Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2005)

Emergence of Toscana Virus in Europe

  • Rémi N. Charrel,
  • Pierre Gallian,
  • José-María Navarro-Marí,
  • Loredana Nicoletti,
  • Anna Papa,
  • Mária Paz Sánchez-Seco,
  • Antonio Tenorio,
  • Xavier de Lamballerie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1111.050869
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
pp. 1657 – 1663

Abstract

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Toscana virus (TOSV) is an arthropodborne virus first identified in 1971 from the sandfly Phlebotomus perniciosus in central Italy. Many case reports in travelers and clinical research and epidemiologic studies conducted around the Mediterranean region have shown that TOSV has a tropism for the central nervous system (CNS) and is a major cause of meningitis and encephalitis in countries in which it circulates. In central Italy, TOSV is the most frequent cause of meningitis from May to October, far exceeding enteroviruses. In other northern Mediterranean countries, TOSV is among the 3 most prevalent viruses associated with meningitis during the warm seasons. Therefore, TOSV must be considered an emerging pathogen. Here, we review the epidemiology of TOSV in Europe and determine questions that should be addressed in future studies. Despite increasing evidence of its major role in medicine as an emerging cause of CNS infections, TOSV remains an unstudied pathogen, and few physicians are aware of its potential to cause CNS infections.

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