Usually dengue fever is not fatal, but some deaths have been reported.
Usually dengue fever is not fatal, but some deaths have been reported.
Dengue fever can be fatal, symptoms are usually more serious after a secondary infection from a different strain of dengue (there are 4 strains of dengue). Secondary infection can lead to Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever which can cause internal bleeding, if the symptoms are not recognized it can ultimately lead to death.
12,500 die each year, according to the World Health Organization.
If you catch yellow fever, you get a sudden fever and headache. If the yellow fever turns into a bad case, you then become extremely tired and get bleeding into the skin, slow heartbeat, back pains, and vomiting. About half the people who get bad cases die. Typically, people infected with dengue virus are asymptomatic (80%) or only have mild symptoms such as an uncomplicated fever. Other go to a complicated stage with a rash and hemorrhage.
The prognosis for uncomplicated dengue fever is very good, and almost 100% of patients fully recover. However, as many as 6-30% of all patients die when DHF occurs.
ya dengue can kill the people but not aften.dengue is self limited fever it will subside spontanious ly after 1 week to few more days.most dengue symptoms are like a common fever and they over come from the disease without knowing that they had dengue.but in some patients it be come complicated with symptoms like blood faild to clot,high temperature.malaise etc...and some time may patient die.
I assume you are taling about Dengue Fever? Well, around two weeks after infected, usually. That is, If you even die at all. If you don't live in a third world country, you can find a way to get medical help. Under the right conditions, less than 1 percent of people infected die. Even without medical help, only 15 percent of the infected population die. The odds are in your favor no matter what. Anyways, I hope that helped. Have a nice day :)
Din Beramboi died on April 2, 2010, in Selayang, Selangor, Malaysia of hemorrhagic dengue fever.
i know for a fact that the death rate is you will die within 4 hours of having dengue fever Dengue fever is not fatal. The complication dengue haemorrhagic fever however is extremely serious and if not treated by experienced medical professionals has a survival rate of 1%. The above statement "4 hour statement" is ludicrous and dangerous, it should be removed. Dengue is a virus carried by a certain mosquito. Depending upon where in the world, largely due to available medical care the fatality rate is at worst, 5% and usually less than 1%. It is a painful disease often called "breakbone fever." The elderly and the very young (infants) are most likely to die, almost all between the age of 15 and 60, unless immune-compromised (due to leukemia treatment, Aids, etc.) will recover. In most places in the world the survival rate is greater than 99%.
The answer, unfortunately, is possible. There are four types of dengue virus. If a person is infected by any one of those four types, though it is not entirely impossible to die from it, it very rarely happens. It can even act like a vaccine, providing some immunity from the same type of virus to the infected person. However, if the same person (already infected by one of the four types some times before) gets infected from a different type, - any other of the remaining three, -dengue fever could develop into a more severe form, - earlier known as Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever, presently called as Severe Dengue Fever. That severe form could be fatal. There is neither vaccination nor specific treatment against either Dengue Fever or its more dangerous form, the Severe Dengue Fever. However, prompt medical care could often save life even in the case of the severe form. Since Severe Dengue Fever patients are loosing serious amounts of body fluids, - including blood -, the most vital treatment is keeping the fluid level to optimal, thus diminishing the complications which could have lead to death. More detailed information can be found in the related links.
sometimes