The epidemiology and clinical association of enterovirus (EV) and parechovirus (HPeV) infections, as well as the type-distribution-according-to-age, were determined during a 4-year study period in Spain. During 2010-2013, a total of 21,832 clinical samples were screened for EV and the detection frequency was 6.5% (1,430). Of the total EV-negative samples, only 1,873 samples from 2011 to 2013 were available for HPeV testing. HPeV was detected in 42 (2%) of them. Positive samples were genotyped using PCR and sequencing. EV infections occurred in all age groups of patients: neonates (17%), children 28 days to 2 years (29%), children 2-14 years (40%), and adults (14%). Thirty-four different EV types were identified. HPeV infections were detected exclusively in infants <8 m (70% neonates, P < 0.05). All but one HPeV were HPeV-3. Differences in type frequency detection were found according to age and clinical manifestation. Coxsackievirus (CV)-B4 (61%), CV-B5 (83%), and HPeV-3 (64%) were more frequent in neonates than in older patients (P < 0.05). Echovirus (E)-3 (60%), E-18 (47%), E-25 (62%), CV-A6 (61%), CV-A16 (72%), and EV-71 (75%) were mainly detected in children 28 days to 2 years (P < 0.05), whereas, E-6 (79%), E-20 (88%), and E-30 (85%) were predominant in children >2 years and adults (P < 0.05). Clinically, meningitis was associated with EV (P < 0.01) whereas, encephalitis was more frequent in HPeV-infected patients. CV-B types were associated with myocarditis (90%; P < 0.05) and EV species A with hand-foot-mouth-disease/atypical exanthema (88%; P < 0.05). J. Med. Virol. 89:435-442, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.24658 | DOI Listing |
Euro Surveill
November 2024
Institut Pasteur, Université Paris Cité, CNRS UMR 3569, Signalisation antivirale, Paris, France.
Euro Surveill
October 2024
The members of the study group are listed under Collaborators.
Cell Mol Life Sci
October 2024
OrganoVIR Labs, Department of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Amsterdam UMC, location Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam Institute for Reproduction and Development, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 9, 1100 AZ, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Microbiol Spectr
November 2024
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, HyogoPrefectural Kobe Children's Hospital, Kobe City, Hyogo, Japan.
Virology
December 2024
Unité de Virologie, Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, Antananarivo, Madagascar.
Madagascar has faced three major outbreaks of vaccine-derived polioviruses (VDPVs) in recent decades, with VDPV type 1 reemerging in late 2020. Here, we report the molecular characterization of these cVDPV1 strains. WHO protocols were used for poliovirus detection in stool and wastewater samples.
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