| Literature DB >> 24894194 |
Maria El Qazoui1, Hicham Oumzil, Larbi Baassi, Nezha El Omari, Khalid Sadki, Saaid Amzazi, Mohamed Benhafid, Rajae El Aouad.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute gastroenteritis is a serious cause of child mortality and morbidity in resource-limited countries. A viral etiology is most common, and rotavirus and norovirus are reported to be the leading causative agents. There are still few epidemiological data on the simultaneous occurrence of these viruses in Morocco. The aim of this study was to provide useful epidemiological data on the gastroenteritis associated with rotavirus and norovirus among children aged less than 5 years.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24894194 PMCID: PMC4057912 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Age distribution of rotavirus and norovirus infected cases.
Clinical features of rotavirus and norovirus infection
| 1-3 | 01 (01.28%) | 03 (06.98%) | 16 (08.33%) | |
| 4-5 | 21 (26.92%) | 12 (27.91%) | 63 (32.81%) | |
| ≥ 6 | 56 (71.79%) | 28 (65.12%) | 113 (58.85%) | |
| 1-4 | 74 (94.87%) | 40 (93.02%) | 168 (87.50%) | |
| 5 | 03 (03.85%) | 00 (00.00%) | 14 (07.29%) | |
| ≥ 6 | 01 (01.28%) | 43 (06.98%) | 10 (05.21%) | |
| 0 | 05 (06.41%) | 05 (11.63%) | 50 (26.04%) | |
| 1 | 00 (00.00%) | 03 (06.98%) | 07 (03.65%) | |
| 2-4 | 16 (20.51%) | 09 (20.93%) | 50 (26.04%) | |
| ≥ 5 | 57 (73.08%) | 26 (60.47%) | 85 (44.27%) | |
| 0 | 05 (06.41%) | 05 (11.63%) | 50 (26.04%) | |
| 1 | 19 (24.36%) | 07 (16.28%) | 31 (16.15%) | |
| 2 | 26 (33.33%) | 14 (32.56%) | 57 (29.69%) | |
| ≥ 3 | 33 (42.31%) | 17 (39.53%) | 54 (28.13%) | |
| 37 | 25 (32.05%) | 17 (39.53%) | 79 (41.15%) | |
| 37.1-38.4 | 05 (06.41%) | 02 (04.65%) | 15 (07.81%) | |
| 38.5-38.9 | 02 (02.56%) | 11 (25.58%) | 34 (17.71%) | |
| ≥ 39.0 | 46 (58.97%) | 13 (30.23%) | 64 (33.33%) | |
| Mild | 08 (10.26%) | 17 (39.53%) | 67 (34.90%) | |
| Moderate | 26 (33.33%) | 13 (30.23%) | 55 (28.65%) | |
| Severe | 44 (56.41%) | 13 (30.23%) | 70 (36.46%) | |
| Rehydration | 07 (08.97%) | 12 (27.91%) | 45 (23.44%) | |
| Hospitalization | 71 (91.03%) | 31 (72.09%) | 147 (76.56%) | |
| | | | | |
| | 14.74 | | 12.38 | < 0.0001 |
| 13.12 | 12.38 | 0.26 | ||
*89 rotavirus positives samples-(9 co-infections + 2 data missing) = 78.
**54 norovirus positives samples-(9 co-infections + 2 data missing) = 43.
***201 negatives samples-(9 data missing) = 192.
Figure 2The seasonal distribution of rotavirus and norovirus infections between January and December 2011.
Distribution of norovirus positive cases in the 4 sites of the study, in 1 year survey
| Coastal cities | 46 | | 13 | | 28.3 | | |
| 44 | 90 | 11 | 24 | 25 | | ||
| Non-coastal cities | 25 | | 1 | | 4 | 0.001 | |
| 220 | 245 | 29 | 30 | 13.2 | | ||
| 335 | 54 | ||||||
Figure 3Distribution of G/P genotypes combinations in Morocco, from January to December 2011.
Figure 4Phylogenic analysis of norovirus sequences. The genetic relationship is based on a 322-nucleotides fragment of Region C (VP1). The tree was generated using the neighbor-joining method and the bootstrap values from 1000 replicates were shown on each branch. The sequence accession numbers are given in parentheses. The reference strains were from NCBI Genbank: Bristol(X76716), Fayetteville (AY113106), MinireovirusTV24 (U02030), CS-E1/2002/USA (AY502009), Tiffin-1999 (AY502010) and Variant Sydney 2012/FRA (KF008239).