São José confirma primeira morte por dengue em 2025
Portal Aqui Vale
2006 Prof. Frank Hadley Collins, Dir., Cntr. for Global Health and Infectious Diseases, Univ. of Notre Dame This 2006 photograph depicted a female Aedes aegypti mosquito while she was in the process of acquiring a blood meal from her human host, who in this instance, was actually the biomedical photographer, James Gathany, here at the Centers for Disease Control. Youll note the feeding apparatus consisting of a sharp, orange-colored fascicle, which while not feeding, is covered in a soft, pliant sheath called the "labellum, which retracts as the sharp stylets contained within pierce the host's skin surface, as the insect obtains its blood meal. The orange color of the fascicle is due to the red color of the blood as it migrates up the thin, sharp translucent tube. The fascicle is composed of a pair of needle-sharp "stylets". The larger of the two stylets, known as the "labrum", when viewed in cross-section takes on the shape of an inverted "V", and acts as a gutter, which directs the ingested host blood towards the insect's mouth. As the primary vector responsible for the transmission of the Flavivirus Dengue (DF), and Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), the day-biting Aedes aegypti mosquito prefers to feed on its human hosts. Ae. aegypti also plays a major role as a vector for another Flavivirus, "Yellow fever". Frequently found in its tropical environs, the white banded markings on the tarsal segments of its jointed legs, though distinguishing it as Ae. aegypti, are similar to some other mosquito species. Also note the lyre-shaped, silvery-white markings on its thoracic region as well, which is also a determining morphologic identifying characteristic.This females abdomen had become distended due to the blood meal she was ingesting, imparting the red coloration to her translucent abdominal exoskeleton.
A Prefeitura de São José dos Campos confirmou, nesta terça-feira (11), a primeira morte por dengue na cidade em 2025. O sexo e a idade da vítima não foram revelados.
A vítima estava internada desde o dia 8 de janeiro e morreu no dia 05 de fevereiro. Essa é a terceira morte provocada pela doença neste ano na região do Vale do Paraíba. Antes, a Prefeitura de Jacareí já havia confirmada a morte de duas pessoas na cidade.
São José dos Campos é a segunda cidade da região com maior número de casos de dengue neste ano – são 249 casos confirmados desde o início de 2025, de acordo com o Painel de Arboviroses do Governo do Estado.
Em toda a região, são 1.214 casos confirmados. Em São Paulo, o número de casos passa de 85 mil, com 71 mortes.