Of the 77 patients with laboratory-diagnosed dengue infections, 41 (53%)
were female. The median age of the 71 patients for whom age was reported was
38 years (range: 8 months–72 years). Clinical information was available
for 56 patients (73%). The most commonly reported symptoms were fever (54
patients [96%]), headache (36 [64%]), myalgias (32 [57%]), chills (19 [34%]),
and rash (20 [36%]). Fourteen patients (25%) had at least one hemorrhagic
symptom (e.g., petechiae, purpura, hemoptysis, hematemesis, hematuria, or
epistaxis), and nine (16%) had elevated liver transaminases. Because of incomplete
reporting, whether any of the laboratory-diagnosed cases met the clinical
criteria for dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) could not be determined; however,
15 patients (27%) required hospitalization, including one who died. The fatal
case occurred in an adult in otherwise good health who had recently returned
from a month-long visit to Mexico. Travel destinations were available for
66 patients (86%); 20 patients (30%) reported recent travel to a Caribbean
island during the 2 weeks before illness onset, 14 (21%) to Pacific islands,
11 (17%) to Asia, 10 (15%) to Central America, 10 (15%) to South America,
and one (2%) to Africa. Ten patients acquired their dengue infections during
travel to areas of the United States in which dengue is endemic (Puerto Rico
[six] and U.S. Virgin Islands [two]) or to a U.S. location where an outbreak
was occurring (Hawaii during May 27, 2001–January 30, 2002 [two]).5