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1.
Vaccine ; 29(34): 5652-6, 2011 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21699946

ABSTRACT

This study is the first systematic documentation of the potency of monovalent oral polio vaccine type 3 (mOPV3) kept at ambient temperatures during a polio immunization campaign in Chad. During the study test vials were exposed to temperatures of up to 47.1 °C, and kept outside of the 2-8 °C range for a maximum of 86.9 hours. Post-campaign laboratory testing confirmed that the test vials were still potent, and in conformity with the defined release specifications. Further, the Vaccine Vial Monitors performed as expected, giving an early warning indication of when cumulative exposure to heat reached levels that may have negatively affected the vaccine's potency. This study provides proof-of-concept evidence that certain types of OPV remain potent and thus can be kept, for limited periods of time, as well as administered at ambient temperatures.


Subject(s)
Hot Temperature , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/immunology , Refrigeration , Chad , Clinical Laboratory Techniques , Drug Storage , Humans , Immunization , Mass Vaccination , Poliomyelitis/prevention & control
2.
Emerg Infect Dis ; 10(12): 2143-9, 2004 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15663851

ABSTRACT

From February to August 2003, 38 persons were infected with Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) virus in Mauritania; 35 of these persons were residents of Nouakchott. The first patient was a young woman who became ill shortly after butchering a goat. She transmitted the infection to 15 persons in the hospital where she was admitted and four members of her family. In Nouakchott, two disease clusters and 11 isolated cases were identified. The case-fatality ratio was 28.6%. Of the patients not infected by the first case-patient, almost half were butchers, which suggests that the primary mode of animal-to-human transmission was direct contact with blood of infected animals. The hospital outbreak alerted health authorities to sporadic cases that occurred in the following weeks, which would have probably gone otherwise unnoticed. Studies must be conducted to determine the potential risk for continued sporadic outbreaks of CCHF in humans and to propose prevention measures.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks , Hemorrhagic Fever, Crimean/epidemiology , Adult , Animals , Base Sequence , Cattle/virology , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Viral , Disease Reservoirs/veterinary , Disease Vectors , Female , Goats/virology , Humans , Male , Mauritania/epidemiology , Middle Aged , Molecular Sequence Data , Pregnancy , Sheep/virology , Ticks/virology
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