Chikungunya is a mosquito-borne alphavirus disease whose name translates from the Kimakonde language as 'that which bends up' — a vivid description of the intensely painful joint disease it causes. WHO estimates more than 3 million reported cases across more than 110 countries since the virus re-emerged across the Indian Ocean and the Americas after 2004.
Chikungunya virus disease (ICD-10: A92.0) is an arboviral infection caused by chikungunya virus (CHIKV), a single-stranded RNA alphavirus in the Togaviridae family. The virus is transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes; A. albopictus has extended transmission into temperate and Indian Ocean island regions. After a 3-7 day incubation period, infection causes a biphasic illness: an acute febrile arthritic phase lasting 7-14 days, followed in 30-40% of patients by a post-acute or chronic phase of persistent polyarthralgia and arthritis lasting months to years.
key facts
Prevalence
Over 3 million cases reported across more than 110 countries since 2004 (WHO 2024); India, Brazil, the Caribbean, and the Indian Ocean islands have all experienced major outbreaks
Demographics
All age groups affected; chronic arthralgia disproportionately affects adults over 40 and women
Avg. age
Acute disease across all ages; chronic post-chikungunya joint pain peaks in adults over 40
Global cases
Endemic transmission ongoing in India, Brazil, Mexico, Caribbean nations, and parts of Africa and Southeast Asia; periodic large outbreaks superimposed
Specialist
Tropical Medicine
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How you might notice it
The key symptoms of Chikungunya are: Sudden onset of high fever (often above 39°C) lasting 3-7 days after a 3-7 day incubation following mosquito bite., Severe symmetric polyarthralgia of the small joints of the hands, wrists, ankles, and feet — the most distinctive feature., Joint swelling and tenderness, often disabling — patients cannot grip, walk, or perform daily tasks., Maculopapular rash on the trunk and limbs in 40-75% of patients, appearing 2-5 days after fever onset., Severe headache, often retro-orbital, lasting several days., Marked myalgia and back pain accompanying the polyarthralgia., Fatigue and malaise that can persist long after fever resolves..
01Sudden onset of high fever (often above 39°C) lasting 3-7 days after a 3-7 day incubation following mosquito bite.
02Severe symmetric polyarthralgia of the small joints of the hands, wrists, ankles, and feet — the most distinctive feature.
03Joint swelling and tenderness, often disabling — patients cannot grip, walk, or perform daily tasks.
04Maculopapular rash on the trunk and limbs in 40-75% of patients, appearing 2-5 days after fever onset.
05Severe headache, often retro-orbital, lasting several days.
06
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How it’s diagnosed
diagnosis
Suspect chikungunya in any patient with sudden high fever and severe symmetric polyarthralgia within 7 days of travel to or residence in an active transmission area. Differential diagnosis with dengue and Zika is mandatory in co-endemic regions, and concurrent testing is standard. Diagnosis combines clinical features with molecular and serologic confirmation. Reverse-transcription PCR (RT-PCR) on serum within the first 7-8 days of illness detects viral RNA with high sensitivity; viremia peaks at day 2-4. IgM antibody by ELISA becomes positive 5-7 days after symptom onset and persists for several months; IgG appears later and persists for years. Concurrent dengue NS1 antigen and IgM testing is mandatory because the two viruses share clinical features but have different management implications — most importantly, NSAIDs should be avoided until dengue is excluded because they can worsen hemorrhagic complications. Acute joint examination documents symmetric arthritis of small joints; in patients with persistent symptoms past 4-6 weeks, screening for inflammatory arthritis differentials (rheumatoid factor, anti-CCP, ANA) helps distinguish post-chikungunya arthritis from new-onset rheumatologic disease. Imaging is rarely needed acutely; persistent joint pain past 3 months may warrant ultrasound or MRI for synovitis assessment and rheumatology referral.
