Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2008)

Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome Caused by 2 Lineages of Dobrava Hantavirus, Russia

  • Boris Klempa,
  • Evgeniy A. Tkachenko,
  • Tamara K. Dzagurova,
  • Yulia V. Yunicheva,
  • Vyacheslav G. Morozov,
  • Natalia M. Okulova,
  • Galina P. Slyusareva,
  • Aleksey Smirnov,
  • Detlev H. Kruger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1404.071310
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
pp. 617 – 625

Abstract

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Dobrava-Belgrade virus (DOBV) is a European hantavirus that causes hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS); case-fatality rates in Balkan countries are as high as 12%. To determine causative agents, we examined 126 cases of DOBV-associated HFRS in central and southern European Russia. In central Russia (Lipetsk, Voronezh, Orel regions), outbreaks were caused by a DOBV variant (DOBV-Aa) carried by Apodemus agrarius. In southern Russia (Sochi district), where HFRS is endemic, HFRS cases were caused by a new DOBV variant (DOBV-Ap), found in A. ponticus, a novel hantavirus natural host. Both viruses, DOBV-Aa/Lipetsk and DOBV-Ap/Sochi, were isolated through Vero E6 cells, genetically characterized, and used for serotyping of the HFRS patients’ serum. The clinical severity of HFRS caused by DOBV-Aa resembles that of HFRS caused by Puumala virus (mild to moderate); clinical severity of disease caused by DOBV-Ap infections is more often moderate to severe.

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