1.West Nile virus infection.
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2004;42(9):676-678
4.Evaluation of a self-prepared anti-WNV-IgG diagnostic ELISA kit with a panel of serum samples collected from the people from areas in which West Nile fever is endemic.
Yu-Chun WANG ; Qiang SHAO ; Li-Ping ZHANG ; Wei ZHEN ; Xue-Min WU ; Xue-Zheng MA ; Yong ZHAO ; Kong-Xin HU
Chinese Journal of Virology 2014;30(5):549-553
In view of that there is no report of west Nile virus infection cases in our country, evaluation the self-prepared anti-WNV-IgG diagnostic ELISA kit should be employed with the establishment of the serum sample panel collected from the entry personnel. All individuals of entry personnel were traveled from epidemic area of infectious west Nile disease. In our study, the serum samples were both detected by self-prepared anti-WNV-IgG diagnostic ELISA kit and the FDA certified kits ,which are FOCUS West Nile Virus IgG Dxselect and Panbio Dengue IgG Capture ELISA kits. The self-prepared kit and FDA certified kits were compared and assessed simultaneously. Furthermore, the specificity, repeatability and stability of the kits were also evaluated. The results indicated that no significant difference of detective rates (35. 6% for self-prepared kit vs. 32.5% for FOCUS kit, χ2 = 3. 05, P > 0.05) and good consistency (Kappa = 0.8372) between the self-prepared kit and FDA certified kits. Also, the positive coincidence rate, the negative coincidence rate and the total coincidence rate were calculated as 91.18%, 95.34% and 92.66%, respectively. The laboratory self-developed kit presented similar quality as the counterpart kits with FDA certificate. The development of our self-prepared anti-WNV-IgG diagnostic ELISA kit will provide technical support for the prevention and control of west Nile virus entry.
Endemic Diseases
;
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
;
Humans
;
Immunoglobulin G
;
blood
;
Reagent Kits, Diagnostic
;
West Nile Fever
;
epidemiology
;
West Nile virus
;
immunology
5.The First Reported Case of West Nile Encephalitis in Korea.
Jihye HWANG ; Ho Sung RYU ; Hyunjin KIM ; Sang Ahm LEE
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(3):343-345
West Nile encephalitis was first identified in 1937, but until now, it was never diagnosed in Korea. A 58-yr-old Korean man was admitted with headache and cognitive dysfunction. The patient had been on a business trip in Guinea. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) showed pleocytosis. The patient complained of both leg weakness,and arachnoiditis and myelitis were observed on lumbar magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A specific neutralizing antibody for West Nile virus was positive in serum. After a treatment with interferon-alpha 3mu, follow up CSF findings recovered completely after 3 months later. The first case of West Nile encephalitis in Korea was imported from Guinea, and was cured successfully.
Antibodies, Viral/*blood
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Headache/complications
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Humans
;
Interferon-alpha/*therapeutic use
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Republic of Korea
;
West Nile Fever/*diagnosis/*drug therapy
;
West Nile virus/immunology
6.The First Reported Case of West Nile Encephalitis in Korea.
Jihye HWANG ; Ho Sung RYU ; Hyunjin KIM ; Sang Ahm LEE
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(3):343-345
West Nile encephalitis was first identified in 1937, but until now, it was never diagnosed in Korea. A 58-yr-old Korean man was admitted with headache and cognitive dysfunction. The patient had been on a business trip in Guinea. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) showed pleocytosis. The patient complained of both leg weakness,and arachnoiditis and myelitis were observed on lumbar magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A specific neutralizing antibody for West Nile virus was positive in serum. After a treatment with interferon-alpha 3mu, follow up CSF findings recovered completely after 3 months later. The first case of West Nile encephalitis in Korea was imported from Guinea, and was cured successfully.
