1.Expert consensus on the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of neonatal dengue, chikungunya, and Zika virus infections (2025).
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2025;27(10):1155-1166
Mosquito-borne viruses, including dengue virus (DENV), chikungunya virus (CHIKV), and Zika virus (ZIKV), pose major threats to public health in tropical and subtropical regions worldwide. Neonates are particularly vulnerable, and the associated disease burden has drawn increasing attention. Routes of neonatal infection include vertical mother-to-child transmission (transplacental and peripartum) and postnatal mosquito bites. Clinical manifestations are often nonspecific; a proportion of cases may progress to central nervous system infection, hemorrhagic disease, or long-term neurodevelopmental impairment, with serious consequences for survival and quality of life. Although China has issued prevention and control guidelines for adults and pregnant women, systematic clinical guidance tailored to neonates remains lacking. In response, the Perinatal Group of the Pediatric Branch of the Chinese Medical Doctor Association convened a multidisciplinary panel to develop this expert consensus, integrating the latest international evidence with China's practical prevention and control experience. The consensus addresses epidemiology; the effects of maternal infection on fetuses and neonates; clinical manifestations; diagnosis and differential diagnosis; early warning indicators of severe disease; therapeutic strategies and supportive care; and prevention and maternal-infant management. It aims to provide evidence-based, standardized, and practical guidance for frontline clinicians managing neonatal mosquito-borne viral infections.
Humans
;
Zika Virus Infection/therapy*
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Chikungunya Fever/therapy*
;
Dengue/prevention & control*
;
Female
;
Pregnancy
;
Consensus
2.Polyarthritis in four patients with chikungunya arthritis.
Nai Lee LUI ; Hoe Nam LEONG ; Julian THUMBOO
Singapore medical journal 2012;53(4):241-243
The incidence of chikungunya infection in Singapore has been on the rise since the first reported case in 2006. Acute polyarthritis, a common manifestation among affected patients, may precede fever and present with debilitating arthritis to rheumatologists, orthopaedists, internists and primary care physicians. The diagnosis of chikungunya infection requires careful history taking and a high index of suspicion, with supporting evidence from the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction or the chikungunya IgM serology test. Treatment of chikungunya arthritis usually involves non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Rarely, polyarthritis in chikungunya may persist even after resolution of the acute infection, necessitating treatment with disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs. In this article, we present the different manifestations of chikungunya arthritis in our local setting and review the literature.
Aged
;
Alphavirus Infections
;
complications
;
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal
;
therapeutic use
;
Arthritis
;
drug therapy
;
virology
;
Chikungunya Fever
;
Chikungunya virus
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged

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