EPIDEMIC VIRAL ENTERITIS IN A LONG-STAY CHILDREN'S WARD
1975; Elsevier BV; Volume: 305; Issue: 7897 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/s0140-6736(75)92370-3
ISSN1474-547X
AutoresT. H. Flewett, A.S. Bryden, Heather Davies, C. A. Morris,
Tópico(s)Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology
ResumoTwo outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis occurred in 1974 in a long-stay children's ward. Electron microscopy demonstrated rotaviruses in faeces from the affected children in the first outbreak, and adenoviruses in faeces from affected children and a nurse in the second outbreak. The illness in both outbreaks was very mild; but the diarrhoea associated with rotavirus infection usually lasted 5-8 days (in one patient it lasted for 28 days) and sometimes started with vomiting; whereas the adenovirus-associated diarrhoea lasted only 2-4 days and was not associated with vomiting. Neither the rotaviruses nor the adenoviruses could be established in tissue-culture.
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