An outbreak of food-borne gastroenteritis due to sapovirus among junior high school students

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Abstract

The human sapovirus (SaV) causes acute gastroenteritis mainly in infants and young children. A food-borne outbreak of gastroenteritis associated with SaV occurred among junior high school students in Yokohama, Japan, during and after a study trip. The nucleotide sequences of the partial capsid gene derived from the students exhibited 98% homology to a SaV genogroup IV strain, Hu/Angelhom/SW278/2004/SE, which was isolated from an adult with gastroenteritis in Solna, Sweden. An identical nucleotide sequence was detected from a food handler at the hotel restaurant, suggesting that the causative agent of the outbreak was transmitted from the food handler. This is the first description of a food-borne outbreak associated with the SaV genogroup IV strain in Japan.

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Usuku, S., Kumazaki, M., Kitamura, K., Tochikubo, O., & Noguchi, Y. (2008). An outbreak of food-borne gastroenteritis due to sapovirus among junior high school students. Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases, 61(6), 438–441. https://doi.org/10.7883/yoken.jjid.2008.438

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