Research Projects

Vector borne viruses (arboviruses) have the potential to expand rapidly into new areas and belong mostly to the Flaviviridae, Bunyaviridae, Togaviridae, Reoviridae families. They have animal reservoirs including wildlife and birds from which they are able to be transmitted by insect or animal vectors to humans or sensitive animals where they can cause severe disease. Common arboviruses of medical importance in South Africa include West Nile virus (WNV), Sindbis virus, Rift Valley fever (RVF) and Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF). Typically arbovirus infections may present as febrile disease with a rash, muscle and joint pain in humans and occasionally results in encephalitis (RVF, WNV), hemorrhagic manifestations (RVF, CCHF and Dengue) or death in humans. Signs of virus activity in animals could be attributed to abortion storms in the case of RVF and Wesselsbron virus (WSLB); encephalitis (WNV; Shunivirus, Alphaviruses) or pulmonary and hemorrhagic disease (African horse sickness (AHSV), equine encephalosis (EEV). Surveying and screening animals which exhibit with these symptoms may be a good sentinel and early warning system to detect an increase in virus activity and identify potential outbreaks. Investigation of vector activity in areas where outbreaks matching these syndromes occur or where human and animal cases of specific viruses occur may help to solve the ecological-epidemiology, identify the reservoirs and predict outbreaks.

 

Please note:

  • The diagnostic services provided by the ZARV program are for research purposes and we therefore need as much clinical and epidemiological information as possible for the research to be worthwhile. A specimen submission form must accompany each specimen. Refer to the information sheet for type of specimen and address to send the specimens to. Please read the biosafety packaging sheet to safely handle and transport these specimens.
  • Investigations involve a range of tests that are covered through research grants, however due to the substantial cost to us we can only accept specimens that are send on ice to reach us in 2 days accompanied with a completed submission form.

Please contact us directly to discuss the case if you have specific question

http://www.up.ac.za/en/zoonoses-research-unit/article/2354866/investigation-of-neurological-disease-in-humans

 

Animal Surveillance Program Human Surveillance Program  Vector Surveillance Program

The ZARV program investigates undiagnosed neurological disease in animals. Diagnostic tests have consisted principally of molecular procedures (RT-PCR) to detect viral genetic material (nucleic acid) in brain, spinal cord or blood samples, but the acquisition of a biosafety level 3 (BSL3) laboratory allow us to grow live virus from specimens and to prepare reagents for antibody tests, so as to facilitate making a diagnosis at different stages of infection: either detection of virus during acute illness (0-10 days from onset of signs), or demonstration of an immune response later (after 10 days). Furthermore, we shall progressively broaden the range of pathogens for which tests are conducted and attempt virus discovery if it cannot be solved with our current tests.

To investigate unsolved human cases of neurological disease, the ZARV program has developed a range of tests that can detect up to 30 causes of neurological disease. From 2016, human meningo-encephalitis, and Gillian Barre syndrome cases that tested negative for standard pathogens will also be investigated as part of the research program. Currently, The programs is involved in an ANDEMIA study for disease surveillance in 3 sentintinel sites (Mapulaneng, Matekwaneng and Kalafong hospitals) and training of medical scientists. 

 

 

ZARV has been conducting vector surveillance to determine the arboviral vector epidemiology of multiple vector species with particular focus on mosquito and Culicoides spp. Surveillance is conducted at multiple core and ad hoc sites across five provinces within South Africa, including urban areas in Gauteng Province (Boschkop & Kyalami) where regular cases of arboviruses have been detected in horses; wildlife reserves within Mpumalanga and Limpopo Province where cases of neurological disease in multiple wildlife species have been reported; and wildlife and human interfaces within North West Province and KwaZulu Natal Provinces following arboviral detection in humans or animals. For core sites, mosquito collections have been occurring monthly since 2011 resulting in eight years of ecological and viral surveillance data. Collected vectors are retrospectively screened for the presence of zoonotic arboviruses of public health significance, and assess the presence of emerging and reemerging infectious disease that may cause severe outbreak and high mortality in humans, livestock and wildlife. The mosquito and Culicoides flora is further described as a means of predicting outbreaks, assessing vector capacity and epidemiology and determining risk to host species.

 

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