Key tests
01
Chikungunya RT-PCR (serum)Detects chikungunya viral RNA during acute viremia; most specific test within 7-8 days of symptom onset
02
Chikungunya IgM ELISA serologyDetects antibody response from approximately day 5-7 of illness; persists for several months
03
Chikungunya IgG ELISA or plaque-reduction neutralizationConfirms past infection and supports diagnosis when paired with acute IgM; persists for years
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Treatment & cost
medical treatments
✓Paracetamol (acetaminophen) 500-1000 mg every 4-6 hours (max 4 g/day)
✓NSAIDs (ibuprofen 400 mg three times daily, naproxen 500 mg twice daily)
✓Hydroxychloroquine 200-400 mg/day
✓Short-course oral corticosteroids (prednisolone 15-30 mg/day tapered over 4-8 weeks)
surgical options
Joint replacement surgery for end-stage post-chikungunya arthritisOutcomes comparable to joint replacement for other arthritis causes when patient selection is appropriate
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Causes & risk factors
known causes
Bite of an infected Aedes aegypti or Aedes albopictus mosquito
Day-biting Aedes mosquitoes acquire chikungunya virus by feeding on viremic humans and transmit it to others 2-7 days later. A. aegypti is the principal vector in tropical urban areas; A. albopictus extends transmission into temperate regions including parts of Europe and the Indian Ocean.
Outbreak conditions and high vector density
Chikungunya outbreaks accompany rising Aedes density (rainy seasons, accumulation of water in containers, urban crowding). The Reunion Island outbreak (2005-2006) infected approximately one-third of the population in a single season.
Vertical (mother-to-neonate) transmission near delivery
Pregnant women with viremia at the time of delivery transmit chikungunya to the neonate in roughly 50% of cases. Severe neonatal disease (encephalopathy, seizures, long-term sequelae) is a recognized risk.
Travel-related transmission to non-endemic areas
Returning travelers with viremia have introduced local outbreaks in southern Europe (Italy 2007, France 2010), the Caribbean (2013), and the continental US (2014). Local vector competence in receiving regions determines whether transmission spreads.
Inadequate vector control around the home and workplace
Standing water in flowerpots, tires, water-storage containers, blocked gutters, and discarded bottles all support Aedes breeding. Eliminating these sources cuts local mosquito density and outbreak intensity dramatically.
risk factors
Residence or travel in an active transmission areaenvironmental
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Living with it
01Use insect repellent containing DEET (20-30%), picaridin, IR3535, or oil of lemon eucalyptus on exposed skin during the day in endemic regions and reapply per label.
02Wear long sleeves, long trousers, and permethrin-treated clothing during peak Aedes activity (dawn and dusk).
03Stay in air-conditioned or screened accommodation; sleep under a permethrin-treated bed net if the room is not screened.
04Eliminate breeding sites around the home: empty flowerpots, change water in bird baths twice weekly, cover or discard tires and containers, clear blocked gutters.
05Consider the IXCHIQ chikungunya vaccine if you are 18 or older and traveling to or working in an active transmission area; consult a travel medicine provider for individual risk assessment.
06Use mosquito protection during the first week of illness if infected to prevent onward transmission to vectors and family members.
recommended foods
•Adequate oral fluids (2-3 liters per day) during the acute febrile illness
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When to seek help
why see a tropical medicine
Infectious disease referral is recommended for any patient with severe acute chikungunya, atypical presentation, or persistent symptoms beyond 4-6 weeks. Rheumatology involvement is essential for chronic post-chikungunya arthritis lasting more than 3 months. Maternal-fetal medicine evaluates pregnant women diagnosed in the third trimester because of perinatal transmission risk.
01Chronic post-chikungunya arthritis lasting months to years in 25-40% of patients; significant functional impairment in subsets.
02Severe atypical disease with encephalopathy, myocarditis, hepatitis, or hemorrhage — concentrated in older adults, neonates, and those with comorbidities; higher mortality.
