USGS logo Yale School of Medicine logo.
The Canary Database
Yale Occupational and Environmental Medicine Program
135 College St
Room 366
New Haven, CT, USA
06510-2283




American Journal of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene. 36(1):120-32, 1987 Jan.

Epidemiologic and clinical features of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever in southern Africa.

Swanepoel R, Shepherd AJ, Leman PA, Shepherd SP, McGillivray GM, Erasmus MJ, Searle LA, Gill DE

Find in a library icon

Article type: Curated - Canary ID: 2023

Following the diagnosis in 1981 of the first case of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) in South Africa, an antibody survey was undertaken on cattle sera to determine the distribution of the virus and specific diagnostic tests were routinely applied to specimens from suspected cases of hemorrhagic fever to establish the medical significance of its presence. Antibody to CCHF virus was demonstrated by reversed passive hemagglutination-inhibition technique in 2,460/8,667 (28%) cattle sera and in 140/180 herds tested in South Africa, as well as in 347/763 (45%) cattle sera and in 32/34 (94%) herds tested in Zimbabwe. The antibody was found in all major cattle farming areas, but was of low prevalence along the southern coast where 2 of the 3 species of Hyalomma tick which occur in South Africa are absent. From February 1981 to January 1986, inclusive, 29 indigenous cases of CCHF were diagnosed in 16 outbreaks which arose in various locations throughout South Africa. A further 2 imported cases of CCHF arose in Zaire and Tanzania. The clinical features of infection conformed to the classical descriptions of CCHF in the Soviet Union. The fatal outcome in 11/31 cases indicates that the African disease is no less severe than that which occurs in Eurasia. It is inferred that the virus is widespread in all countries in Africa and Eurasia which lie within the limits of world distribution of ticks of the genus Hyalomma.


Top of page.