Author: Katherine E. Arden; Ristan M. Greer; Claire Y.T. Wang; Ian M. Mackay
Title: Genotypic diversity, circulation patterns, and co-detections among rhinoviruses in Queensland, 2001 Document date: 2018_5_30
ID: d0w40mkn_19
Snippet: Perhaps the RV-Bs are less severe pathogens 23, 26 or their infections contribute disease to a different population than that tested here. It is noteworthy that RV-Bs are also under-represented in community populations. 28, 35 While the RV species often co-circulated during 2001, one species usually predominated each month, changing from month to month. Each species displayed bimodal peaks in autumn and spring and a trough in winter, which aligne.....
Document: Perhaps the RV-Bs are less severe pathogens 23, 26 or their infections contribute disease to a different population than that tested here. It is noteworthy that RV-Bs are also under-represented in community populations. 28, 35 While the RV species often co-circulated during 2001, one species usually predominated each month, changing from month to month. Each species displayed bimodal peaks in autumn and spring and a trough in winter, which aligned with IFAV circulation. Exchange of prevailing species and turnover of prevalent genotypes is supported by other studies that employ molecular typing and span 12 months or . CC-BY-ND 4.0 International license author/funder. It is made available under a The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not peer-reviewed) is the . https://doi.org/10.1101/334334 doi: bioRxiv preprint Page 14 of 21 more. 25 15, 36-39 Shorter cross-sectional studies may misrepresent association between disease severity and RV species or genotype by failing to capture year-to-year variation in RV diversity.
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