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Experimental infection of chimpanzees with the Norwalk agent of epidemic viral gastroenteritis

✍ Scribed by Richard G. Wyatt; Harry B. Greenberg; Dan W. Dalgard; William P. Allen; D. Lewis Sly; Thomas S. Thornhill; Robert M. Chanock; Albert Z. Kapikian


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1978
Tongue
English
Weight
468 KB
Volume
2
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


A fecal filtrate of human origin containing the Norwalk agent of epidemic viral gastroenteritis was administered by stomach tube to chimpanzees in an attempt to induce diarrheal disease. Significant postchallenge serum antibody rises against Norwalk viral antigens were demonstrated in all animals using the techniques of immune electron microscopy and radioimmunoassay. In addition, viral antigens were detected in feces from five of nine animals using radioimmunoassay. Clinical illness characterized by diarrhea and/or vomiting did not occur. Infection was transmitted subsequently by feeding four additional chimpanzees a fecal filtrate prepared from one of the previously infected animals. Development of an antibody response in four animals and detection of viral antigen in two animals that received this passage filtrate indicated that viral replication had occurred in the absence of clinical illness. The availability of the chimpanzee as an experimental animal host susceptible to infection with the Norwalk agent should facilitate the study of epidemic viral gastroenteritis.


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## Abstract Norwalk virus (NV) and Norwalk‐like viruses (NLVs) are common etiologic agents of viral gastroenteritis. Viral gastroenteritis is a common disease that is highly transmissible, spreading rapidly through families, institutions, and communities. Because methods for in vitro cultivation of