View clinical trials related to Dengue.
Filter by:Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever is a mosquito-borne viral disease endemic in the Philippines which caused multiple epidemics. Most points to the activation of the complement system secondary to humoral respond leading to cytokine release causing systemic inflammation. Melatonin, is a hormone which has an a) anti-viral, b) immunomodulator, c) antioxidant, d) modulatory effect on hematopoiesis and e) anti-inflammatory action. This is a randomized control trial to determine the effectiveness of adjunctive melatonin therapy among patients diagnosed with Dengue fever with Warning Signs. This would include children aged 5 to 18 years old with no signs of hemmorhagic shock. They would be randomly assigned into 2 groups. Baseline Complete blood count with platelet (CBCPC) will be collected. Daily CBCPC will be collected and would be statistically analyze after the study.
Symptomatic dengue virus infection in pregnant women could affect the mother, fetus and the newborn at birth. The risks of postpartum hemorrhage, prematurity and low birth weight are increased in dengue fever. Cases of vertical transmission have been described. This study therefore proposes to quantify these risks in a pregnant woman presenting a clinical picture of dengue fever through a prospective, longitudinal and comparative study.
Background: Dengue continues to be a high priority disease for public health in tropical and subtropical countries, where vector control measures have not had the expected impact on transmission. The development of new vaccines opens the possibility of having an additional measure capable of preventing the development of the disease and avoiding its complications. Currently, in two of the Dengue virus (DENV) vaccines a differential behaviour of the immune response has been observed between seropositive and seronegative individuals, which makes the generation of evidence from prevalence studies in places of high and low endemicity more relevant. Objective: To determine the predominant type of humoral immune response in high areas and to estimate the serotype-specific prevalence for DENV in people groups aged 5 to 35 years living in Mexican cities with low and high dengue endemicity. Methodology: Descriptive cross-sectional study with subgroup analysis (by endemic and non-endemic areas, by age groups and by sex). Expected results: In areas of low dengue endemicity the humoral immune response against dengue is predominantly monotypic (against one serotype) while in areas of high dengue endemicity it is predominantly multitype (against two or more serotypes).
This trial aims to test the safety of 2 doses of a T-cell priming specific cocktail of Dengue viruses peptides representing all 4 DENV serotypes and mounted on a gold nanoparticle. NOTE: This is the master protocol of a prospective 2-stage adaptive trial, which aims to add and test a Coronavirus vaccine candidate as well, in an identical trial design.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the antiviral activity of JNJ-64281802 versus placebo in terms of reduction of dengue virus (DENV) ribonucleic acid (RNA) in primary DENV infection.
Dengue fever, an arbovirus transmitted by the Aedes mosquito, is a public health problem in all tropical and subtropical regions of the world. There is currently no antiviral treatment and vector control has shown its limits. The 2018 European marketing authorization of the tetravalent chimeric yellow fever / dengue vaccine (Dengvaxia®) is a major step forward in the fight against the disease. Dengvaxia® is indicated for the prevention of dengue due to serotypes DENV 1-4 in subjects aged 9 to 45 years with a history of infection with the dengue virus and living in endemic areas (seroprevalence of at least 70% in the target population). Dengue seroprevalence data in the French Caribbean territories of Martinique and Guadeloupe dates back to 2011 and concerns only adult blood donors aged 18 to 70 years. To date, no data exists for individuals aged 9 to 17 years in the region. In order to implement an optimal vaccine introduction strategy for these territories, the main aim of the DengueSEA study is to estimate the seroprevalence of the Dengue viruses (DENV 1-4) in 9-17 year olds giving a blood sample as part of care in hospital departments of the French Caribbean islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe.
To discribe concentration of NT-proBNP and Troponin I in Dengue hemorrhagic shock children, in correlation between concentration of NT-proBNP and troponin I with total fluid admission, respiratory support, using inotrope and vasopressor using.
Dengue fever is the most common arbovirus worldwide (390 million people infected per year) and is a global public health problem. This public health problem is also becoming European due to its rapid expansion over the past decade with an increase in cases of 400% and the appearance of the first indigenous cases of dengue in Europe. Studies on the consequences of dengue fever on pregnancy find contradictory results. In fact, most of these studies are observational studies describing the risk of dengue fever for pregnancy, without comparison with a control group or comparing the different pregnancy morbidities to those found during pregnancy in the general population. Other research is retrospective case-control studies with major biases in the definitions of obstetric complications, which makes the results questionable. The study therefore proposes to carry out a prospective case-control study with rigorous matching criteria, strict definitions of cases, controls and obstetric complications.
Dengue is the most common arbovirus worldwide (390 million people infected each year) and belongs to the Flavivirus genus of the Flaviviridae family like Zika. Its expansion has been rapid since the last decade with an increase in the number of cases of 400% and the first cases of indigenous dengue described in Europe. Current data on the consequences of dengue fever on the fetus are incomplete. The risk of maternal-fetal transmission of dengue during the peripartum period has now been recorded in numerous case reports and a few case series for patients who contracted dengue in the 12 days preceding childbirth or at the time of delivery. However, the transmission of dengue is highly variable depending on the studies ranging from 1.6 to 15% and the consequences for the newborn are very variable ranging from simple thrombocytopenia to death in severe neonatal dengue. Regarding the risk of malformation, a few old cases of heart disease, hydrocephalus and neural tube closure abnormalities have been described in the literature following exposure to dengue fever during pregnancy. Since no malformative case has been described, however, to our knowledge, no prospective study with specialized ultrasound monitoring has been performed for pregnant women who contracted dengue during their pregnancy.
The purpose of this research study is to test the protection of volunteers previously vaccinated with Tetravalent Dengue Virus (TDEN) Purified Inactivated Vaccine (PIV) with alum and boosted with TDEN live attenuated vaccine (LAV) formulation against a weakened form of an experimental dengue virus challenge. The Investigators will also include people that have not received the study vaccine. The Investigators are collecting information about how the vaccine protects against a dengue virus challenge as well as adding to knowledge about the safety of the challenge.