medigraphic.com
SPANISH

Revista Latinoamericana de Infectología Pediátrica

ISSN 2683-1678 (Print)
Órgano Oficial de la Sociedad
Latinoamericana de lnfectología Pediátrica.
Órgano de la Asociación Mexicana de
Infectología Pediátrica, A.C.
Órgano difusor de la Sociedad Española
de lnfectología
  • Contents
  • View Archive
  • Information
    • General Information        
    • Directory
  • Publish
    • Instructions for authors        
  • medigraphic.com
    • Home
    • Journals index            
    • Register / Login
  • Mi perfil

2022, Number 2

<< Back Next >>

Rev Latin Infect Pediatr 2022; 35 (2)

Cache Valley Virus: Orthobunyavirus, geographically widespread in America

Zúñiga CIR, Caro LJ
Full text How to cite this article 10.35366/106656

DOI

DOI: 10.35366/106656
URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.35366/106656

Language: Spanish
References: 8
Page: 64-66
PDF size: 110.03 Kb.


Key words:

Cache Valley Virus, mosquitoes, Orthobunyavirus.

ABSTRACT

Cache Valley Virus (VCV) was first isolated from Culiseta inornata mosquitoes collected in Cache Valley, Utah. member of the Bunyamwera serogroup, family Bunyaviridae, genus Orthobunyavirus, geographically widespread in the United States of America, Canada and other countries in the Americas, transmitted by mosquitoes. Symptoms of VCV infection: fever > 38 oC, headache, nausea, vomiting, rash, myalgia, arthralgia, and disorientation. Although the main vector mosquitoes are unknown, Culiseta inornata is considered the main vector of VCV.


REFERENCES

  1. Rodrigues A. The pathogenesis of Cache Valley virus in the ovine fetus. [Tesis doctoral]. Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University. Texas, EUA. 2011.

  2. Campbell G, Mataczynski J, Reisdorf E, Powell J, Martin D. Second human case of Cache Valley virus disease. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006; 12 (5): 854-856.

  3. Waddell L, Pachal N, Mascarenhas M, Greig J, Harding S. Cache Valley virus: a scoping review of the global evidence. Zoonoses Public Health. 2019; 66 (7): 1-20.

  4. Ayers V, Huang Y, Lyons A, Lee S, Dunlop J. Infection and transmission of Cache Valley virus by Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. Parasit Vectors. 2019; 12 (1): 384.

  5. Armstrong P, Andreadis T, Anderson J. Emergence of a new lineage of Cache Valley virus (Bunyaviridae: Orthobunyavirus) in the Northeastern United States. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2015; 93 (1): 11-17.

  6. Calisher C, John Sever J. ¿El Virus del Serogrupo Bunyamwera norteamericano es el agente etiológico de fallas del sistema nervioso central congénitas humanas? Rev Enf Infec Emerg. 1997; 1 (4): 1-45.

  7. Wilson M, Suan D, Duggins A, Schubert R, Khan L. A novel cause of chronic viral meningoencephalitis: Cache Valley virus. Ann Neurol. 2017; 82: 105-114.

  8. Gill C, Beckham D, Piquet A, Tyler K, Pastula D. Five Emerging Neuroinvasive Arboviral Diseases: Cache Valley, Eastern Equine Encephalitis, Jamestown Canyon, Powassan, and Usutu. Semin Neurol. 2019; 39 (4): 419-427.




2020     |     www.medigraphic.com

Mi perfil

C?MO CITAR (Vancouver)

Rev Latin Infect Pediatr. 2022;35