| Literature DB >> 23804569 |
W Allan Nix1, Nino Khetsuriani1, Silvia Peñaranda1, Kaija Maher1, Linda Venczel1, Zsuzsa Cselkó1, Maria Cecilia Freire2, Daniel Cisterna2, Cristina L Lema2, Patricia Rosales3, Jacqueline R Rodriguez4, Wilma Rodriguez3, Percy Halkyer5, Olivier Ronveaux5, Mark A Pallansch1, M Steven Oberste1.
Abstract
The family Picornaviridae is a large and diverse group of viruses that infect humans and animals. Picornaviruses are among the most common infections of humans and cause a wide spectrum of acute human disease. This study began as an investigation of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) in a small area of eastern Bolivia, where surveillance had identified a persistently high AFP rate in children. Stools were collected and diagnostic studies ruled out poliovirus. We tested stool specimens from 51 AFP cases and 34 healthy household or community contacts collected during 2002-2003 using real-time and semi-nested reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction assays for enterovirus, parechovirus, cardiovirus, kobuvirus, salivirus and cosavirus. Anecdotal reports suggested a temporal association with neurological disease in domestic pigs, so six porcine stools were also collected and tested with the same set of assays, with the addition of an assay for porcine teschovirus. A total of 126 picornaviruses were detected in 73 of 85 human individuals, consisting of 53 different picornavirus types encompassing five genera (all except Kobuvirus). All six porcine stools contained porcine and/or human picornaviruses. No single virus, or combination of viruses, specifically correlated with AFP; however, the study revealed a surprising complexity of enteric picornaviruses in a single community.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23804569 PMCID: PMC4637931 DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.053827-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Virol ISSN: 0022-1317 Impact factor: 3.891