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Clinical management of severedengue depends on judicious use of fluid rehydration.
2
These health centres are not equipped in any way to manage severedengue cases.
3
Only one patient met severedengue criteria, but warning signs were present in 10.
4
Patients with severedengue fever showed prolonged hospitalization and significant impairment of organ functions.
5
In 1970 only nine countries faced severedengue outbreaks.
6
Conclusions: Although dengue is a frequent cause of travel illness, severedengue and deaths are rare.
7
One individual, reportedly a Japan volunteer, developed severedengue symptoms and was evacuated for off-island medical care.
8
To minimize a risk of dengue fever and severedengue, travelers should consider regional and seasonal dengue situation.
9
Case definitions for dengue, dengue with warning signs, and severedengue provide a framework to guide clinical decision-making.
10
Patients were classified as either non- severedengue fever or severedengue fever according to the guidelines from the WHO.
11
Background: Early identification of patients at risk of severedengue disease (DD) is critical to guide its management.
12
The recognition of these known warning signs associated to severedengue disease underlines the usefulness of the WHO 2009 classification.
13
Background: The early identification of patients at risk of severedengue infection (DI) is critical to guide clinical management.
14
The relative risk of severedengue in secondary versus primary infection ranges from 2 to 7.
15
Antibody-dependent enhancement, viral factors, age, host factors and clinical experience of the managing physician modulate the risk of progressing to severedengue.
16
About 2-4% of secondary infections lead to severedengue.