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Frequency of detection of picornaviruses and seven other respiratory pathogens in infants

Frequency of detection of picornaviruses and seven other respiratory pathogens in infants
Frequency of detection of picornaviruses and seven other respiratory pathogens in infants
Background: Dual respiratory viral infections are frequently associated with lower respiratory tract illness in infants. This study aimed to determine the impact of a dual respiratory viral infection on specific aspects of the infant's immune response and the clinical course of illness.
Methods: A prospective study was performed with 772 infants hospitalized from October 2000 through July 2004. Sensitive polymerase chain reaction methodology revealed the presence of a single respiratory virus in 443 (57%) of 772 cases, whereas dual infections were identified in 153 (20%) of cases. From 250 infants with confirmed respiratory viral infection, fresh heparinized blood was analyzed for interferon-[gamma] (IFN-[gamma]) responses by flow cytometry. Of these, 191 patients had a single infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), rhinoviruses, adenoviruses or influenza viruses; and 59 patients had a dual infection with RSV and rhinoviruses, RSV and adenoviruses, influenza viruses and rhinoviruses or adenoviruses and rhinoviruses. The clinical features and peripheral lymphocyte IFN-[gamma] responses were compared among infants with single or dual infections.
Results: It was found that dual infections with non-RSV respiratory viruses induced peripheral blood mononuclear cell IFN-[gamma] responses that mimic those of single infections, whereas coinfection with RSV was associated with reduced IFN-[gamma] responses and a more severe clinical course of lower respiratory tract disease.
Conclusions: The results indicate that the clinical characteristics and the IFN-[gamma] response differ significantly in single and dual respiratory viral infection, depending on the nature of the simultaneously detected viruses. In dual infections, RSV involvement was associated with a decreased IFN-[gamma] response in peripheral blood mononuclear cell and an increase in severity of illness.
611-616
Legg, Julian P.
d794b6a3-768c-4986-b67f-bf9a30fe228e
Warner, Jill A.
277d6d32-d31d-417c-866a-054f9d07633f
Johnston, Sebastian L.
90e0ef79-cfde-40e0-b301-90d3063ee036
Warner, John O.
50630e99-8486-4859-ade3-cd2c79c5a153
Legg, Julian P.
d794b6a3-768c-4986-b67f-bf9a30fe228e
Warner, Jill A.
277d6d32-d31d-417c-866a-054f9d07633f
Johnston, Sebastian L.
90e0ef79-cfde-40e0-b301-90d3063ee036
Warner, John O.
50630e99-8486-4859-ade3-cd2c79c5a153

Legg, Julian P., Warner, Jill A., Johnston, Sebastian L. and Warner, John O. (2005) Frequency of detection of picornaviruses and seven other respiratory pathogens in infants. Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 24 (7), 611-616.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Dual respiratory viral infections are frequently associated with lower respiratory tract illness in infants. This study aimed to determine the impact of a dual respiratory viral infection on specific aspects of the infant's immune response and the clinical course of illness.
Methods: A prospective study was performed with 772 infants hospitalized from October 2000 through July 2004. Sensitive polymerase chain reaction methodology revealed the presence of a single respiratory virus in 443 (57%) of 772 cases, whereas dual infections were identified in 153 (20%) of cases. From 250 infants with confirmed respiratory viral infection, fresh heparinized blood was analyzed for interferon-[gamma] (IFN-[gamma]) responses by flow cytometry. Of these, 191 patients had a single infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), rhinoviruses, adenoviruses or influenza viruses; and 59 patients had a dual infection with RSV and rhinoviruses, RSV and adenoviruses, influenza viruses and rhinoviruses or adenoviruses and rhinoviruses. The clinical features and peripheral lymphocyte IFN-[gamma] responses were compared among infants with single or dual infections.
Results: It was found that dual infections with non-RSV respiratory viruses induced peripheral blood mononuclear cell IFN-[gamma] responses that mimic those of single infections, whereas coinfection with RSV was associated with reduced IFN-[gamma] responses and a more severe clinical course of lower respiratory tract disease.
Conclusions: The results indicate that the clinical characteristics and the IFN-[gamma] response differ significantly in single and dual respiratory viral infection, depending on the nature of the simultaneously detected viruses. In dual infections, RSV involvement was associated with a decreased IFN-[gamma] response in peripheral blood mononuclear cell and an increase in severity of illness.

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Published date: 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 27224
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27224
PURE UUID: 88d4eb55-4627-43a2-ace2-983d74913931

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Date deposited: 25 Apr 2006
Last modified: 07 Jan 2022 22:20

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Contributors

Author: Julian P. Legg
Author: Jill A. Warner
Author: Sebastian L. Johnston
Author: John O. Warner

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