Darin S. Carroll
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Featured researches published by Darin S. Carroll.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2007
Joel M. Montgomery; M. Jahangir Hossain; Michael Bell; Abul K. Azad; Mohammed Rafiqul Islam; Mohammed Abdur Rahim Molla; Darin S. Carroll; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Paul A. Rota; Luis Lowe; James A. Comer; Pierre E. Rollin; Markus Czub; Allen Grolla; Heinz Feldmann; Stephen P. Luby; Jennifer L. Woodward; Robert F. Breiman
Transmission of this virus highlights the need for infection control strategies for resource-poor settings.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2008
M. Jahangir Hossain; Joel M. Montgomery; Michael Bell; Darin S. Carroll; Vincent P. Hsu; Pierre Formenty; A. Croisier; Eric Bertherat; M. A. Faiz; Abul K. Azad; Rafiqul Islam; M. Abdur Rahim Molla; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Paul A. Rota; James A. Comer; Pierre E. Rollin; Stephen P. Luby; Robert F. Breiman
BACKGROUND In Bangladesh, 4 outbreaks of Nipah virus infection were identified during the period 2001-2004. METHODS We characterized the clinical features of Nipah virus-infected individuals affected by these outbreaks. We classified patients as having confirmed cases of Nipah virus infection if they had antibodies reactive with Nipah virus antigen. Patients were considered to have probable cases of Nipah virus infection if they had symptoms consistent with Nipah virus infection during the same time and in the same community as patients with confirmed cases. RESULTS We identified 92 patients with Nipah virus infection, 67 (73%) of whom died. Although all age groups were affected, 2 outbreaks principally affected young persons (median age, 12 years); 62% of the affected persons were male. Fever, altered mental status, headache, cough, respiratory difficulty, vomiting, and convulsions were the most common signs and symptoms; clinical and radiographic features of acute respiratory distress syndrome of Nipah illness were identified during the fourth outbreak. Among those who died, death occurred a median of 6 days (range, 2-36 days) after the onset of illness. Patients who died were more likely than survivors to have a temperature >37.8 degrees C, altered mental status, difficulty breathing, and abnormal plantar reflexes. Among patients with Nipah virus infection who had well-defined exposure to another patient infected with Nipah virus, the median incubation period was 9 days (range, 6-11 days). CONCLUSIONS Nipah virus infection produced rapidly progressive severe illness affecting the central nervous and respiratory systems. Clinical characteristics of Nipah virus infection in Bangladesh, including a severe respiratory component, appear distinct from clinical characteristics reported during earlier outbreaks in other countries.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Yu Li; Darin S. Carroll; Shea N. Gardner; Matthew C. Walsh; Inger K. Damon
Human disease likely attributable to variola virus (VARV), the etiologic agent of smallpox, has been reported in human populations for >2,000 years. VARV is unique among orthopoxviruses in that it is an exclusively human pathogen. Because VARV has a large, slowly evolving DNA genome, we were able to construct a robust phylogeny of VARV by analyzing concatenated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from genome sequences of 47 VARV isolates with broad geographic distributions. Our results show two primary VARV clades, which likely diverged from an ancestral African rodent-borne variola-like virus either ≈16,000 or ≈68,000 years before present (YBP), depending on which historical records (East Asian or African) are used to calibrate the molecular clock. One primary clade was represented by the Asian VARV major strains, the more clinically severe form of smallpox, which spread from Asia either 400 or 1,600 YBP. Another primary clade included both alastrim minor, a phenotypically mild smallpox described from the American continents, and isolates from West Africa. This clade diverged from an ancestral VARV either 1,400 or 6,300 YBP, and then further diverged into two subclades at least 800 YBP. All of these analyses indicate that the divergence of alastrim and variola major occurred earlier than previously believed.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2007
Giliane de Souza Trindade; Ginny L. Emerson; Darin S. Carroll; Erna Geessien Kroon; Inger K. Damon
Genetic diversity enables this virus to persist in Brazil and other parts of the world.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004
A. Townsend Peterson; Darin S. Carroll; James N. Mills; Karl M. Johnson
Biologic principles and explicit assumptions reduce the range of possibilities in identifying the reservoir of filoviruses
Journal of General Virology | 2009
Christina L. Hutson; Victoria A. Olson; Darin S. Carroll; Jason Abel; Christine M. Hughes; Zachary Braden; Sonja Weiss; Joshua S. Self; Jorge E. Osorio; Paul N. Hudson; Michael Dillon; Kevin L. Karem; Inger K. Damon; Russell L. Regnery
