| Literature DB >> 30634384 |
Lucia Bonadonna1, Giuseppina La Rosa2.
Abstract
Infectious agents, including bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and molds, may threaten the health of swimming pool bathers. Viruses are a major cause of recreationally-associated waterborne diseases linked to pools, lakes, ponds, thermal pools/spas, rivers, and hot springs. They can make their way into waters through the accidental release of fecal matter, body fluids (saliva, mucus), or skin flakes by symptomatic or asymptomatic carriers. We present an updated overview of epidemiological data on viral outbreaks, a project motivated, among other things, by the availability of improved viral detection methodologies. Special attention is paid to outbreak investigations (source of the outbreak, pathways of transmission, chlorination/disinfection). Epidemiological studies on incidents of viral contamination of swimming pools under non-epidemic conditions are also reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: adenovirus; enterovirus; hepatitis A virus; norovirus; swimming pool; waterborne disease
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30634384 PMCID: PMC6352248 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16020166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
List of viral swimming pool-related outbreaks.
| Caption | N° People Affected | Etiological Agent | Location | Virus Identified in Pool Waters | Year | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus | 206 | HAdV | Colorado, USA | Not tested | 1951 | [ |
| >300 | HAdV 3 | Washington | Not detected | 1954 | [ | |
| 112 | HAdV 3 | Canada | Not tested | 1955 | [ | |
| 358 | HadV 3 and 7 | Japan | Not tested | 1959 | [ | |
| 45 | HAdV 3 | Washington | No. Water analyses two weeks after the exposure | 1966 | [ | |
| 44 | HAdV 7 | Kansas | No. Samples were taken after hyperchlorination of the pool | 1973 | [ | |
| 105 | HAdV 3 | Georgia | Not tested | 1977 | [ | |
| 72 | HAdV 4 | Georgia | Yes. First swimming-pool related outbreak in which AdV was recovered from water samples | 1977 | [ | |
| 77 | HAdV 7a | Oklahoma | Not tested | 1982 | [ | |
| 80 | Unknow | Greece | Yes. Pool water samples tested found positive for AdVs, and negative for enteroviruses and hepatitis A virus | 1995 | [ | |
| 34 | HAdV 3 | Australia | No | 2000 | [ | |
| 59 | HAdV 4 | Spain | Not tested | 2008 | [ | |
| 134 | HAdV 3 | China | Not tested | 2011 | [ | |
| 373 | HAdV 7 | Taiwan | Not tested | 2011 | [ | |
| 55 | HAdV 4 | China | Yes. Gene sequences obtained from the water samples were 100% identical to the sequences obtained from the swab samples. | 2013 | [ | |
| Enterovirus | 26 | Enterovirus-like | Colorado | Not tested | 1987 | [ |
| 46 | Echovirus 30 | Ireland | Not tested | 1979 | [ | |
| 68 | Echovirus 30 | Italy | No. Virological analysis of pool waters was performed one month after the outbreak | 1997 | [ | |
| 90 | Echovirus 3 | South Africa | Not tested. Unclean swimming-pool water was confirmed by total coliform count | 2001 | [ | |
| 215 | Echovirus 13 and 30 | Germany | Yes. An echovirus 30 sequence obtained from pond water showed 100% amino-acid homology with sequence obtained from patient isolates | 2001 | [ | |
| 36 | Echovirus 9 | Connecticut | Not tested | 2003 | [ | |
| Hepatitis A virus | 56 | - | Hungary | Not tested | 1987 | [ |
| 20 | - | Louisiana, USA | Not tested | 1989 | [ | |
| 7 | - | Australia | Not tested | 1997 | [ | |
| Norovirus | 103 | - | Ohio | No. Pool water were found negative for both bacterial and viral pathogens. | 1977 | [ |
| 242 | - | Finland | Yes. Identical sequence was detected in both patient stool and pool water | 2001 | [ | |
| 36 | - | Minnesota | Not known | 2001–2002 | [ | |
| 53 | - | Vermont | Not tested | 2004 | [ | |
| 18 | - | Wisconsin | Not known | 2006 | [ |