Zika Virus, French Polynesia, South Pacific, 2013

Van‐Mai Cao‐Lormeau(Institut Louis Malardé), Claudine Roche(University of French Polynesia), Anita Teissier(Institut Pasteur de Dakar), Emilie Robin(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Anne-Laure Berry(Institut Louis Malardé), Henri‐Pierre Mallet(Institut Pasteur de Dakar), Amadou Alpha Sall(University of French Polynesia), Didier Musso(Fondazione Edmund Mach)
Emerging infectious diseases
May 13, 2014
Cited by 864Open Access
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Abstract

To the Editor: Isolated in 1947 from a rhesus monkey in Zika forest, Uganda, Zika virus (ZIKV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus (1). For half a century, ZIKV was described only as causing sporadic human infections in Africa and Asia, which was mostly confirmed by serologic methods (2). In 2007, the first ZIKV outbreak reported outside Africa and Asia was retrospectively documented from biological samples of patients on Yap Island, Federated States of Micronesia, North Pacific, who had received an incorrect diagnosis of dengue virus (DENV) (3,4). We report here the early investigations that led to identification of ZIKV as the causative agent of an outbreak that started in October 2013 in French Polynesia.


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