SUMMARYMayaro virus (MAYV) is an arbovirus (Togaviridae: Alphavirus) enzootic in tropical South America and maintained in a sylvan cycle involving wild vertebrates and Haemagogus mosquitoes. MAYV cases occur sporadically in persons with a history of recent activities inside or around forests. This paper reports three cases of MAYV fever detected in men infected in Camapuã, MS, Brazil. Serum samples collected at four days and two months after the onset of the symptoms and examined by hemagglutination inhibition test, revealed monotypic seroconversion to MAYV. Isolation of the virus was obtained from one of the samples by inoculation of the first blood samples into newborn mice. A suspension of the infected mouse brain was inoculated into C6/36 cells culture and the virus was identified by indirect immunofluorescent assay with alphavirus polyclonal antibodies. RT-PCR, performed with RNA extracted from the supernatant of C6/36 infected cells in the presence of alphavirus generic primers as well as specific MAYV primers, confirmed these results. The reported cases illustrate the importance of laboratory confirmation in establishing a correct diagnosis. Clinical symptoms are not always indicative of a disease caused by an arbovirus. Also MAYV causes febrile illness, which may be mistaken for dengue.
A new virus, SP An 71686, was isolated from sentinel mice exposed in a forest area in Iguape county, São Paulo state, Brazil, in 1979. The results suggest [hemagglutination inhibition (HI), complement fixation, neutralization, and ELISA] that SP An 71686 virus is a new arbovirus and that it demonstrates some cross-reactivity with other members of the family Flaviviridae, but can be differentiated from them. Although there is an intensive circulation of several arboviruses in the area, the only diagnosed cases of human disease were caused by Rocio virus during and after the epidemic of encephalitis that occurred in 1975-1977, one case of febrile illness by Caraparu virus in 1983, and by subtype IF of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus in soldiers during jungle survival training in 1990. Wild animals had a prevalence of SP An 71686 HI monotype antibodies: 46% of birds captured in 1990, 40% in 1991 and 19.5% in 1992. These results suggested that wild birds may play a role in the virus transmission cycle. Mammals (rodents and marsupials) must also be considered potential hosts. However, the virus reservoir-vector relationships need further studies which would help to clarify the ecology of this virus.
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