| Literature DB >> 16704845 |
Herish M Ahmed1, J Brian S Coulter, Osamu Nakagomi, C A Hart, Jamal M Zaki, Abas A Al-Rabaty, Winifred Dove, Nigel A Cunliffe.
Abstract
Of 260 children with acute diarrhea in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, 96 (37%) were infected with rotavirus. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction identified G1, G4, G2, G9, P[8], P[6], and P[4] as the most common genotypes. Eight G/P combinations were found, but P[8]G1 and P[4]G2 accounted for >50% of the strains.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16704845 PMCID: PMC3374452 DOI: 10.3201/eid1205.051422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Rotavirus genotypes and electropherotypes*
| Genotype | No.(%) fully typeable strains | Electropherotype† |
|---|---|---|
| P[4]G2 | 8 (15) | Short (7/8) |
| P[6]G1 | 6 (11) | Long (5/6) |
| P[6]G4 | 1 (2) | ND |
| P[6]G9 | 1 (2) | Long |
| P[8]G1 | 19 (33) | Long (13/19) |
| P[8]G4 | 12 (21) | Long (12/12) |
| P[8]G9 | 6 (11) | Long (4/6); short (1/6) |
| P[6]GNT | 2 | Long (2/2) |
| P[8]GNT | 4 | Long (2/4) |
| P[NT]G2 | 3 | Short (3/3) |
*Four rotavirus infections were mixed: P[8]G1/G2 (2), P[4]G2/G4 and P[4]/[8]G1/G2. †Indicates number of strains electropherotypeable in the genotype combination; ND, not determined.