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Rotavirus surveillance in the city of Rio de Janeiro–Brazil during 2000–2004: Detection of unusual strains with G8P[4] or G10P[9] specificities

✍ Scribed by Eduardo M. Volotão; Caroline C. Soares; Adriana G. Maranhão; Ludmila N. Rocha; Yasutaka Hoshino; Norma Santos


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
140 KB
Volume
78
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


Rotavirus diarrhea is a potentially life-threatening disease that affects millions of children annually around the world. Because protection against rotavirus disease is thought to be type specific, continuous rotavirus surveillance before and after implementation of a vaccine is still of essential importance. Rotavirus surveillance has been conducted in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil since 1982. In the present study, we report rotavirus surveillance data in Rio de Janeiro city from 2000 to 2004. One hundred twenty nine of 1,568 (8.2%) stool samples, collected from children with acute diarrhea between January 2000 and July 2004 were rotavirus-positive. One hundred twenty eight of the 129 (99.2%) rotavirus-positive samples were genotyped for G and/or P specificity. G1 was the predominant strain (49.6%, 64/129) followed by G9 (30.2%, 39/129), and G4 (17.8%, 23/129); G2 and G3 viruses were not detected. One sample (0.8%) was non-typeable. P genotypes were determined for 124 of the 129 (96%) samples, and P[8] was the predominant genotype (90.6%, 117/129). Genotypes P[4] and P[9] were detected in two (1.6%) samples each; one (0.8%) sample presented P[6] genotype; and five (3.8%) samples were non-typeable. Two samples (1.6%) presented mixed P genotypes (P[6] + P[8]). Two unusual strains were isolated: a G8P[4] strain isolated from a non-hospitalized child with diarrhea and a G10P[9] strain isolated from a hospitalized child with diarrhea.


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Detection of uncommon rotavirus a strain
✍ M.M. Gómez; E.M. Volotão; M.C. Lima de Mendonça; L.F.L. Tort; M.F.M. da Silva; J 📂 Article 📅 2010 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 152 KB

## Abstract Group A rotaviruses (RV‐A) are the major cause of gastroenteritis in infants and young children around the world. Each year RV‐A causes approximately 11 million episodes of severe diarrhea, with an estimated of 611,000 deaths. Epidemiologic surveys have identified P[8]G1, P[4]G2, P[8]G3