Molecular confirmation of hepatitis A virus from well water: Epidemiology and public health implications

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Abstract

An outbreak of hepatitis A in a rural river-island community was found to be associated with consumption of contaminated well water. Specimens from case-patients, the implicated well, and a cesspool suspected to be the source of contamination were all positive for hepatitis A virus (HAV) RNA by immunocapture reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. All isolates were identical over about 400 bases from two capsid-encoding regions of the genome, identifying the chain of transmission. Other wells up to 60 m from the cesspool also contained HAV RNA. In addition, HAV RNA was detected in the contamination source well 6 months after the initial contamination, when fecal coliform bacteria were no longer present. These findings demonstrate the utility of viral detection techniques to evaluate contaminated ground water.

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De Serres, G., Cromeans, T. L., Levesque, B., Brassard, N., Barthe, C., Dionne, M., … Margolis, H. S. (1999). Molecular confirmation of hepatitis A virus from well water: Epidemiology and public health implications. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 179(1), 37–43. https://doi.org/10.1086/314565

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