Author: Gagliardi, T.B.; Paula, F.E.; Iwamoto, M.A.; Proençaâ€Modena, J.L.; Santos, A.E.; Camara, A.A.; Cervi, M.C.; Cintra, O.A.L.; Arruda, E.
Title: Concurrent detection of other respiratory viruses in children shedding viable human respiratory syncytial virus Cord-id: j55v4clu Document date: 2013_7_16
ID: j55v4clu
Snippet: Human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) is an important cause of respiratory disease. The majority of studies addressing the importance of virus coâ€infections to the HRSVâ€disease have been based on the detection of HRSV by RTâ€PCR, which may not distinguish current replication from prolonged shedding of remnant RNA from previous HRSV infections. To assess whether coâ€detections of other common respiratory viruses are associated with increased severity of HRSV illnesses from patients who w
Document: Human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) is an important cause of respiratory disease. The majority of studies addressing the importance of virus coâ€infections to the HRSVâ€disease have been based on the detection of HRSV by RTâ€PCR, which may not distinguish current replication from prolonged shedding of remnant RNA from previous HRSV infections. To assess whether coâ€detections of other common respiratory viruses are associated with increased severity of HRSV illnesses from patients who were shedding viableâ€HRSV, nasopharyngeal aspirates from children younger than 5 years who sought medical care for respiratory infections in Ribeirão Preto (Brazil) were tested for HRSV by immunofluorescence, RTâ€PCR and virus isolation in cell culture. All samples with viableâ€HRSV were tested further by PCR for other respiratory viruses. HRSVâ€disease severity was assessed by a clinical score scale. A total of 266 samples from 247 children were collected and 111 (42%) were HRSVâ€positive. HRSV was isolated from 70 (63%), and 52 (74%) of them were positive for at least one additional virus. HRSVâ€positive diseases were more severe than HRSVâ€negative ones, but there was no difference in disease severity between patients with viableâ€HRSV and those HRSVâ€positives by RTâ€PCR. Coâ€detection of other viruses did not correlate with increased disease severity. HRSV isolation in cell culture does not seem to be superior to RTâ€PCR to distinguish infections associated with HRSV replication in studies of clinical impact of HRSV. A high rate of coâ€detection of other respiratory viruses was found in samples with viableâ€HRSV, but this was not associated with more severe HRSV infection. J Med. Virol. 85:1852–1859, 2013. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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