Acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis in Tunisia. Report of viral isolations
J. P. Whitcher, N. J. Schmidt, R. Mabrouk, M. Messadi, T. Daghfous, I. Hoshiwara and C. R. Dawson
Acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis (AHC), a new disease entity first reported
in 1969, has since become pandemic throughout the world. In Tunisia during
an epidemic in 1972 to 1973 we studied 25 cases of AHC, which were
characterized by explosive onset of lid edema, chemosis, conjunctival
hemorrhages, follicular hypertrophy, and epithelial keratitis. Clinical
signs peaked in 48 hours and cleared without sequelae in five to seven
days. Paired acute- and convalescent-phase sera from six of the patients
showed a rising titer of neutralizing antibody to the prototype strain of
AHC virus (J6 70/71), which was isolated in Japan. Two viral isolates from
Tunisian patients were also antigenically related to the Japanese strain,
indicating that a single etiologic agent (a new member of the picornavirus
group) is probably responsible for the current pandemic of AHC.