Selected article for: "causative agent and HBoV detection"

Author: Moriyama, Yoko; Hamada, Hiromichi; Okada, Mineyuki; Tsuchiya, Nozomi; Maru, Hiromi; Shirato, Yuri; Maeda, Yasuhiro; Hirose, Yosuke; Yoshida, Masaki; Omura, Yoh; Honda, Takafumi; Muto, Ayako; Hayashi, Kitami; Terai, Masaru
Title: Distinctive clinical features of human bocavirus in children younger than 2 years
  • Document date: 2010_4_10
  • ID: uzzyws7p_2
    Snippet: Since the detection of HBoV from respiratory tract samples from Swedish infants and children with LRTI [3] , reports related to HBoV have been published around the world. Epidemiological data show that HBoV is present on every continent with different incidence rates and seasonality. In fact, HBoV is detected year round, with rates of 0.5-19% in patients with LRTI [2, 7, 13, 15, 26] . Recently, this virus is propagated in an in vitro culture syst.....
    Document: Since the detection of HBoV from respiratory tract samples from Swedish infants and children with LRTI [3] , reports related to HBoV have been published around the world. Epidemiological data show that HBoV is present on every continent with different incidence rates and seasonality. In fact, HBoV is detected year round, with rates of 0.5-19% in patients with LRTI [2, 7, 13, 15, 26] . Recently, this virus is propagated in an in vitro culture system [10] . No animal model of infection has been established. Nevertheless, the fact that HBoV is not detected randomly in materials but is detected significantly more often in the absence of other viruses suggests that HBoV is a causative agent of previously unexplained respiratory tract infections [25] .

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