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CHIKUNGUNYA
Luciano Schiazza M.D. Dermatologist Via XX Settembre, 3/2 16121 Genova - Italy tel. 010.590270 - cell. 335.655.97.70
Chikungunya (CHIK) is a viral disease. The word “chikungunya” is a Swahili word which means “walking bent over” because of the stopped posture of patients.
The disease was first described in Tanzania in 1952. Chikungunya virus is an arbovirus (alphavirus of the family of Togaviridae); it is a RNA virus.
The disease is transmitted from human to human by the bite of an Aedes mosquito (aedes aegipty, aedes albopictus): mosquitoes are daytime vectors with highest activity at the beginning and the end of the day.
Aedes albopictus
CHIK is endemic in sub-Saharian Africa, southeastern Asia and on the Indian subcontinent. In March 2005 the disease appeared in the Comor Islands and then in Mauritius and Mayotte, in the island of La Réunion, in the Seychelles, in the Madagascar. The CHIK is an acute infection of sudden onset. The incubation period is usually 4-7 days (with a range of 1-12 days).
In the most severe cases there are headache, nausea and vomiting, conjunctival injection. Younger patients could suffer of haemorragic symptoms, such as bleeding from the nose or gums. In La Réunion island some cases of meningo-encephalitis have been reported.
The treatment is symptomatic only:
No vaccine for chikungunya fever is to-day available. Prevention is the best way to avoid CHIK infection; it is based on personal protective measures (to avoid to be bitten by mosquitoes) especially during the hours of highest mosquitoes activity (morning and late afternoon). These are the recommendations:
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| Last update: 13-01-2009
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