1.Outbreak of Zika Virus.
Jong Jin WOO ; Jeong Hoon BAE ; Ji Hoon KANG ; Keun Hwa LEE
Journal of Bacteriology and Virology 2016;46(4):330-334
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a vector-borne flavivirus. It was initially identified in Uganda in 1947, and the first human infection was reported in Nigeria in 1953. Since 2015, ZIKV has been spreading rapidly in Brazil and the Americas. Given its general symptoms, ZIKV is considered to be a mild, febrile illness, although it is associated with severe neurologic complications. On February 1, 2016, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). We conducted a review of the literature on the epidemiology and transmission, clinical manifestations, and diagnosis of ZIKV. Additionally, we introduce original literature on the current ZIKV outbreak in this review.
Americas
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Brazil
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Diagnosis
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Emergencies
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Epidemiology
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Flavivirus
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Humans
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Nigeria
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Public Health
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Uganda
;
World Health Organization
;
Zika Virus*
2.Prevalence and patterns of self-reported animal-related injury among veterinarians in metropolitan Kampala.
Richard M KABUUSU ; Emmanuel O KEKU ; Robert KIYINI ; Theresa J MCCANN
Journal of Veterinary Science 2010;11(4):363-365
To establish the prevalence, patterns and risk factors of animal-related injuries among veterinarians, self-administered questionnaires were given to 60 veterinarians practicing in metropolitan Kampala. The prevalence of animal-related injuries in metropolitan Kampala was 72% (95%CI, 57~84). Some veterinarians (34%) suffered multiple injuries with a mean and median of 2.1 and 2.0 injuries per veterinarian, respectively. Of a total of 70 self-reported animal related injuries, cattle accounted for 72%, cats for 25%, dogs for 23%, self inoculation for 15% and birds for 13%. Injuries associated with poultry did not require hospital treatment. The upper limb was the most the frequently (68%) injured anatomical body part of veterinarians, and vaccination of animals (25%) was the major activity associated with injury. Animal-related injuries are common among practicing veterinarians in metropolitan Kampala; however, they did not differ significantly based on the veterinarian's gender, experience or risk awareness.
Accidents, Occupational/*statistics & numerical data
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Animals
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Prevalence
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Risk Factors
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*Self Report
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Uganda
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Veterinarians/*statistics & numerical data
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Wounds and Injuries/*epidemiology
3.Evaluation of the Accuracy of the EasyTest(TM) Malaria Pf/Pan Ag, a Rapid Diagnostic Test, in Uganda.
Chom Kyu CHONG ; Pyo Yun CHO ; Byoung Kuk NA ; Seong Kyu AHN ; Jin Su KIM ; Jin Soo LEE ; Sung Keun LEE ; Eun Taek HAN ; Hak Yong KIM ; Yun Kyu PARK ; Seok Ho CHA ; Tong Soo KIM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2014;52(5):501-505
In recent years, rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) have been widely used for malaria detection, primarily because of their simple operation, fast results, and straightforward interpretation. The Asan EasyTest(TM) Malaria Pf/Pan Ag is one of the most commonly used malaria RDTs in several countries, including Korea and India. In this study, we tested the diagnostic performance of this RDT in Uganda to evaluate its usefulness for field diagnosis of malaria in this country. Microscopic and PCR analyses, and the Asan EasyTest(TM) Malaria Pf/Pan Ag rapid diagnostic test, were performed on blood samples from 185 individuals with suspected malaria in several villages in Uganda. Compared to the microscopic analysis, the sensitivity of the RDT to detect malaria infection was 95.8% and 83.3% for Plasmodium falciparum and non-P. falciparum, respectively. Although the diagnostic sensitivity of the RDT decreased when parasitemia was < or =500 parasites/microl, it showed 96.8% sensitivity (98.4% for P. falciparum and 93.8% for non-P. falciparum) in blood samples with parasitemia > or =100 parasites/microl. The specificity of the RDT was 97.3% for P. falciparum and 97.3% for non-P. falciparum. These results collectively suggest that the accuracy of the Asan EasyTest(TM) Malaria Pf/Pan Ag makes it an effective point-of-care diagnostic tool for malaria in Uganda.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Antigens, Protozoan/blood/*isolation & purification
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Humans
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Malaria, Falciparum/*diagnosis/epidemiology
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Parasitemia
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Point-of-Care Systems
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Predictive Value of Tests
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Reagent Kits, Diagnostic
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Uganda/epidemiology
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Young Adult
4.Advances in Epidemiology, Biology and Laboratory Diagnosis of Zika Virus.
