1. Astrovirus and digestive disorders in neonatal units.
- Author
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Chappé C, Minjolle S, Dabadie A, Morel L, Colimon R, and Pladys P
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Male, Nurseries, Hospital, Retrospective Studies, Astroviridae Infections diagnosis, Astroviridae Infections virology, Feces virology, Mamastrovirus isolation & purification
- Abstract
Aim: To describe clinical signs associated with Human Astrovirus (HAstV) in stools in neonatal units., Methods: During 2005-2006, all stool virology performed for isolated digestive symptoms or suspicion of neonatal infection was tested for HAstV by an amplified enzyme-linked immunoassay (IDEIA™ Astrovirus test, Dako Cytomation). Each newborn with a positive result (HAstV+ group) was retrospectively matched with the first following symptomatic newborn in the same care unit having a negative stool virology (HAstV- group). Clinical data were collected during two 3-day periods (just after faecal samples collection and 1 week before) and compared within and between each group., Results: Human astrovirus was detected in faeces of 68 newborns [gestational age: 31.4(28.8-34) weeks] at a post-natal age of 23 (15-42) days without seasonal dominance. Human astrovirus+ and HAstV- groups were comparable. Bloody stool (54.4% versus 14.7%, p < 0.01) and stage II-III necrotizing enterocolitis (20.6% versus 4.4%, p < 0.05) were more frequently observed in HAstV+ than in HAstV- group; these associations were confirmed by logistic regression analysis., Conclusion: This descriptive study argues for a possible association between HAstV and digestive symptoms in newborns specifically in preterm infants., (© 2011 The Author(s)/Acta Paediatrica © 2011 Foundation Acta Paediatrica.)
- Published
- 2012
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