Hemagglutination and Hemagglutination-Inhibition with Arthropod-Borne VirusesThe American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1958
- Neutralizing Antibodies Against Certain Viruses in the Sera of Residents of IndiaThe Journal of Immunology, 1954