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© Christine Schmitt, Anubis Vega Rua, Jean-Marc Panaud
Tête de moustique femelle Aedes albopictus, vecteur du virus de la dengue et du chikungunya. Microphotographie électronique à balayage, image colorisée.
Publication : The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health

Aedes aegypti in south Vietnam: ecology, genetic structure, vectorial competence and resistance to insecticides

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health - 01 Mar 2003

Huber K, Le Loan L, Hoang TH, Tien TK, Rodhain F, Failloux AB

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 12971518

Southeast Asian J. Trop. Med. Public Health 2003 Mar;34(1):81-6

In Vietnam, dengue hemorrhagic fever has been detected since the 1950s. In Southeast Asia, urban centers expanded rapidly in an uncontrolled and unplanned way. The Aedes aegypti populations and dengue viruses thrived in these new ecological and demographic settings. The result of these changes was a greatly extended geographic distribution, increased densities of Ae. aegypti and the maintenance of the four dengue serotypes leading to a dramatic increase in dengue transmission. To assess the role of the vector in the changing pattern of the disease in Southeast Asia, we studied the ecology of Ae. aegypti, genetic differentiation, variability in competence as a vector for dengue 2 virus, and resistance to insecticides.