Hee Jung LEE ; Young Bong KIM ; Yungoh SHIN
Journal of Bacteriology and Virology 2017;47(1):1-13
Zika virus (ZIKV) was spread to both eastward and westward from Uganda where the virus was identified approximately in 1947 by a group of arbovirus researchers. In 2015, ZIKV reached Americas with major outbreaks in Brazil. Most countries with mosquito transmitted ZIKV infection are located in tropical and subtropical areas, where ZIKV is endemic with other flaviviruses, including JEV, dengue and yellow fever virus. Approximately 40 countries in Central and South Americas and territories in South Pacific Islands and South East Asia show autochthonous ZIKV endemics. American lineage of ZIKV is known significantly to be mutated in susceptibility to host and in pathogenicity from Asian and Asian lineages approximately since 2014. Early and specific identification of ZIKV infection is very important for the effective management of patients. First of all, optimal collection of specimens for the laboratory diagnosis is required for both nucleic acid testing (NAT) and serological tests. Specimens for NAT tests and serological tests should be determined by the available laboratory resources, work-flow in each laboratory and the geographic areas of specimen collected in addition to days after showing symptoms. Testing strategy for specific differentiation among flaviviruses will vary depending on the prevalence of viruses known to be circulating in the area where the patients were exposed. NAT will be employed for the patients presenting with onset of symptoms less than 7 days. Advanced diagnostic technologies should be continuously developed for the increase of specificity and sensitivity of ZIKV diagnosis.
Americas
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Arboviruses
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Biology*
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Brazil
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Clinical Laboratory Techniques*
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Culicidae
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Dengue
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Diagnosis
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Disease Outbreaks
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Epidemiology*
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Far East
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Flavivirus
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Humans
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Pacific Islands
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Prevalence
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Serologic Tests
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South America
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Uganda
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Virulence
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Yellow fever virus
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Zika Virus*
5.Sample type is vital for diagnosing infection with peste des petits ruminants virus by reverse transcription PCR.
Pam Dachung LUKA ; Chrisostom AYEBAZIBWE ; David SHAMAKI ; Frank Norbert MWIINE ; Joseph ERUME
Journal of Veterinary Science 2012;13(3):323-325
Peste des petits ruminants (PPR) diagnosis from suspected samples from sheep and goats was carried out. Buffy coat, tissues, and oculo-nasal swabs were analyzed using nucleoprotein (NP3/NP4) and fusion protein (F1/F2) gene primers, respectively. Analysis of the sample types and primer set revealed that buffy coat are the best type of samples for PPR diagnosis and the use of two set of primers will increase the number of positives.
Animals
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DNA Primers/analysis
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Eye/virology
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Goat Diseases/blood/*diagnosis/epidemiology/virology
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Goats
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Hair/virology
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Nose/virology
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Nucleoproteins/analysis
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Peste-des-Petits-Ruminants/blood/*diagnosis/epidemiology/virology
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Peste-des-petits-ruminants virus/genetics/*isolation & purification
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Pigmentation
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RNA, Viral/genetics/*isolation & purification
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Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction/*methods/standards/veterinary
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Sheep
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Sheep Diseases/blood/*diagnosis/epidemiology/virology
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Uganda/epidemiology
6.A Rapid Diagnostic Test for Toxoplasmosis using Recombinant Antigenic N-terminal Half of SAG1 Linked with Intrinsically Unstructured Domain of GRA2 Protein.
