PAPPATACI FEVER


Meaning of PAPPATACI FEVER in English

also called phlebotomus fever, three-day fever, or sand fly fever acute, infectious, febrile disease caused by a virus and producing temporary incapacitation. It is transmitted by the bloodsucking female sand fly, Phlebotomus papatasii, and is prevalent in the moist subtropical countries of the Eastern Hemisphere lying between latitude 20 and 45 N, particularly around the Mediterranean Sea, in the Middle East, and in parts of India. It breaks out in epidemic form during the summer season following the breeding of this species of fly, but the reservoir for the virus between epidemics is unknown. The sand fly becomes infected as a result of biting an infected person when the virus is circulating in the person's bloodi.e., from 48 hours before until 24 hours after the onset of fever. The virus then requires seven to ten days to incubate, after which the sand fly remains infected for life. Humans become infected from the bites of infected female sand flies. The virus multiplies and becomes widely disseminated throughout the body; and, within two and one-half to five days after exposure, there is suddenly a feeling of lassitude, abdominal distress, and dizziness, followed within one day by a chilly sensation and a rapid rise in temperature during the next day or two to 102104.5 F (38.840.3 C). As in dengue, there are severe frontal headache and postorbital pain, intense muscular and joint pains, and a flushed appearance of the face but no true rash or subsequent scaling. During the first day of fever there is an accelerated pulse. Usually after two days the temperature slowly returns to normal; only rarely is there a second episode of fever. Following the febrile period, there is great fatigue and weakness, accompanied by slow pulse and frequently subnormal blood pressure. Convalescence may require a few days or several weeks, but the prognosis is always favourable. Treatment is entirely symptomatic. Sand flies breed in vegetation within a few hundred feet of human habitations. However, these breeding places are difficult to discover, rendering larvicidal control impractical. The bloodsucking females feed only from sunset to sunrise and only at ground level, so that sleeping above the ground floor provides moderately good protection. Ordinary mosquito netting and screening are useless, because unfed female flies can pass through their 18-mesh squares. Insect repellents, such as dimethyl phthalate, when applied to exposed skin, will keep sand flies away for a few hours, but the use of insecticide sprays on verandas, on screens, around doors and windows, and within habitations will readily kill all adult sand flies that alight on the sprayed surfaces.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.