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      Rotaviruses as a cause of nosocomial, infantile diarrhoea in Northern Brazil: pilot study

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          Abstract

          Faecal samples were obtained from 190 children, aged 0 to 5 years, admitted to a public hospital in Belém, Pará, Brazil. These patients were placed in a pediatric ward with 40 beds distributed in six rooms. Case were classified into three groups: (a) nosocomial: children who developed gastroenteritis 72 hr or later after admission; (b) community-acquired: patients admitted either with diarrhoea or who had diarrhoea within 72 hr following admission; (c) non-diarrhoeic: those children who had no diarrhoea three days before and three days after collection of formed faecal sample. Specimens were routinely processed for the presence of rotaviruses, bacteria and parasites. Rotaviruses were detected through enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and subsequently serotyped/electrophoretyped. Rotaviruses were the most prevalent enteropathogens among nosocomial cases, accounting for 39 % (9/23) of diarrhoeal episodes; on the other hand, rotaviruses ocurred in 8.3 % (11/133) and 9 % (3/34) of community-acquired and non-diarrhoeic categories, respectively. Mixed infections involving rotavirus and Giardia intestinalis and rotavirus plus G. intestinalis and Entamoeba histolytica were detected in frequencies of 8.6 and 4.3 %, respectively, in the nosocomial group. The absence of bacterial pathogens in this category, and the unusual low prevalence of these agents in the other two groups may reflect the early and routine administration of antibiotics following admission to this hospital. Rotavirus serotype 2 prevailed over the other types, accounting for 77.8 % of isolates from nosocomial diarrhoeal episodes. In addition, at least five different genomic profiles could be observed, of which one displayed an unusual five-segment first RNA cluster. Dehydration was recorded in all cases of hospital-acquired, rotavirus-associated diarrhoea, whereas in only 57 % of nosocomial cases of other aetiology. It was also noted that nosocomial, rotavirus-associated diarrhoeal episodes occur earlier (7 days), following admission, if compared with those hospital-acquired cases of other aetiology (14 days).

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          mioc
          Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
          Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz
          Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde (Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil )
          0074-0276
          1678-8060
          December 1995
          : 90
          : 6
          : 743-749
          Affiliations
          [01] Belém orgnameFundação Nacional de Saúde orgdiv1Instituto Evandro Chagas Brasil
          Article
          S0074-02761995000600016 S0074-0276(95)09000616
          10.1590/S0074-02761995000600016
          c2ac8ad9-f3ab-4c28-84ac-3a17ef8ab236

          This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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          Page count
          Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 0, Pages: 7
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          SciELO Brazil


          rotavirus,infantile diarrhoea,nosocomial
          rotavirus, infantile diarrhoea, nosocomial

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