Rotavirus as a cause of severe gastroenteritis in adults.
AUTOR(ES)
Echeverria, P
RESUMO
Rotavirus was identified as the only etiological agent in 5% of adults (28 of 526) with diarrhea who were admitted to Bamrasnaradura Hospital in Nonthaburi, Thailand, during a 1-year period. Infection was determined by detection of rotavirus in diarrheal stools by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay accompanied by a greater than fourfold rise in serum complement fixation and radioimmunoassay antibody titers to rotavirus. Adults with clinical rotavirus infections were as severely ill as patients with most bacterial enteric infections; only patients with cholera passed more watery stools and were more dehydrated than those with rotavirus infections. Only 2 of the 28 adults with rotavirus infections had known recent contact with young children with diarrhea. Rotavirus infections in these adults occurred most frequently in the cooler, drier months in Thailand than during the rest of the year. In some settings, rotavirus should be considered in the differential diagnosis of severe diarrhea in adults as well as in young children.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=270871Documentos Relacionados
- CDC group HB-5 as a cause of genitourinary infections in adults.
- Human Group B Rotavirus Infections Cause Severe Diarrhea in Children and Adults in Bangladesh
- The treatment of severe dystonia in children and adults.
- Astrovirus as a cause of gastroenteritis in Japan.
- Longitudinal Studies of Neutralizing Antibody Responses to Rotavirus in Stools and Sera of Children following Severe Rotavirus Gastroenteritis