Fig 1.
Epidemiological curve of the acute respiratory infection outbreak in the Guarani Indigenous village of Paraty Mirim, from epidemiological weeks 13 to 16.
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Table 1.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of acute respiratory infection cases during the outbreak in the Indigenous Guarani village of Paraty Mirim, Rio de Janeiro–Brazil, 2016.
Table 2.
Acute respiratory infection age specific attack rates during the outbreak in the Indigenous Guarani village of Paraty Mirim, Rio de Janeiro–Brazil, 2016.
Table 3.
Demographic and clinical data of patients with pathogens detected in the nasopharyngeal clinical sample during the outbreak in the Indigenous Guarani village of Paraty Mirim, Rio de Janeiro–Brazil, 2016.
Fig 2.
A–HA and B—NA. Maximum-Likelihood phylogenetic tree of hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) genes of influenza A (H1N1)pdm09 strains Sequences obtained from the Guarani population are in blue, other Brazilian strains are in green, the vaccine strains are in red and other representative strains are in black. Amino acid substitutions in comparison with the vaccine strain A/California/07/2009-like chosen for the southern hemisphere from 2010 to 2016 are described in the branches.
Fig 3.
Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree of the G gene of respiratory syncytial viruses B Sequences obtained from the Guarani population are in blue, other Brazilian strains are in green, the reference strain with the insertion of 60 nucleotides characterized as BA genetic group is in red and other representative strains are in black.
Table 4.
Amino acid substitutions in the G gene of respiratory syncytial viruses B detected in Guarani population and in other Brazilian individuals in comparison with the reference strain DQ227363 with the insertion of 60 nucleotides (area highlighted in gray) characterized as BA genotype.