| Literature DB >> 19239338 |
Geoffrey J Gorse1, Theresa Z O'Connor, Susan L Hall, Joseph N Vitale, Kristin L Nichol.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The clinical features and incidence of human coronavirus (HCoV) infections in chronically ill older adults need better definition.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19239338 PMCID: PMC7110218 DOI: 10.1086/597122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Table 1Illnesses positive for human coronavirus (HCoV)–229E and HCoV-OC43 of 665 fully assessable illnesses for which both nasal-and-oropharyngeal (NOP)–swab and/or paired serum specimens were tested
Table 2Fully assessable illnesses positive for human coronavirus (HCoV)–229E and HCoV-OC43, of 487 illnesses for which both nasal-and-oropharyngeal (NOP)–swab and paired serum specimens were tested
Figure 1List of 93 acute respiratory illnesses associated with human coronavirus (HCoV)-229E and -OC43 virus infections. The illnesses are listed in chronological order (regardless of whether the illness is a first episode of acute respiratory illness), by calendar month, from the beginning of October 1998 to April 1999 (the end of follow-up). Included among these 93 illnesses are 3 (2 HCoV-229E and 1 HCoV-OC43) that were not among the 665 illnesses that were assessable. For the patients infected with HCoV-229E and HCoV-OC43, the other respiratory illnesses, occurring before or after the HCoV-associated illness, are also shown. Of the patients with an illness associated with either HCoV-229E or HCoV-OC43, 1 had laboratory-documented influenza (LDI) before the HCoV illness, 4 had an HCoV illness before LDI, 13 had LDI concurrent with the HCoV infection during the illness, 9 had a non-HCoV/non-LDI illness before the HCoV illness, and 12 had either an HCoV-229E or HCoV-OC43 illness before a non-HCoV/non-LDI illness. Each row represents 1 patient, and the reporting site is identified by the 2-letter code for US states and Puerto Rico (PR), to the left of the graph. Of 20 sites, 19 in 13 states and PR reported illnesses associated with HCoV (HCoV-229E in 11 states and HCoV-OC43 in 12 states and PR). HCoV-associated illnesses were reported by 2 sites in Florida, 2 in Southern and 1 in Northern California, 2 in Texas, and 2 in Virginia; study sites reporting the most HCoV-229E and -OC43-associated illnesses were in Virginia (15 illnesses), Alabama (13 illnesses), Minnesota (10 illnesses), Missouri (9 illnesses), and Texas (9 illnesses). The cumulative numbers of illnesses of HCoV-associated illnesses, regardless of whether it was a first episode of acute respiratory illness and including those associated with HCoV and those with both HCoV and LDI, are graphed by calendar month (the cumulative number is that which occurred up to the beginning of the corresponding month); 32 HCoV-associated illnesses (5 HCoV-229E and 27 HCoV-OC43) occurred by the end of 1998, and 61 occurred during 1999 (19 HCoV-229E, 41 HCoV-OC43, and 1 with both strains). The only period when HCoV-229E–associated illnesses predominated was after February 1999 (10 HCoV-229E and 7 HCoV-OC43)
Table 3Demographic and clinical characteristics and clinical outcomes for 585 veterans with acute respiratory illnesses, categorized by first episode
Table 4Univariate and multivariate associations between illness group and 11 symptoms/signs of acute respiratory illness and vaccine group
Table 5Spirometric and clinical measures of severity of acute respiratory illness, by illness group
Table 6Characteristics of patients and first episodes of acute respiratory illnesses associated with either human coronavirus (HCoV)–NL63 or HCoV–HKU1