From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pogosta disease
Other namesKarelian fever, Ockelbo disease
Specialty Infectious disease

Pogosta disease is a viral disease. [1] [2] The symptoms of the disease usually include rash, as well as mild fever and other flu-like symptoms; in most cases the symptoms last less than 5 days. However, in some cases, the patients develop a painful arthritis. There are no known chemical agents available to treat the disease. [3]

Signs and symptoms

Cause

It has long been suspected that the disease is caused by a Sindbis-like virus, a positive-stranded RNA virus belonging to the Alphavirus genus and family Togaviridae. [1] In 2002 a strain of Sindbis was isolated from patients during an outbreak of the Pogosta disease in Finland, confirming the hypothesis. [3]

Treatment

There is currently no treatment available.

Epidemiology

This disease is mainly found in the Eastern parts of Finland; the disease was first detected in 1974 in the old parish village of Ilomantsi, sometimes called Pogosta. [4] A typical Pogosta disease patient is a middle-aged person who has been infected through a mosquito bite while picking berries in the autumn. The prevalence of the disease is about 100 diagnosed cases every year, with larger outbreaks occurring in 7-year intervals. [3]

Etymology

It is also known as Karelian fever and Ockelbo disease. The names are derived from the words Pogosta, Karelia and Ockelbo.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b Lvov, D. K.; Vladimirtseva, E. A.; Butenko, A. M.; Karabatsos, N.; Trent, D. W.; Calisher, C. H. (1988). "Identity of Karelian fever and Ockelbo viruses determined by serum dilution-plaque reduction neutralization tests and oligonucleotide mapping". The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 39 (6): 607–610. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1988.39.607. PMID  2849885.
  2. ^ Laine, Maria (2002). Pogosta Disease. University of Turku. ISBN  951-29-2129-4.
  3. ^ a b c Kurkela S, Manni T, Vaheri A, Vapalahti O (May 2004). "Causative agent of Pogosta disease isolated from blood and skin lesions". Emerg Infect Dis. 10 (5): 889–894. doi: 10.3201/eid1005.030689. PMC  3323234. PMID  15200824.
  4. ^ Virus unique to Finland sees biggest outbreak in decades Yle News

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pogosta disease
Other namesKarelian fever, Ockelbo disease
Specialty Infectious disease

Pogosta disease is a viral disease. [1] [2] The symptoms of the disease usually include rash, as well as mild fever and other flu-like symptoms; in most cases the symptoms last less than 5 days. However, in some cases, the patients develop a painful arthritis. There are no known chemical agents available to treat the disease. [3]

Signs and symptoms

Cause

It has long been suspected that the disease is caused by a Sindbis-like virus, a positive-stranded RNA virus belonging to the Alphavirus genus and family Togaviridae. [1] In 2002 a strain of Sindbis was isolated from patients during an outbreak of the Pogosta disease in Finland, confirming the hypothesis. [3]

Treatment

There is currently no treatment available.

Epidemiology

This disease is mainly found in the Eastern parts of Finland; the disease was first detected in 1974 in the old parish village of Ilomantsi, sometimes called Pogosta. [4] A typical Pogosta disease patient is a middle-aged person who has been infected through a mosquito bite while picking berries in the autumn. The prevalence of the disease is about 100 diagnosed cases every year, with larger outbreaks occurring in 7-year intervals. [3]

Etymology

It is also known as Karelian fever and Ockelbo disease. The names are derived from the words Pogosta, Karelia and Ockelbo.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b Lvov, D. K.; Vladimirtseva, E. A.; Butenko, A. M.; Karabatsos, N.; Trent, D. W.; Calisher, C. H. (1988). "Identity of Karelian fever and Ockelbo viruses determined by serum dilution-plaque reduction neutralization tests and oligonucleotide mapping". The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 39 (6): 607–610. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1988.39.607. PMID  2849885.
  2. ^ Laine, Maria (2002). Pogosta Disease. University of Turku. ISBN  951-29-2129-4.
  3. ^ a b c Kurkela S, Manni T, Vaheri A, Vapalahti O (May 2004). "Causative agent of Pogosta disease isolated from blood and skin lesions". Emerg Infect Dis. 10 (5): 889–894. doi: 10.3201/eid1005.030689. PMC  3323234. PMID  15200824.
  4. ^ Virus unique to Finland sees biggest outbreak in decades Yle News

External links


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