Kyoung Ju SONG ; Zhaoshou YANG ; Chom Kyu CHONG ; Jin Soo KIM ; Kyung Chan LEE ; Tong Soo KIM ; Ho Woo NAM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(5):503-510
Toxoplasma gondii is an apicomplexan parasite with a broad host range of most warm-blooded mammals including humans, of which one-thirds of the human population has been infected worldwide which can cause congenital defects, abortion, and neonatal complications. Here, we developed a rapid diagnostic test (RDT) for T. gondii infection. Antigenic N-terminal half of the major surface antigen (SAG1) was linked with intrinsically unstructured domain (IUD) of dense granule protein 2 (GRA2). The recombinant GST-GRA2-SAG1A protein was successfully expressed and purified as 51 kDa of molecular weight. Furthermore, antigenicity and solubility of the rGST-GRA2-SAG1A protein were significantly increased. The overall specificity and sensitivity of GST-GRA2-SAG1A loaded RDT (TgRDT) were estimated as 100% and 97.1% by comparing with ELISA result which uses T. gondii whole cell lysates as the antigen. The TgRDT tested with Uganda people sera for field trial and showed 31.9% of seroprevalence against T. gondii antibody. The TgRDT is proved to be a kit for rapid and easy to use with high accuracy, which would be a suitable serodiagnostic tool for toxoplasmosis.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Amino Acid Sequence
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Antibodies, Protozoan/*blood
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Antigens, Protozoan/genetics/*immunology
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Female
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Humans
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Infant
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Male
;
Molecular Sequence Data
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Protozoan Proteins/genetics/*immunology
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Recombinant Fusion Proteins
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Reproducibility of Results
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Serologic Tests
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Time Factors
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Toxoplasma/genetics/*immunology/isolation & purification
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Toxoplasmosis/*diagnosis/epidemiology/parasitology
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Uganda/epidemiology
;
Young Adult
7.Probability of Antibody Formation against Circumsporozoite Protein of Plasmodium vivax among Korean Malaria Patients.
Ho Woo NAM ; Kyoung Ju SONG ; Hye Jin AHN ; Zhaoshou YANG ; Chom Kyu CHONG ; Pyo Yun CHO ; Seong Kyu AHN ; Tong Soo KIM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2014;52(2):143-149
To evaluate the seroprevalence against circumsporozoite protein (CSP) of Plasmodium vivax in sera of Korean patients, the central repeating domain (CRD) of CSP was cloned and analyzed. From the genomic DNA of patient's blood, 2 kinds of CSPs were identified to belong to a VK210 type, which is the dominant repeating of GDRA(D/A)GQPA, and named as PvCSPA and PvCSPB. Recombinantly expressed his-tagged PvCSPA or PvCSPB in Escherichia coli reacted well against sera of patients in western blot, with the detecting rate of 47.9% (58/121), which included 15 cases positive for PvCSPA, 6 cases positive for PvCSPB, and 37 cases for both. The mixture of PvCSPA and PvCSPB was loaded to a rapid diagnostic test kit (RDT) and applied with the same set of patient sera, which resulted in detection rates of 57.0% (69/121). When the protein sequences of PvCSPA were compared with those of P. vivax in endemic regions of India and Uganda, they were compatibly homologous to PvCSPA with minor mutations. These results suggested that the recombinant PvCSPA and PvCSPB loaded RDT may be a milestone in latent diagnosis which has been a hot issue of domestic malaria and important for radical therapy in overlapped infections with P. falciparum in tropical and subtropical areas. During the biological process of malarial infection, exposure of CSP to antigen-antibody reaction up to 57.0% is the first report in Korea.
Amino Acid Sequence
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Antibodies, Protozoan/*blood/immunology
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Antibody Formation
;
Antigens, Protozoan/immunology
;
Base Sequence
;
Humans
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India
;
Malaria, Vivax/*diagnosis/*epidemiology/immunology
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Merozoite Surface Protein 1/genetics/*immunology
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Plasmodium vivax/genetics/immunology
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Protozoan Proteins/genetics/*immunology
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Reagent Kits, Diagnostic
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Recombinant Proteins/diagnostic use/immunology
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Sequence Analysis, DNA
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Seroepidemiologic Studies
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Uganda