Abstract
In an active diarrhea surveillance study of children aged 12-24 months in Lima, Peru, norovirus was the most common pathogen identified. The percentage of mixed (bacterial and noroviral) infections was significantly higher among norovirus-positive samples (53%) than among norovirus-negative samples (12%). The combination of norovirus with the most common bacterial pathogens was associated with increased clinical severity over that of either single-pathogen norovirus or single-pathogen bacterial infections.
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Zambruni, M., Luna, G., Silva, M., Bausch, D. G., Rivera, F. P., Velapatino, G., … Ochoa, T. J. (2016). High prevalence and increased severity of norovirus mixed infections among children 12-24 months of age living in the suburban areas of Lima, Peru. Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, 5(3), 337–341. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpids/piv001
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