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Surveillance of pathogens in outpatients with gastroenteritis and characterization of sapovirus strains between 2002 and 2007 in Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan

Authors :
Jiro Miyasaka
Kuniko Shinozaki
Kazuhiko Katayama
Shigeru Matsuo
Ryuichi Nakashima
Seiya Harada
Shunsuke Yahiro
Yasushi Shimada
Tomoichiro Oka
Mineyuki Okada
Shigeru Ikezawa
Takehiko Ueno
Koichi Nishimura
Takaji Wakita
Naokazu Takeda
Source :
Journal of medical virology. 81(6)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Infectious acute gastroenteritis is an important public health problem worldwide. A total of 639 stool specimens were tested for the presence of diarrhea pathogens. The specimens were from outpatients with acute gastroenteritis who consulted the pediatric clinic in Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan, from June 2002 to December 2007. Of these, 421 (65.9%) were positive for diarrhea pathogens. Among them were norovirus (NoV) in 260 (61.8%), sapovirus (SaV) in 81 (19.2%), rotavirus in 49 (11.6%), adenovirus in 19 (4.5%), enterovirus in 13 (3.1%), astrovirus in 9 (2.1%), kobuvirus in 1 (0.2%), and bacterial pathogens in 11 (2.6%). Mixed infection (co-infection of viruses) was found in 22 (5.2%) of the 421 pathogen-positive stool samples. NoV was the most prevalent pathogen throughout the study period; however, the SaV detection rate was unexpectedly high and was found to be the secondary pathogen from 2005 to 2007. Genetic analysis of SaV with 81 strains demonstrated that SaV strains belonging to genogroup IV emerged in 2007, and dynamic genogroup changes occurred in a restricted geographic area. This study showed that SaV infection is not as rare as thought previously.

Details

ISSN :
10969071
Volume :
81
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of medical virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4305a2438fa334cd8047ec05104fb136