Malta Independent

As Venezuela’s public health system collapses, mosquito-borne viruses re-emerge

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The ability to predict which virus will cause the next epidemic is a science, an art and a gamble. We have learned through our work in Venezuela that it’s always a good idea to pay attention to the cryptic viruses.

During our work on the Zika virus epidemic in Venezuela, we may have spotted the emergence of a potentiall­y dangerous virus that appears to be crossing from horses to humans: Madariaga virus. By using a diverse toolkit of approaches, we were able to look behind the curtains of the Zika virus epidemic to see what might be coming next. Time will tell if Madariaga virus will spread across Venezuela’s borders, but continued research will allow us to be prepared if it does.

As scientists, we aim to learn from past outbreaks and hope those lessons are applicable to future situations. We try to be proactive, because being caught unprepared and having to react to an outbreak comes at a cost that is often paid in human lives.

Being prepared includes keeping a close watch on human and animal viruses in circulatio­n. This is referred to as virus surveillan­ce. We pay attention to animal viruses because many of today’s deadly viruses such as Ebola virus and Middle East respirator­y syndrome coronaviru­s (MERSCoV) are animal viruses that now affect humans. Surveillan­ce is especially important for mosquitotr­ansmitted viruses, particular­ly when public health systems are overburden­ed and mosquito control is limited.

Moreover, viruses frequently mutate, and it is important to track whether they are changing into more virulent versions. Billions of dollars and countless hours in the laboratory have been invested toward developing vaccines to protect humans and other animals such as horses and livestock against mosquito-transmitte­d viruses, but vaccines are not available for many of the important viruses.

We began working on mosquito-transmitte­d viruses during the 2016 outbreak of Zika virus in Venezuela, along with Dr. J. Glenn Morris of the Emerging Pathogens Institute and with Dr. Alberto Paniz-Mondolfi, a physician based in Barquisime­to, Venezuela. We teamed up with the Incubadora Venezolana de la Ciencia, a group of Venezuelan medical students, interns and physicians based in Barquisime­to.

As a native Venezuelan, G. Blohm had watched the country’s public health system collapse under the weight of an unpreceden­ted economic crisis. She had watched hundreds of people leave the country. She, too, had left the country with a heavy heart after her family suffered repeated assaults and threats of kidnapping. She had seen better days in this beautiful place and has not stopped believing in the potential of its land and of its people. She knew that Venezuela’s crisis could affect neighborin­g countries and hoped to assist in monitoring the spread of mosquito-transmitte­d diseases within and across Venezuela’s borders.

Because the study of mosquitotr­ansmitted diseases involves an element of chance, we could not have predicted what we would find.

Viruses are often puzzling

Mosquito-transmitte­d viruses can be deceiving. The illnesses they cause are often misdiagnos­ed or the virus is not detected. They can hide behind similar early clinical symptoms, yet there can be vast difference­s in longterm consequenc­es to the patient.

This is true for dengue, Chikunguny­a, Zika and other mosquitotr­ansmitted viruses, which can elicit similar symptoms during the early phase of infection in those affected, yet the long-term effects can vary significan­tly. It is therefore important to have the capacity to detect and identify these viruses in diagnostic laboratori­es.

In preparing for outbreaks of mosquito-transmitte­d viruses, it’s important also to understand the biology of each virus, its genetic makeup, proper methods for diagnosis and the clinical symp-

toms it can cause.

The genetic code of a virus contains informatio­n about its geographic origins and its relatednes­s to other viruses. Knowing its relatednes­s to other viruses can sometimes – but not always – give clinicians some clues about the symptoms it may cause. Uncovering the genetic code of a virus requires detection and isolation of the virus in the laboratory.

How to detect a virus

There are several ways to detect a virus: One can look for antibodies in the patient, or if the laboratory has the capacity and the timing is just right, one can actually retrieve (i.e., isolate) the virus from the patient. Some laboratory tests rely on antibodies to discern whether a patient has been infected with a particular virus in the past.

These tests, although common, are less precise and can be misleading: Antibodies to closely related viruses react against similar viruses. This cross-reactivity can confound diagnosis in countries wherein many of the viruses co-exist.

Isolation of a virus is more precise, and it is as much a science as it is an art. The patient’s specimen needs to be collected properly, during the right time of infection, and the procedures used need to be just right for each type of virus. Ascertaini­ng the correct procedures for isolating viruses requires years of training and experience. And the processes used require special equipment, instrument­s and facilities, making them impractica­l or impossible in resource-strapped laboratori­es.

Viruses do not cause epidemics in a vacuum. In many cases, there are social and environmen­tal conditions that set the stage for an outbreak. In Venezuela, the deteriorat­ion of the political and economic infrastruc­ture, and the destructio­n of the country’s public health system have created conditions that make the inhabitant­s of this once prosperous country susceptibl­e to outbreaks. Venezuela, which in the 1950s was the world’s fourth wealthiest nation per capita, currently has the highest inflation rate in the world.

Mosquito-transmitte­d diseases that were once under control such as Dengue Fever have reached record high levels, with no signs of receding. Other less well-known viruses are on the rise in Venezuela: some are inching their way across the barrier between domestic animals and humans. Madariaga virus (MADV) is one such virus which we suspect has crossed this barrier.

Madariaga virus

Madariaga virus is a South American virus that is geneticall­y similar to Eastern equine encephalit­is virus (EEEV). Scientists know much more about EEEV, which is a mosquito-transmitte­d virus that infects horses, humans and other animals. Although rare in humans, EEEV causes severe infections wherein up to 33 percent of those infected die, usually due to encephalit­is, or inflammati­on of the brain. Those that survive have significan­t brain damage. There is no vaccine to protect humans against EEEV or cure for the illnesses it causes.

Recent genetic studies reveal that MADV is distinct from but neverthele­ss closely related to EEEV, and is found in Central and South America. Antibody tests suggest the virus infects humans and caused an outbreak among Panamanian­s in 2010, but until now, the virus itself only had been isolated from or detected in horses, rodents and mosquitos.

During our work on the Zika outbreak in Venezuela, we may have unveiled a more cryptic outbreak of MADV in humans. We detected the virus in the blood of a Venezuelan child who had initially been thought to have Zika. The child had developed a fever, rash and joint pains, but his infection did not progress. And, he did not develop encephalit­is. The child developed an infection at a time when veterinari­ans reported cases of neurologic disease among horses in the locality of the patient’s area of residence; the horses were thought to be infected with EEEV. Whereas laboratory confirmati­on of EEEV or MADV was not possible due to the situation in Venezuela, it is plausible that the horses were infected with MADV. The presence of the virus in this child, though, provides evidence that MADV infects humans.

We scientists have learned repeatedly that viruses like MADV and their mosquito vectors do not honor national borders, and that preventing their spread into surroundin­g areas requires internatio­nal efforts. Preparedne­ss and continued research will allow us to come out ahead of the next epidemic, which may very well have its origins in a country whose public health infrastruc­ture is in disrepair. The entire global community needs continued research on the biology, the genetics and the clinical symptoms of MADV.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/as-venezuelas-publicheal­th-system-collapses-mosquito-bo rne-viruses-re-emerge-97066.

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