The Early Whole-Blood Transcriptional Signature of Dengue Virus and Features Associated with Progression to Dengue Shock Syndrome in Vietnamese Children and Young Adults
Dengue is a pantropic public health problem. In children, dengue shock syndrome (DSS) is the most common life-threatening complication. The ability to predict which patients may develop DSS may improve triage and treatment. To this end, we conducted a nested case-control comparison of the early host...
Enregistré dans:
| Auteur principal: | |
|---|---|
| Format: | Journal Article |
| Langue: | anglais |
| Publié: |
2018
|
| Accès en ligne: | https://demo7.dspace.org/handle/123456789/92 |
| Tags: |
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
|
Documents similaires: The Early Whole-Blood Transcriptional Signature of Dengue Virus and Features Associated with Progression to Dengue Shock Syndrome in Vietnamese Children and Young Adults
- Early T-cell responses to dengue virus epitopes in Vietnamese adults with secondary dengue virus infections
- Patterns of Gene Transcript Abundance in the Blood of Children with Severe or Uncomplicated Dengue Highlight Differences in Disease Evolution and Host Response to Dengue Virus Infection
- Clinical and Virological Features of Dengue in Vietnamese Infants
- The value of daily platelet counts for predicting dengue shock syndrome: Results from a prospective observational study of 2301 Vietnamese children with dengue
- Clinical Features of Dengue in a Large Vietnamese Cohort: Intrinsically Lower Platelet Counts and Greater Risk for Bleeding in Adults than Children
- Clinical Characteristics of Dengue Shock Syndrome in Vietnamese Children: A 10-Year Prospective Study in a Single Hospital