Abstract
Yunnan Province in China borders 3 countries (Viet-nam, Laos, and Myanmar) in Southeast Asia. In the 1980s, a large-scale rabies epidemic occurred in this province, which subsided by the late 1990s. However, 3 human cases of rabies in 2000 indicated reemergence of the disease in 1 county. In 2012, rabies was detected in 77 counties; 663 persons died of rabies during this new epidemic. Fifty two rabies virus strains obtained during 2008-2012 were identified and analyzed phylogenetically by sequencing the nucleoprotein gene. Of the 4 clades identified, clades YN-A and YN-C were closely related to strains from neighboring provinces, and clade YN-B was closely related to strains from Southeast Asia, but formed a distinct branch. Rabies virus diversity might be attributed to dog movements among counties, provinces, and neighboring countries. These findings suggest that Yunnan Province is a focal point for spread of rabies between Southeast Asia and China.
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CITATION STYLE
Zhang, H. L., Zhang, Y. Z., Yang, W. H., Tao, X. Y., Li, H., Ding, J. C., … Tang, Q. (2014). Molecular epidemiology of reemergent rabies in Yunnan Province, Southwestern China. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 20(9), 1433–1442. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2009.130440
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