Rodent-borne hanta- and arenaviruses are an emerging public health threat in Europe; however, their circulation in human populations is usually underestimated since most infections are asymptomatic. Compared to other European countries, Italy is considered 'low risk' for these viruses, yet in the Province of Trento, two pathogenic hantaviruses (Puumala and Dobrava-Belgrade virus) and one arenavirus (Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus) are known to circulate in rodent reservoirs. In this paper, we performed a follow-up serological screening in humans to detect variation in the prevalence of these three viruses compared to previous analyses carried out in 2002.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) are represented by rare but life-threatening cutaneous adverse reactions to different drugs. Previous studies have found that in a Han Chinese population from Taiwan and other Asian Countries, a strong genetic association between HLA-class I alleles (B*15:02, B*58:01) and SJS and TEN was induced by carbamazepine and allopurinol, respectively. To identify genetic markers that covered the MHC region, we carried out a case-control association enrolling 20 Caucasian patients with SJS/TEN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman coronaviruses, represented by the two prototype strains HCV-OC43 and HCV-229E, are important human respiratory pathogens, also associated with necrotizing enterocolitis. Two previous studies, one describing the electron microscopic observation of doughnut-shaped particles, resembling coronaviruses, in a perivascular inflammatory lesion of brain tissue taken at autopsy from a multiple sclerosis patient, and the other one reporting the isolation of coronaviruses from the brains of two multiple sclerosis patients, suggested the possible association between coronaviruses and human demyelinating diseases. We analysed polyadenylated RNAs extracted from cerebrospinal fluid of twenty randomly selected multiple sclerosis patients and ten patients with other neurological diseases (medullary atrophy, Parkinson's disease, polyneuropathy, senile dementia, headache and toxic polyneuropathy) by reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction searching for HCV-OC43 and HCV-229E sequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman coronaviruses (HCV) OC43 and 229E are the second most frequently isolated agents of common colds, and have also been associated with severe upper respiratory infections in children and with gastroenteritis of unknown etiology, such as infantile necrotizing enterocolitis. While HCV-OC43 and neonatal calf diarrhea coronavirus NCDCV cannot be held responsible for enteric infection in man, serological data suggest the possible existence of a human coronavirus, antigenically related to HCV-OC43 and NCDCV, and responsible for enteric infections. We developed a rapid and sensitive method for the diagnosis of the human respiratory coronavirus infections, and for detecting these viruses in suspect coronavirus infections.
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