03Severe perinatal infection in neonates of mothers with viremia near delivery, with seizures, encephalopathy, and long-term neurodevelopmental impairment.
04Concurrent dengue or Zika infection adding hemorrhagic risk or pregnancy implications.
05Acute exacerbation of pre-existing inflammatory or autoimmune arthritis.
06Severe depression, anxiety, and disability from prolonged chronic arthritis affecting work and family life.
Acute chikungunya virus diseaseFirst 7-14 days of illness. High fever (often over 39°C), abrupt-onset severe polyarthralgia of wrists, ankles, hands, and feet, maculopapular rash on trunk and limbs, headache, myalgia. Self-limited in most patients.
Post-acute chikungunya (days 14-90)Persistent joint pain, stiffness, and fatigue continuing after resolution of fever. Affects 30-50% of patients and may overlap with rheumatologic differentials.
Chronic chikungunya arthritis (over 90 days)Persistent polyarthritis, often symmetrical, affecting the small joints. Sometimes mimics rheumatoid arthritis. Persists in 25-40% of patients at 1 year and 10-20% at 2 years. Mechanism likely involves viral persistence in synovial tissue and immune dysregulation.
Atypical chikungunya (severe form)Severe disease with encephalopathy, myocarditis, hepatitis, acute respiratory distress, or hemorrhage. Concentrated in neonates, older adults, and patients with comorbidities. Mortality higher in this group.
Congenital and perinatal chikungunyaVertical transmission near delivery (intrapartum) causes severe neonatal disease including encephalopathy, seizures, hemodynamic instability, and long-term neurodevelopmental impairment.
Living with Chikungunya
Timeline
Acute symptoms resolve over 7-14 days in most patients. Post-acute joint pain may persist for several weeks. Chronic post-chikungunya arthritis lasts 3 months to several years in 25-40% of patients. Rehabilitation gains continue for 6-12 months in those with chronic disease.
Lifestyle
01Rest during the acute phase; gradually increase activity as joint pain allows.
02Use cold packs on swollen joints and gentle stretches to reduce stiffness.
03Track joint symptoms and functional limitation to share with rheumatologist if persistent past 6 weeks.
04Continue insect bite avoidance after symptoms resolve to prevent re-infection (though immunity is typically lifelong, co-infection with dengue or Zika remains possible).
05Maintain a healthy body weight and physical conditioning to reduce joint load.
06Disclose recent travel and chikungunya history to any clinician evaluating new joint symptoms in the months after acute infection.
Daily management
01Take paracetamol for fever and pain; switch to NSAIDs after the first 48-72 hours when dengue has been excluded.
02Drink at least 2-3 liters of fluid each day during the acute illness.
Complementary approaches
Physical and occupational therapyGraded range-of-motion exercises, strengthening, and joint protection education in the post-acute phase improve function and reduce stiffness. Particularly valuable for hand and wrist involvement.
Aquatic exercise programsWarm-water exercise reduces joint loading while maintaining range of motion and aerobic capacity in patients with chronic chikungunya arthritis. Well-tolerated and effective for return to activity.
Choosing a doctor
Look for an infectious disease specialist or tropical medicine physician with experience in arboviral disease; many academic centers run dedicated travel medicine clinics. Rheumatologists managing post-viral arthritis are best for chronic joint involvement. Verify that the clinic offers chikungunya PCR and serology, plus dengue and Zika testing.
Patient support resources
WHO Chikungunya →Global statistics, prevention guidance, vaccine information, and outbreak surveillance for chikungunya.
CDC Chikungunya Virus →US public health guidance on diagnosis, prevention, traveler advisories, vaccine recommendations, and laboratory testing.
Chikungunya is a viral disease transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes that causes sudden high fever, severe symmetric joint pain, rash, headache, and fatigue. The name means 'that which bends up' in Kimakonde, describing how patients fold over from joint pain. Most recover within two weeks but 30-40% have prolonged joint pain.