Antibodies, Viral/*blood
;
Headache/complications
;
Humans
;
Interferon-alpha/*therapeutic use
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Republic of Korea
;
West Nile Fever/*diagnosis/*drug therapy
;
West Nile virus/immunology
7.Estimation of the Outbreaks of Transfusion-Transmissible Emerging Infectious Diseases in Korean Blood Donors by Public Data.
Jae Won KANG ; Jong Hyun SEO ; Jungwon KANG ; Kyoung Won YOUN ; Sun Mi SHIN ; Young Ik SEO ; Kwang HUH
Korean Journal of Blood Transfusion 2017;28(3):264-274
BACKGROUND: Transfusion transmissible emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) is a potential risk to the safety of blood transfusions due to the lack of donor screening assays. To prevent the spread of EIDs through blood transfusions, we attempted to predict the possibility of blood donations from people with EIDs using a public database. METHODS: We used the Disease Web Statistics System of the Korean Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Korean Statistical Information Service. We estimated the possibility of blood donations from people with EIDs using the public database combined with the database made available by the Blood Information Management System of the Korean Red Cross. RESULTS: Among the transfusion transmissible EIDs, Babesiosis, Leishmaniasis, West Nile fever, Chikungunya, and Dengue fever were reported in Korea. All of them were cases imported from abroad. Although the number of reported cases of Babesiosis, Leishmaniasis, West Nile fever, and Chikungunya were less than 10 per year until 2016, the reported cases of Dengue fever gradually increased from 2001, and there were 318 cases of Dengue fever in 2016. CONCLUSION: The possibility of blood donation from people with transfusion-transmissible EIDs was low because all reported transfusion-transmissible EIDs in Korea were from foreigners and blood donation from Koreans who returned from abroad was restricted for a period of a month. Nonetheless, preventive strategy for donation from people is necessary given the recent increase in Dengue fever.
Animals
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Babesiosis
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Blood Donors*
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Blood Transfusion
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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
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Communicable Diseases, Emerging*
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Dengue
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Disease Outbreaks*
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Donor Selection
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Emigrants and Immigrants
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Humans
;
Information Management
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Information Services
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Korea
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Leishmaniasis
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Red Cross
;
West Nile Fever
8.Ecological characteristics and current status of infectious disease vectors in South Korea.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2017;60(6):458-467
In light of global climate change, the seasonal and geographical distribution of vector species, especially mosquitoes, chigger mites, and ticks, are of great importance for human beings residing in rural and urban environments. A total of 12 species belonging to 4 genera have been identified as vector mosquitoes in the Republic of Korea. The most common of the 56 mosquito species in this country from 2013 through 2015 was found to be a malaria vector, Anopheles sinensis s.l. (species ratio [SR] 52%); followed by a potential vector of West Nile virus, Aedes vexans nipponii (SR 38%); a Japanese encephalitis vector, Culex tritaeniorhynchus (SR 6%); a West Nile virus vector, Culex pipiens (SR 3%); and a dengue and Zika virus vector, Ae. albopictus (SR 0.3%). Of the scrub typhus vectors, Leptotrombidium scutellare is the predominant chigger mite in Gyongnam province and Jeju island, whereas L. pallidum is the predominant species in other areas of Korea. Ticks were found to be prevalent in most environmental conditions, and high levels of their activity were consistently observed from May to September. Haemaphysalis species of ticks were mostly collected in grasslands, whereas Ixodes species were frequently found in coniferous forests. Haemaphysalis longicornis, known as the main vector of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome, was the predominant species and was widely distributed throughout the country.
Aedes
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Anopheles
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Climate Change
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Communicable Diseases*
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Coniferophyta
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Culex
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Culicidae
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Dengue
;
Disease Vectors*
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Encephalitis, Japanese
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Fever
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Forests
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Globus Pallidus
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Grassland
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Humans
;
Ixodes
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Korea*
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Malaria
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Mites
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Republic of Korea
;
Scrub Typhus
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Seasons
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Thrombocytopenia
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Ticks
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Trombiculidae
;
West Nile virus
;
Zika Virus