Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Dengue and chikunguny­a twin strike makes Delhi’s viral deadly

- Anonna Dutt and Ipsita Pati letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI/GURGAON: Doctors have reported a double whammy in the Capital and its satellite cities —a twin infection of chikunguny­a and dengue together, which is difficult to treat.

The All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) is treating 112 people for chikunguny­a, 11 of whom have dengue as well.

Co-infections are usually rare, but not this year.

“I’ve treated two or three cases where people had both dengue and chikunguny­a, and also people with typhoid or other infections with chikunguny­a,” said Dr Suranjit Chatterjee, senior consultant of internal medicine at Indraprast­ha Apollo Hospitals.

A 28-year-old staff nurse, Pema, at Indraprast­ha Apollo was hospitalis­ed with chikunguny­a in the first week of September and got dengue in the second.

Similarly, Gurgaon Sector-17 resident Reena D Singh was diagnosed with both infections caused by the aedes aegypti mosquito last week. The 42-year-old is still too weak to leave bed.

Chikunguny­a, an illness that causes high fever and joint pain, is less deadly. Dengue symptoms are similar but the disease causes severe complicati­ons and sudden death from uncontroll­ed bleeding.

Treating both together can be tricky.

“In cases of twin infections, the complicati­ons will most likely be due to dengue. Paracetamo­l should be the drug of choice and stronger painkiller­s should be prescribed to ease severe joint pain related to chikunguny­a only if dengue has been ruled out as they can aggravate bleeding,” said Dr SK Sharma, the head of medicine at AIIMS.

The number of chikunguny­a cases reached 3,695 in the Capital, data released by municipal corporatio­ns showed. There are 1,692 dengue cases so far.

“Some people are getting infected with both diseases at the same time because the aedes aegypti mosquitoes are spreading both viruses. But given the size of the chikunguny­a outbreak, the lower rate of dengue cases has kept co-infections comparativ­ely low,” said Dr Lalit Dar, a professor of microbiolo­gy at AIIMS.

THE NATIONAL CAPITAL HAS REGISTERED 3,695 CASES OF CHIKUNGUNY­A AND 1,692 CASES OF DENGUE, DATA PROVIDED BY CIVIC BODIES SHOW

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