ARBOVIRUSES CAUSING HUMAN-DISEASE IN THE AUSTRALASIAN ZOOGEOGRAPHIC REGION

被引:221
作者
MACKENZIE, JS [1 ]
LINDSAY, MD [1 ]
COELEN, RJ [1 ]
BROOM, AK [1 ]
HALL, RA [1 ]
SMITH, DW [1 ]
机构
[1] STATE HLTH LAB SERV, QUEEN ELIZABETH II MED CTR, DIV VIROL, NEDLANDS, WA, AUSTRALIA
关键词
D O I
10.1007/BF01321074
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Over 65 arboviruses have been reported from countries in the Australasian zoogeographic region, but only a few have been implicated in human disease. These include the flaviviruses Murray Valley encephalitis (MVE), Kunjin (KUN), Kokobera (KOK), and dengue, particularly types 1 and 2; the alphaviruses Ross River (RR), Barmah Forest (BF), and Sindbis (SIN); and the bunyaviruses, Gan Gan and Trubanaman: In this paper recent epidemiological and clinical, results pertaining to these viruses are reviewed, with major emphasis on MVE and RR viruses. The extensive early studies of Australian arboviruses have been reviewed by Doherty [49, 50], and their ecology and Vectors more recently by Kay and Standfast [87]. In addition, the biology of MVE and KUN [113] and RR [87, 114] viruses have been the subjects of more detailed reviews. The Australasian zoogeographic region is defined as countries east of the Wallace and Weber lines, two hypothetical lines in the Indo-Australian archipelago where the fauna of the Australasian and Oriental regions meet. Seroepidemiological studies of human arboviral infections have suggested that the Japanese encephalitis flavivirus and the chikungunya alphavirus occur only in the Oriental region, whereas the related MVE and RR viruses, respectively, are restricted to the Australasian region [85,148]. Serological results from Wallacea, the zone between the Wallace and Weber lines, are not so clear-cut [85]. This review is therefore restricted to countries east of Wallacea, specifically New Guinea and Australia.
引用
收藏
页码:447 / 467
页数:21
相关论文
共 160 条
  • [1] POSSIBLE CLINICAL INFECTION WITH EDGE HILL VIRUS
    AASKOV, JG
    PHILLIPS, DA
    WIEMERS, MA
    [J]. TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 1993, 87 (04) : 452 - 453
  • [2] AN EPIDEMIC OF ROSS RIVER VIRUS-INFECTION IN FIJI, 1979
    AASKOV, JG
    MATAIKA, JU
    LAWRENCE, GW
    RABUKAWAQA, V
    TUCKER, MM
    MILES, JAR
    DALGLISH, DA
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 1981, 30 (05) : 1053 - 1059
  • [3] BARMAH FOREST VIRUS IN THE GIPPSLAND LAKES REGION, VICTORIA
    ALDRED, J
    CAMPBELL, J
    DAVIS, G
    LEHMANN, N
    WOLSTENHOLME, J
    [J]. MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1990, 153 (07) : 434 - 434
  • [4] ALDRED J, 1992, COMM DIS INTEL, V16, P169
  • [5] ANDERSON S G, 1957, Med J Aust, V44, P113
  • [6] ANDERSON S. G., 1953, MED JOUR AUSTRALIA, V1, P478
  • [7] MURRAY VALLEY ENCEPHALITIS AND AUSTRALIAN-X DISEASE
    ANDERSON, SG
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYGIENE, 1954, 52 (04): : 447 - +
  • [8] Badman R. T., 1984, COMM DIS INTELL, V17, P5
  • [9] MURRAY VALLEY ENCEPHALITIS, 1974 - CLINICAL FEATURES
    BENNETT, NMK
    [J]. MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1976, 2 (12) : 446 - &
  • [10] ILLNESS CAUSED BY A BARMAH FOREST-LIKE VIRUS IN NEW-SOUTH-WALES
    BOUGHTON, CR
    HAWKES, RA
    NAIM, HM
    [J]. MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1988, 148 (03) : 146 - 147