Document details

Outbreak of acute respiratory infection among infants in Lisbon, Portugal, caus...

Author(s): Rebelo-de-Andrade, Helena cv logo 1 ; Pereia, C. cv logo 2 ; Giria, M. cv logo 3 ; Prudêncio, E. cv logo 4 ; Brito, M.J. cv logo 5 ; Calé, E. cv logo 6 ; Taveira, N. cv logo 7

Date: 2010

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.18/1301

Origin: Repositório Científico do Instituto Nacional de Saúde

Subject(s): Adenovirus; New Recombinant Strain; Outbreack; Respiratory Infection; Resistência aos Antimicrobianos


Description
Human adenoviruses (AdVs) typically cause mild illnesses in otherwise healthy hosts. We investigated a pediatric outbreak of acute respiratory infection with fatal outcomes that occurred in Lisbon, Portugal, in 2004.Biological specimens were collected from 83 children attending two nurseries, a kinesiotherapy clinic, and the household of a nanny. Adenovirus infection was confirmed in 48 children by PCR and virus isolation. Most(96%) isolates were classified as being of subspecies B1. Phylogenetic analysis of fiber and hexon gene sequences revealed that most infants were infected with AdV serotype 3 (AdV3) strains. Infants attending one nursery harbored a new recombinant strain containing an AdV serotype 7 hexon and serotype 3 fiber (AdV7/3). Both the AdV3 and the AdV7/3 strains caused fatal infections. Two different serotype 3 strains were circulating in Lisbon in 2004, and the new AdV7/3 recombinant type originated from only one of those strains. These results demonstrate that recombination leads to the emergence of new adenovirus strains with epidemic and lethal potential
Document Type Article
Language English
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