Literature DB >> 19201258

Viral agents associated with acute gastroenteritis in children hospitalized with diarrhea in Lanzhou, China.

Yu Jin1, Wei-xia Cheng, Xue-mei Yang, Miao Jin, Qing Zhang, Zi-qian Xu, Jie-mei Yu, Lin Zhu, Su-hua Yang, Na Liu, Shu-xian Cui, Zhao-yin Fang, Zhao-jun Duan.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Gastroenteritis is a major cause of childhood morbidity and mortality worldwide. Rotavirus, human caliciviruses (HucV), adenovirus, and astrovirus are recognized as common etiologies of acute gastroenteritis.
OBJECTIVES: To use antigen detection and molecular methods to determine the viral etiology of childhood diarrhea in Lanzhou, China, 2005-2007. STUDY
DESIGN: 544 stool specimens were collected from children hospitalized with diarrhea. ELISA, RT-PCR, or PCR were used to detect viruses commonly causing diarrhea.
RESULTS: Group A rotavirus, norovirus, sapovirus, astrovirus, and adenovirus, were detected in 54.0%, 9.2%, 1.1%, 3.3%, and 4.4%, respectively. No group B or group C rotaviruses were detected. The relative contribution of these viruses changed greatly over 2 years. The percentage of rotavirus and adenovirus dropped from 61.2% and 5.4% to 47.6% and 1.4%, whereas HucV increased from 5.0% to 15.0%. G1 and P[8] were the predominant rotavirus strains, and P[6] was detected for the first time in this area. The predominant norovirus strain changed from GII3 to GII4, and the subtypes of GII4 changed from the Hunter strain to the variant 2006b strain.
CONCLUSIONS: The distribution of viruses and genotypes of individual viruses causing gastroenteritis in Lanzhou, China changed greatly during 2005-2007.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19201258     DOI: 10.1016/j.jcv.2008.12.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Virol        ISSN: 1386-6532            Impact factor:   3.168


  24 in total

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