How is chikungunya transmitted?▾▴
Chikungunya is transmitted through the bite of infected Aedes aegypti or Aedes albopictus mosquitoes that bite during the day. Vertical transmission from mother to neonate around delivery occurs in approximately half of pregnancies with maternal viremia at term. Person-to-person transmission has not been documented.
What are the main symptoms of chikungunya?▾▴
Sudden high fever (often over 39°C), severe symmetric joint pain in wrists, ankles, hands, and feet, maculopapular rash, headache, and fatigue are typical. Joint pain is the hallmark — patients often cannot grip or walk. Symptoms appear 3-7 days after a mosquito bite and last 7-14 days.
How long does chikungunya last?▾▴
Acute fever and rash resolve within 7-14 days in most patients. Joint pain may continue for weeks to years; 30-40% of patients have persistent arthralgia at 3 months and 10-20% at 2 years. Predictors of chronic disease include age over 40, female sex, and severity of acute joint symptoms.
Is there a chikungunya vaccine?▾▴
Yes. The IXCHIQ live-attenuated chikungunya vaccine was approved by the US FDA in November 2023 as a single subcutaneous dose for adults 18 and older at increased risk of exposure. Seroconversion exceeds 95% within 28 days. It is contraindicated in pregnancy and severe immunosuppression.
How is chikungunya diagnosed?▾▴
Diagnosis uses RT-PCR on serum within the first 7-8 days of illness and IgM serology from day 5-7 onward. Concurrent dengue and Zika testing is essential because all three viruses co-circulate and have overlapping symptoms. Travel history is critical for clinical suspicion.
How is chikungunya treated?▾▴
There is no specific antiviral therapy. Acute care includes paracetamol for fever and pain, oral fluids, and rest. NSAIDs are added after dengue is excluded. Chronic joint pain may need hydroxychloroquine, short-course steroids, methotrexate, or DMARDs under rheumatology guidance.
Can chikungunya kill you?▾▴
Mortality is low (under 0.1% of infections) and concentrated in older adults, neonates infected perinatally, and patients with comorbidities. Most deaths reflect severe atypical disease (encephalopathy, myocarditis, hepatitis) or severe neonatal infection. The high burden is from prolonged disability rather than death.
Can you get chikungunya twice?▾▴
Clinical re-infection is rare. Most immunocompetent adults develop lifelong immunity after a single infection. Persistent or recurrent joint symptoms after acute illness reflect chronic post-chikungunya arthritis rather than re-infection in most cases.
How do you prevent chikungunya?▾▴
Use DEET, picaridin, or IR3535 insect repellent during the day, wear long sleeves and trousers, stay in air-conditioned or screened accommodation, and eliminate standing water around the home. The IXCHIQ vaccine is now available for adults at increased risk. Travelers should follow CDC and WHO travel advisories.
Is chikungunya the same as dengue?▾▴
No. Both are transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes and share fever and rash, but chikungunya causes more severe and prolonged joint pain while dengue causes more headache, retro-orbital pain, severe thrombocytopenia, and risk of hemorrhagic complications. Both should be tested in any compatible patient.
Can pregnant women get chikungunya?▾▴
Yes. Pregnant women infected late in pregnancy can transmit the virus to the newborn at delivery in approximately 50% of cases, causing severe neonatal disease with encephalopathy and long-term neurodevelopmental sequelae. Pregnant travelers should follow strict mosquito-bite prevention; the IXCHIQ vaccine is contraindicated in pregnancy.
Why does chikungunya cause such severe joint pain?▾▴
Chikungunya virus infects synovial cells and triggers persistent local inflammation in joint tissue. Viral RNA has been detected in synovial samples months after acute infection, and immune dysregulation contributes to chronic arthritis. The same mechanisms underlie acute fever, rash, and chronic post-viral arthropathy.
