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      Human viruses in sediments, sludges, and soils.

      Bulletin of the World Health Organization
      Adenoviridae, isolation & purification, Adult, Child, Disease Outbreaks, transmission, Enterovirus, Enterovirus B, Human, Gastroenteritis, Hepatitis A, Hepatovirus, Humans, Norwalk virus, Rotavirus, Seawater, adverse effects, Sewage, Shellfish, Soil Microbiology, Soil Pollutants, Swimming, Virus Diseases, etiology, Viruses, Water Microbiology, Water Pollution, Water Supply

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          Abstract

          Recent studies have provided a greater understanding of the movement of viruses in the environment by their attachment to solids. These studies have focused on solids-associated viruses present in wastewater discharged into the ocean and on viruses in sludge and wastewater that may be retained in soil following their land disposal. Such ocean or land disposal of wastewater and sludge may result in a discharge of one or more of 120 human enteric virus pathogens including those causing poliomyelitis, viral hepatitis A and acute gastroenteritis.Solids-associated viruses in effluents discharged into coastal waters accumulate in bottom sediments, which may contain 10 to 10 000 more virus per unit volume than the overlying seawater. Solids-associated viruses resuspended by water turbulence may be transported from polluted to distant non-polluted recreational or shellfish-growing water. Transmission of viruses causing hepatitis or gastroenteritis may result from contact by bathers or swimmers with these viruses in recreational waters, or from ingestion of raw or improperly cooked shellfish in which the solids-associated virus had been bioaccumulated.The land disposal of sludge and wastewater has a potential of causing infections in farm workers, contamination of crops, pollution of raw potable water sources or infiltration of ground water. Viruses retained on soils can be released by rain water and may contaminate ground water through lateral and vertical movements.

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