Dengue fever classification: Difference between revisions
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=====Laboratory Method, Interpretation, and Sample Characteristics for Confirmed and Probable Dengue===== | =====Laboratory Method, Interpretation, and Sample Characteristics for Confirmed and Probable Dengue===== | ||
A diagnosis of dengue infection is confirmed by the detection of the virus, the viral genome or NS1 | A diagnosis of dengue infection is confirmed by the detection of the virus, the viral genome or NS1 antigen, or seroconversion of IgM or IgG (from negative to positive IgM/IgG or four-fold increase in the specific antibody titer) in paired sera.<ref name=WHO2012>{{cite web | title = Handbook for Clinical Management of dengue | url = http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/76887/1/9789241504713_eng.pdf?ua=1 }}</ref> | ||
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Revision as of 21:31, 9 June 2014
Dengue Fever Microchapters |
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Dengue fever classification On the Web |
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Overview
Current WHO guideline classifies dengue into non-severe and severe disease depending on whether there is severe plasma leakage, severe bleeding, or severe organ impairment. For practical purposes, non-severe cases can be further divided into two subgroups: those with warning signs and those without them. Patients with suspected dengue should be triaged and managed accordingly.
Classification
1997 WHO Classification
Historically, symptomatic dengue virus infections were classified as dengue fever, dengue hemorrhagic fever, and dengue shock syndrome. The case definitions were found too difficult to apply in resource-limited settings and too specific, as it failed to identify a substantial proportion of severe dengue cases, including cases of hepatic failure and encephalitis.
The tables below describe the 1997 WHO dengue case classification:[1]
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2009 WHO Classification
Newer classification published by WHO in 2009 categorizes the disease into probable dengue or laboratory-confirmed dengue (with or without warning signs) and severe dengue (encompassing severe plasma leakage, severe bleeding, and severe organ involvement). However, it has been criticized as overly inclusive for several reasons:[2]
- It allows several different ways to qualify for severe dengue.
- Nonspecific warning signs are used as diagnostic criteria.
- Severity determination is dependent on individual judgment due to the lack of explicit clinical criteria for establishing severe dengue.
The tables below describe the 2009 WHO dengue case classification:[3][4]
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Laboratory Method, Interpretation, and Sample Characteristics for Confirmed and Probable Dengue
A diagnosis of dengue infection is confirmed by the detection of the virus, the viral genome or NS1 antigen, or seroconversion of IgM or IgG (from negative to positive IgM/IgG or four-fold increase in the specific antibody titer) in paired sera.[3]
Definition | Method | Interpretation | Sample Characteristics |
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Confirmed Dengue Infection | Viral isolation | Virus isolated | Serum (collected at 1–5 days of fever) or necropsy tissues |
Genome detection | Positive RT-PCR or positive real-time RT-PCR | ||
Antigen detection | Positive NS1 Ag | ||
Positive immunohistochemical | Necropsy tissues | ||
IgM seroconversion | From negative IgM to positive IgM in paired sera | Acute serum (days 1–5) and convalescent serum (15–21 days after first serum) | |
IgG seroconversion | From negative IgG to positive IgG in paired sera or 4-fold increase IgG levels among paired sera | ||
Probable Dengue Infection | Positive IgM | Positive IgM | Single serum collected after day 5 |
High IgG levels | High IgG levels by ELISA or HI (≥1280) |