Multiple monkeypox virus (MPXV) animal models have been discussed in previous studies, but no small animal models, nor most non-human primate models, demonstrated the protracted asymptomatic incubation phase seen in systemic human orthopoxvirus illness. Herein, we characterize a black-tailed prairie dog (PD) (Cynomys ludovicianus) model of infection, via intranasal and intradermal exposures, with the two MPXV clades. Daily observations of the animals were made (food consumption, general symptoms, disease presentation), while weights and virus evaluations (ocular, nasal, oropharyngeal, faeces, blood) were obtained/made every third day. Generalized rash became apparent 9-12 days post-infection for all animals. Individual animals demonstrated a range of symptoms consistent with human monkeypox disease. Measurable viraemias and excretas were similar for both clade-representative strains and persisted until at least day 21. Greater morbidity was observed in Congo Basin strain-challenged animals and mortality was observed only in the Congo Basin strain-challenged animals. The PD model is valuable for the study of strain-dependent differences in MPXV. Additionally, the model closely mimics human systemic orthopoxvirus disease and may serve as a valuable non-human surrogate for investigations of antivirals and next generation orthopoxvirus vaccines.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2008
Joel M. Montgomery; M. J. Hossain; Darin S. Carroll; A. Croisier; Eric Bertherat; Nima Asgari; Pierre Formenty; N. Keeler; James A. Comer; M.R. Bell; K. Akram; A.R. Molla; K. Zaman; Mohamed R. Islam; K. Wagoner; James N. Mills; Pierre E. Rollin; T. G. Ksiazek; Robert F. Breiman
Patients in Goalando were likely infected by direct contact with fruit bats or their secretions, rather than through contact with an intermediate host.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2010
Mary G. Reynolds; Darin S. Carroll; Victoria A. Olson; Christine M. Hughes; Jack Galley; Anna Likos; Joel M. Montgomery; Richard Suu-Ire; Mubarak O. Kwasi; J. Jeffrey Root; Zach Braden; Jason Abel; Cody J. Clemmons; Russell L. Regnery; Kevin L. Karem; Inger K. Damon
Human monkeypox has never been reported in Ghana, but rodents captured in forested areas of southern Ghana were the source of the monkeypox virus introduced into the United States in 2003. Subsequent to the outbreak in the United States, 204 animals were collected from two commercial trapping sites in Ghana. Animal tissues were examined for the presence of orthopoxvirus (OPXV) DNA using a real-time polymerase chain reaction, and sera were assayed for antibodies against OPXV. Animals from five genera (Cricetomys, Graphiurus, Funiscirus, and Heliosciurus) had antibodies against OPXV, and three genera (Cricetomys, Graphiurus, and Xerus) had evidence of OPXV DNA in tissues. Additionally, 172 persons living near the trapping sites were interviewed regarding risk factors for OPXV exposure, and their sera were analyzed. Fifty-three percent had IgG against OPXV; none had IgM. Our findings suggest that several species of forest-dwelling rodents from Ghana are susceptible to naturally occurring OPXV infection, and that persons living near forests may have low-level or indirect exposure to OPXV-infected animals, possibly resulting in sub-clinical infections.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Ginny L. Emerson; Yu Li; Michael Frace; Melissa Olsen-Rasmussen; Marina L. Khristova; Dhwani Govil; Scott Sammons; Russell L. Regnery; Kevin L. Karem; Inger K. Damon; Darin S. Carroll
The data presented herein support the North American orthopoxviruses (NA OPXV) in a sister relationship to all other currently described Orthopoxvirus (OPXV) species. This phylogenetic analysis reaffirms the identification of the NA OPXV as close relatives of “Old World” (Eurasian and African) OPXV and presents high support for deeper nodes within the Chordopoxvirinae family. The natural reservoir host(s) for many of the described OPXV species remains unknown although a clear virus-host association exists between the genus OPXV and several mammalian taxa. The hypothesized host associations and the deep divergence of the OPXV/NA OPXV clades depicted in this study may reflect the divergence patterns of the mammalian faunas of the Old and New World and reflect a more ancient presence of OPXV on what are now the American continents. Genes from the central region of the poxvirus genome are generally more conserved than genes from either end of the linear genome due to functional constraints imposed on viral replication abilities. The relatively slower evolution of these genes may more accurately reflect the deeper history among the poxvirus group, allowing for robust placement of the NA OPXV within Chordopoxvirinae. Sequence data for nine genes were compiled from three NA OPXV strains plus an additional 50 genomes collected from Genbank. The current, gene sequence based phylogenetic analysis reaffirms the identification of the NA OPXV as the nearest relatives of “Old World” OPXV and presents high support for deeper nodes within the Chordopoxvirinae family. Additionally, the substantial genetic distances that separate the currently described NA OPXV species indicate that it is likely that many more undescribed OPXV/NA OPXV species may be circulating among wild animals in North America.
Journal of Mammalogy | 2006
Neil D. Perry; Britta Hanson; Winston Hobgood; Roel L. Lopez; Craig R. Okraska; Kevin L. Karem; Inger K. Damon; Darin S. Carroll
Abstract On 17 August 2004, 5 Gambian rats (Cricetomys gambianus; 2 males and 3 females) were collected on Grassy Key, Florida. Evidence obtained from this collection confirms the existence of the 1st North American established and reproducing Cricetomys population. This invasive rodent population could represent a new series of ecological threats to the native and endemic flora and fauna of southern Florida.