Serum levels of inflammatory cytokines in Rift Valley fever patients are indicative of severe disease Emerging viruses

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Abstract

Background: Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a mosquito-borne viral zoonosis affecting domestic and wild ruminants, camels and humans. Outbreaks of RVF are characterized by a sudden onset of abortions and high mortality amongst domestic ruminants. Humans develop disease ranging from a mild flu-like illness to more severe complications including hemorrhagic syndrome, ocular and neurological lesions and death. During the RVF outbreak in South Africa in 2010/11, a total of 278 human cases were laboratory confirmed, including 25 deaths. The role of the host inflammatory response to RVF pathogenesis is not completely understood. Methods: Virus load in serum from human fatal and non-fatal cases was determined by standard tissue culture infective dose 50 (TCID50) titration on Vero cells. Patient serum concentration of chemokines and cytokines involved in inflammatory responses (IL-8, RANTES, CXCL9, MCP-1, IP-10, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10, TNF and IL-12p70) was determined using cytometric bead assays and flow cytometry. Results: Fatal cases had a 1-log10 higher TCID50/ml serum concentration of RVF virus (RVFV) than survivors (p∈

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Jansen Van Vuren, P., Shalekoff, S., Grobbelaar, A. A., Archer, B. N., Thomas, J., Tiemessen, C. T., & Paweska, J. T. (2015). Serum levels of inflammatory cytokines in Rift Valley fever patients are indicative of severe disease Emerging viruses. Virology Journal, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-015-0392-3

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