Publications (21) View all
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Article: Climatic, ecological and socioeconomic factors as predictors of Sindbis virus infections in Finland.
K Jalava, J Sane, J Ollgren, R Ruuhela, O Rätti, S Kurkela, P Helle, S Hartonen, P Pirinen, O Vapalahti, M Kuusi[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: SUMMARY Mosquito-borne Sindbis virus (SINV) causes rash-arthritis syndrome in Finland. Major outbreaks with approximately 7-year cycles have caused substantial burden of illness. Forest dwelling grouse are suspected to be amplifying hosts, with the infection transmitted to humans by mosquito bites. SINV infection surveillance data for 1984-2010 were used to create a negative binomial hurdle model, with seasonality, long-term cycles, climatic, ecological and socioeconomic variables. Climatic factors during early summer and amount of snow in April described the occurrence and incidence of SINV infections. Regulated water shore and hatch-year black grouse density described the occurrence, while population working in agriculture, agricultural land (negative) and income (negative) described the incidence of the disease. The prediction for 2009 was 85 cases (95% prediction interval 2-1187), while the actual occurrence was 106. We identified novel and known risk factors. The prevention of SINV infections in regulated water areas by infected mosquito populations should be targeted.Epidemiology and Infection 11/2012; · 2.84 Impact Factor -
Article: Robust reconstruction and analysis of outbreak data: influenza A(H1N1)v transmission in a school-based population.
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ABSTRACT: The rapid spread of the new influenza virus A(H1N1)v in young age groups in 2009 has been partly attributed to a high transmission intensity in schools. However, detailed characterization of the spread of influenza in school populations has been difficult to obtain, simply because it is very hard to identify who infected whom in a large outbreak. Data collected in large outbreak investigations typically miss many transmission events, and some reported transmission events will be incorrect. Here the authors present robust likelihood-based methods that can be used to analyze outbreak data while explicitly accounting for both missing data and erroneous data. They apply this method to a school-based outbreak of pandemic influenza A(H1N1)v that occurred in London, United Kingdom, in April 2009. The authors show that the generation interval in this school-based population was 2.20 days and that the reproduction number declined coincident with school closure, from 1.33 secondary cases per primary case to 0.43 secondary cases per primary case. These results provide quantitative evidence for the change in influenza transmission that is to be expected from school closure.American journal of epidemiology 07/2012; 176(3):196-203. · 5.59 Impact Factor -
Article: Prolonged myalgia in Sindbis virus infection: case description and in vitro infection of myotubes and myoblasts.
Jussi Sane, Satu Kurkela, Marion Desdouits, Hannu Kalimo, Simon Mazalrey, Marja-Liisa Lokki, Antti Vaheri, Tapani Helve, Jyrki Törnwall, Michel Huerre, Gillian Butler-Browne, Pierre-Emmanuel Ceccaldi, Antoine Gessain, Olli Vapalahti[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Sindbis virus (SINV) is a mosquito-borne alphavirus found in Eurasia, Africa, and Oceania. Clinical SINV infection is characterized by febrile rash and arthritis and sometimes prolonged arthralgia and myalgia. The pathophysiological mechanisms of musculoskeletal and rheumatic disease caused by SINV are inadequately understood. We studied the muscle pathology of SINV infection ex vivo by examining a unique muscle biopsy obtained from a patient with chronic myalgia and arthralgia 6 months after acute SINV infection and assessed potential genetic predisposing factors by determining the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and complement factor C4 genes and proteins. In addition, we performed in vitro SINV infections of primary human myoblasts and myotubes. In the muscle biopsy we found evidence of muscle regeneration due to previous necrotic lesions likely caused by earlier SINV infection. We showed that human myoblasts and myotubes were susceptible in vitro for SINV infection as the cells became immunoreactive for viral antigens and cytopathic effect was observed. The patient was homozygous for HLA-B*35 alleles and heterozygous for HLA-DRB1*01 and HLA-DRB1*03 alleles and had total deficiency of C4B protein. This study provides new insights concerning pathological processes leading to chronic symptoms in SINV infection and demonstrates for the first time the susceptibility of human myogenic cells to SINV infection.The Journal of Infectious Diseases 05/2012; 206(3):407-14. · 6.41 Impact Factor -
Article: Chikungunya virus as a causative agent of fever of unknown origin in Finnish travellers to tropics.
Satu Kurkela, Jussi Sane, Emmanuelle Deren, Eili Huhtamo, Irina Suomalainen, Anu Kantele, Olli VapalahtiJournal of clinical virology: the official publication of the Pan American Society for Clinical Virology 03/2012; 54(3):289-90. · 3.12 Impact Factor -
Article: Comparative hepatitis A seroepidemiology in 10 European countries.
S Kurkela, R Pebody, G Kafatos, N Andrews, C Barbara, B Bruzzone, D Butur, S Caplinskas, I Davidkin, A Hatzakis, W Hellenbrand, L M Hesketh, A Nardone, V Nemecek, A Pistol, Z Sobotová, R Vranckx, C G Anastassopoulou[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: SUMMARYThe WHO recommends hepatitis A virus (HAV) immunization according to level of transmission and disease burden. We aimed to identify susceptible age groups by standardized serosurveys to inform HAV vaccination policy in participating countries: Belgium, Czech Republic, England, Finland, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Malta, Romania, and Slovakia. Each country tested national serum banks (n=1854-6748), collected during 1996-2004, for anti-HAV antibodies. Local laboratory results were standardized to common units. Forty-one per cent of those aged <30 years and 6% of those aged ⩾30 years were susceptible to HAV in Romania; compared to 70-94% and 26-71%, respectively, elsewhere. Romania reported high HAV incidence in children and young adults. Other countries reported HAV disease primarily in older risk groups. The results suggest low level of HAV transmission in most of Europe. Romania, however, appeared as an area with intermediate transmission. Vaccination of risk groups in countries with high susceptibility of young and middle-aged adults needs to be continued.Epidemiology and Infection 01/2012; · 2.84 Impact Factor