New evidence shows second dengue infection can be more severe
A team of researchers from the U.S. and Nicaragua has found evidence that suggests people infected a second time
by the dengue virus may experience a more severe form of dengue fever if their antibody levels are at a certain level. In their paper published in the journal Science, the team describes their study of the disease in children in Nicaragua over the course of 12 years and what they found.
Dengue fever is a malady caused by infection of the dengue virus. On first infection, most people have relatively minor symptoms—fever and muscle and joint pain. For many people, a second infection is similar to the first, but for a third group, a second infection can cause what has come to be known as dengue hemorrhagic fever or dengue shock syndrome (DHF/DSS). This form is much worse for the patient, as symptoms include loss of bodily fluid due to blood leaking from vessels, which in turn can lead to organ failure and possibly death. Health scientists have had difficulty agreeing on the cause of DHF/DSS, though some suggested it relates to the level of antibodies produced and maintained after the initial infection. In this new effort, the researchers have found evidence supporting this theory.
Antibodies are blood proteins that the body produces to battle specific antigens. To determine if, indeed, they play a role in dengue infections, the researchers took blood samples from 8,000 children ages two to 14 every year over the course of 12 years in Managua—each sample was tested for antibody levels. This allowed the researchers to monitor levels in children who were not infected, children who were, and children who were infected more than once. By comparing antibody levels in children that developed DHF/DSS to those who did not, the researchers were able to spot a trend—those children who had neither high nor low antibody levels did not develop the more severe reaction—it was those children who had medium levels. In fact, for this group, levels were approximately 7.64 times higher.
The researchers acknowledge that their results are just a first step in proving that antibody levels are the true cause of more severe bouts of dengue fever, but also suggest their findings my soon lead to requirements that new vaccines not be given to children with medium levels of antibodies for fear that the shot might set off DHF/DSS.
Article first appeared in: https://medicalxpress.com/news/2017-11-evidence-dengue-infection-severe-due.html