The Asian Age

Dengue fever may increase stroke risk

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Beijing: People suffering from dengue fever are at two times higher risk of stroke, especially during the first two months following infection, a study warns. Dengue is a mosquito- borne viral infection that infects at least 100 million people every year around the world, with about four billion people at risk of the illness, which includes dengue hemorrhagi­c fever that can lead to spontaneou­s bleeding, organ failure and death. “Clinicians in dengueende­mic areas should be aware of this associatio­n, especially for patients with dengue who have neurologic deficits or for patients with stroke who have unexplaine­d fever,” said ChiaHung Kao, China Medical University Hospital in Taiwan. The study, published in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal ( CMAJ), looked at data on 13,787 patients, most between 31 and 60 years of age, with newly diagnosed dengue between 2000 and 2012. It found the incidence of stroke was higher in people with dengue fever. The risk of stroke was as high as 2.49 times in the first two months of infection with dengue relative to control patients who did not have dengue. “Our findings may help with clinical risk evaluation and may serve as a basis for further investigat­ion of the pathogenes­is of denguerela­ted stroke,” researcher­s said.

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