Can children get chikungunya?▾▴
Yes. Children develop similar acute symptoms with high fever, rash, and joint pain. Severity is generally lower than in adults, but neonates infected perinatally can develop severe disease with encephalopathy and long-term neurodevelopmental impairment. Pediatric chikungunya is managed supportively with paracetamol and fluids.
What is the best treatment for chikungunya joint pain?▾▴
Paracetamol in the first 48-72 hours; NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) once dengue is excluded. For pain persisting beyond 6 weeks, hydroxychloroquine, short-course corticosteroids, or methotrexate may be added under specialist supervision. Physical therapy and graded exercise help maintain joint function.
Can chikungunya cause permanent disability?▾▴
Persistent joint pain and stiffness lasting years occur in 10-20% of patients at 2 years; severe functional impairment is less common but documented. End-stage joint destruction requiring surgery is rare. Early structured physical therapy and rheumatology care reduce long-term disability.
Should I cancel travel during a chikungunya outbreak?▾▴
Pregnant women and people with significant comorbidities should weigh travel carefully and consult a travel medicine provider. Other travelers should follow strict mosquito-bite prevention. The IXCHIQ vaccine may be considered for adults visiting active transmission areas. Check current advisories from CDC and WHO before booking.
Can chikungunya be transmitted by blood transfusion?▾▴
Theoretically yes, because viremia is high in the first week of illness. Blood services in outbreak areas may defer donors who report recent fever or travel. Documented transfusion transmission is rare but possible, and screening or deferral policies vary by country.
Does chikungunya cause hair loss?▾▴
Yes, in some patients. Telogen effluvium (diffuse hair shedding 2-4 months after a febrile illness) is reported after chikungunya as it is after other significant infections. Hair regrows over 6-12 months without specific treatment.
When should I see a rheumatologist after chikungunya?▾▴
See a rheumatologist if joint pain, swelling, or stiffness persists beyond 6-12 weeks after the acute illness, especially if it affects function or sleep. Rheumatologists distinguish post-chikungunya arthritis from new-onset inflammatory arthritis and guide use of hydroxychloroquine, methotrexate, or other DMARDs.
Is there a cure for chikungunya?▾▴
No specific antiviral cure exists. Treatment is supportive, and most patients recover spontaneously. Chronic post-chikungunya arthritis is managed with NSAIDs, hydroxychloroquine, and other rheumatologic agents under specialist care. The IXCHIQ vaccine prevents future infection but does not treat existing disease.
Marked myalgia and back pain accompanying the polyarthralgia.
07Fatigue and malaise that can persist long after fever resolves.
08Conjunctival injection, photophobia, or eye pain in some patients.
09Nausea, vomiting, and abdominal discomfort, especially in pediatric patients.
10Lymphadenopathy and bilateral symmetric joint swelling on examination.
early warning signs
•Sudden high fever and severe joint pain 3-7 days after travel to or residence in an Aedes mosquito-endemic region
•Symmetric joint swelling of wrists, hands, ankles, or feet in a febrile patient with recent travel
•Maculopapular rash appearing within days of fever onset
•Cluster of similar symptomatic cases in family or community during local outbreak alerts
•Severe joint pain combined with conjunctivitis and rash — strongly suggestive triad
● emergency signs
•Altered mental status, seizures, focal neurological deficits, or neck stiffness — possible encephalopathy or encephalitis
•Chest pain, dyspnea, or new arrhythmia — exclude myocarditis or pericarditis
•Severe abdominal pain, persistent vomiting, mucosal bleeding, or hypotension — exclude concurrent dengue or hepatitis
•Neonate with fever, lethargy, seizures, or feeding refusal whose mother had chikungunya around the time of delivery — severe neonatal disease
•Acute jaundice, dark urine, or rapidly worsening fatigue — exclude severe hepatitis
04
Concurrent dengue and Zika testingExcludes the two main differential diagnoses, which co-circulate and have overlapping clinical features
05
Complete blood count, liver enzymes, creatinineIdentifies thrombocytopenia, lymphopenia, hepatitis, and renal involvement; supports differential diagnosis with dengue
06
Rheumatologic workup in chronic cases (RF, anti-CCP, ANA, ESR, CRP)Distinguishes post-chikungunya arthritis from new-onset rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, or other inflammatory diseases
Outlook
Acute mortality is low (under 0.1% of infections in most outbreaks). Most adults recover from acute disease within 7-14 days. However, post-chikungunya arthralgia persists in 30-40% of patients at 3 months, 25-40% at 1 year, and 10-20% at 2 years. Predictors of chronic joint disease include age over 40, female sex, severity of acute joint symptoms, and pre-existing osteoarthritis or inflammatory arthritis. Quality of life can be substantially affected during the chronic phase. Severe disease in neonates infected perinatally carries higher mortality and rates of long-term neurodevelopmental impairment. Lifelong immunity follows infection in immunocompetent adults; clinically apparent re-infection is rare. The introduction of the IXCHIQ vaccine in 2023 has the potential to change this prognosis in vaccinated populations once experience and supply expand.
Tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas, Caribbean, Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and Indian Ocean islands have ongoing transmission. WHO and CDC maintain country-by-country advisories.
Outdoor activity during mosquito-active daylight hoursmodifiable
Aedes mosquitoes bite primarily during the day with peaks at dawn and dusk. Outdoor work, sports, and travel during these hours raise exposure substantially.
Age over 65 or comorbiditiesnon-modifiable
Older adults and patients with diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or immunosuppression face higher risk of severe disease and chronic post-chikungunya arthritis. Mortality is concentrated in this group.
Female sexnon-modifiable
Women are at higher risk of chronic post-chikungunya arthritis lasting more than 1 year, possibly because of immune and hormonal factors that also influence rheumatoid arthritis.
Pregnancy at termnon-modifiable
Maternal viremia within a few days of delivery transmits to neonate in roughly 50% of cases. Severe neonatal chikungunya is associated with poor neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Inadequate vector control around residencemodifiable
Standing water in flowerpots, tires, and containers maintains Aedes populations. Eliminating these sources cuts household exposure substantially.
Pre-existing inflammatory arthritisnon-modifiable
Rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and lupus patients may experience disease flares triggered by chikungunya infection and have higher rates of prolonged joint symptoms.
Easily digestible foods (rice, soft fruits, broth) during the febrile phase
•Adequate protein (1.0-1.2 g/kg/day) to preserve muscle mass during prolonged illness
foods to avoid
•Alcohol during the acute phase — interacts with hepatic clearance and rehydration
•Aspirin and NSAIDs until dengue is excluded — they can worsen hemorrhagic complications
•Crash diets or excessive caloric restriction during recovery from prolonged illness
•Unproven herbal 'remedies' marketed for chikungunya — none have proven antiviral effect
choosing the right hospital
01Access to chikungunya RT-PCR and serology, or contracted reference laboratory
02Concurrent dengue and Zika testing capability
03Rheumatology service for chronic arthritis follow-up
04Maternal-fetal medicine clinic for pregnant patients
05Vector control coordination with public health authorities
Essential facilities
Tropical and travel medicine clinicsInfectious disease outpatient servicesRheumatology clinics with post-viral arthritis experienceReference virology laboratoriesPublic health surveillance and vector control programs
03Use cold packs on painful swollen joints 10-15 minutes several times a day.
04Perform gentle range-of-motion exercises through the day to maintain mobility.
05Use mosquito repellent and stay in screened or air-conditioned accommodation during the first week to prevent onward transmission.
06Report any new neurological symptoms, chest pain, jaundice, or persistent vomiting urgently.
Exercise
Rest in the acute febrile phase. Once fever resolves and pain is manageable, gradual range-of-motion exercises help prevent stiffness. Pool walking and stationary cycling are often the best-tolerated reintroduction activities. Patients with persistent arthritis benefit from structured physiotherapy with progressive strengthening over 6-12 weeks.