Author: Xiao, Fei; Tang, Meiwen; Zheng, Xiaobin; Li, Chunna; He, Jianzhong; Hong, Zhongsi; Huang, Siwen; Zhang, Zhenyi; Lin, Xianqi; Fang, Zhaoxiong; Lai, Renxu; Chen, Shoudeng; Liu, Jing; Huang, Jin; Xia, Jinyu; Li, Zhonghe; Jiang, Guanmin; Liu, Ye; Li, Xiaofeng; Shan, Hong
Title: Evidence for gastrointestinal infection of SARS-CoV-2 Cord-id: 7odpslba Document date: 2020_2_20
ID: 7odpslba
Snippet: The new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) outbreak originating from Wuhan, China, poses a threat to global health. While it's evident that the virus invades respiratory tract and transmits from human to human through airway, other viral tropisms and transmission routes remain unknown. We tested viral RNA in stool from 73 SARS-CoV-2-infected hospitalized patients using rRT-PCR. 53.42% of the patients tested positive in stool. 23.29% of the patients remained positive in feces even after the viral RNA decre
Document: The new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) outbreak originating from Wuhan, China, poses a threat to global health. While it's evident that the virus invades respiratory tract and transmits from human to human through airway, other viral tropisms and transmission routes remain unknown. We tested viral RNA in stool from 73 SARS-CoV-2-infected hospitalized patients using rRT-PCR. 53.42% of the patients tested positive in stool. 23.29% of the patients remained positive in feces even after the viral RNA decreased to undetectable level in respiratory tract. The viral RNA was also detected in gastrointestinal tissues. Furthermore, gastric, duodenal and rectal epithelia showed positive immunofluorescent staining of viral host receptor ACE2 and viral nucleocapsid protein in a case of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Our results provide evidence for gastrointestinal infection of SARS-CoV-2, highlighting its potential fecal-oral transmission route.
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