Polymerase chain reaction in the detection of an 'outbreak' of asymptomatic viral infections in a community birth cohort in South India

Gladstone, B. P. ; Iturriza-Gomara, M. ; Ramani, I. ; Monica, B. ; Banerjee, I. ; Brown, D. W. ; Gray, J. J. ; Muliyil, J. P. ; Kang, G. (2008) Polymerase chain reaction in the detection of an 'outbreak' of asymptomatic viral infections in a community birth cohort in South India Epidemiology and Infection, 136 (3). pp. 399-405. ISSN 0950-2688

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Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0950268807008709

Abstract

Asymptomatic enteric infections are important where sequelae or protection from subsequent illness is an outcome measure. The use of reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to identify asymptomatic enteric infections in a birth cohort followed for rotaviral infections in a south Indian urban slum is reported. Of 1191 non-diarrhoeal samples from 371 children collected in May-June 2003, 22 (1.9%) were positive by ELISA. A total of 147 (40.6%) of 362 samples tested by VP6 RT-PCR were positive. In those samples that could be typed, a high diversity of G types including G1, G2, G4, G8, G9 and G10, and a high proportion (34.4%) of mixed infections were detected. Noroviruses were identified in 6/28 (21.4%) samples tested. The identification of infections undetectable by conventional techniques indicates the importance of the use of sensitive diagnostic techniques in research studies. Asymptomatically infected children may also act as a source of infection for other susceptible hosts.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Cambridge University Press.
ID Code:93271
Deposited On:14 Jun 2012 13:03
Last Modified:19 May 2016 06:23

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