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National epidemic of Lordsdale Norovirus in the UK

National epidemic of Lordsdale Norovirus in the UK
National epidemic of Lordsdale Norovirus in the UK
Background: In early 2002 reports of outbreaks of gastroenteritis reached unprecedented levels in the UK. Forty five Norovirus outbreaks were reported in January 2002.
Objectives: The objective of the study was to determine whether the outbreaks were Noroviral in origin and if so whether they represented a homogeneous or heterogeneous collection of Noroviruses by applying EIA and sequence analysis to representative faecal samples.
Study design: Faecal specimens were collected during the week of highest incidence from 21 outbreaks in a variety of health care settings including hospitals and nursing homes. The outbreaks occurred in geographically distinct regions of the UK and samples were collected by reference laboratories in Glasgow, Manchester, Bristol and Southampton.
Results: The samples were all positive for Noroviruses by negative stain electron microscopy (EM) and Lordsdale virus (LV) EIA, therefore reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) amplification and nucleotide sequencing of the Norovirus RNA polymerase gene was performed on amplicons from samples of each of the 21 outbreaks to investigate the nature and extent of diversity. All samples were very closely related to the reference Lordsdale virus genome sequence. LV was first discovered during an hospital outbreak of gastroenteritis in Southampton General Hospital in March 1993.
Conclusions: Noroviruses are a major cause of outbreaks of gastroenteritis in health care settings. LV is the predominant Norovirus in the UK and was detected in outbreaks that occurred during the national peak of gastroenteritis reports in January 2002.
Norovirus, Lordsdale virus, epidemic, gastroenteritis
1386-6532
243-247
Vipond, I.B.
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Caul, E.O.
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Hirst, D.
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Carmen, B.
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Curry, A.
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Lopman, B.A.
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Pead, P.
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Pickett, M.A.
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Lambden, P.R.
e99ecc21-50d7-4a43-9e79-efba46592c77
Clarke, I.N.
ff6c9324-3547-4039-bb2c-10c0b3327a8b
Vipond, I.B.
0e4fe5de-4829-47e5-bd51-26c329ab5bf3
Caul, E.O.
3ab60e6e-ca41-4196-a205-4c0075fd3767
Hirst, D.
74cd9d6a-43e6-4426-894c-8bf447467cef
Carmen, B.
d27ace8a-d7e1-4f82-a51e-426723f4a4f9
Curry, A.
f6589489-ff60-40ee-98b0-bab9c1be4597
Lopman, B.A.
11e0b91c-3bd4-400c-ac01-8f4ff0191feb
Pead, P.
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Pickett, M.A.
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Lambden, P.R.
e99ecc21-50d7-4a43-9e79-efba46592c77
Clarke, I.N.
ff6c9324-3547-4039-bb2c-10c0b3327a8b

Vipond, I.B., Caul, E.O., Hirst, D., Carmen, B., Curry, A., Lopman, B.A., Pead, P., Pickett, M.A., Lambden, P.R. and Clarke, I.N. (2004) National epidemic of Lordsdale Norovirus in the UK. Journal of Clinical Virology, 30 (3), 243-247. (doi:10.1016/j.jcv.2003.11.011).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: In early 2002 reports of outbreaks of gastroenteritis reached unprecedented levels in the UK. Forty five Norovirus outbreaks were reported in January 2002.
Objectives: The objective of the study was to determine whether the outbreaks were Noroviral in origin and if so whether they represented a homogeneous or heterogeneous collection of Noroviruses by applying EIA and sequence analysis to representative faecal samples.
Study design: Faecal specimens were collected during the week of highest incidence from 21 outbreaks in a variety of health care settings including hospitals and nursing homes. The outbreaks occurred in geographically distinct regions of the UK and samples were collected by reference laboratories in Glasgow, Manchester, Bristol and Southampton.
Results: The samples were all positive for Noroviruses by negative stain electron microscopy (EM) and Lordsdale virus (LV) EIA, therefore reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) amplification and nucleotide sequencing of the Norovirus RNA polymerase gene was performed on amplicons from samples of each of the 21 outbreaks to investigate the nature and extent of diversity. All samples were very closely related to the reference Lordsdale virus genome sequence. LV was first discovered during an hospital outbreak of gastroenteritis in Southampton General Hospital in March 1993.
Conclusions: Noroviruses are a major cause of outbreaks of gastroenteritis in health care settings. LV is the predominant Norovirus in the UK and was detected in outbreaks that occurred during the national peak of gastroenteritis reports in January 2002.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: Norovirus, Lordsdale virus, epidemic, gastroenteritis

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 27466
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27466
ISSN: 1386-6532
PURE UUID: 46ad7a05-fccb-4882-9c7b-8703ce540956
ORCID for I.N. Clarke: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4938-1620

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:33

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Contributors

Author: I.B. Vipond
Author: E.O. Caul
Author: D. Hirst
Author: B. Carmen
Author: A. Curry
Author: B.A. Lopman
Author: P. Pead
Author: M.A. Pickett
Author: P.R. Lambden
Author: I.N. Clarke ORCID iD

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