Incidence and genetic diversity of group C rotavirus among adults

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Abstract

Fecal samples from a 1-year prospective study were investigated to establish the role of group C rotavirus infections in acute diarrhea in Swedish adults (>15 years old). Rotaviruses were found in samples from 3% of the patients, and, in 35% of these, group C rotavirus was detected. Clinical symptoms of group C rotavirus infection were generally milder than those of group A rotavirus infection. Gene 8 (vp7) from 12 group C isolates, including strains from the prospective study, a military outbreak, and a sporadic case, was sequenced. The gene was found to be extremely conserved, with identities of 99.1%-100% at the amino acid level. This study has systematically investigated the prevalence and genetic diversity of group C rotavirus in adults. The data confirm the extreme sequence conservation within human group C rotavirus strains and suggest that symptomatic group C rotavirus infections occur more frequently in adults than has been previously recognized.

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Nilsson, M., Svenungsson, B., Hedlund, K. O., Uhnoo, I., Lagergren, Å., Akre, T., & Svensson, L. (2000). Incidence and genetic diversity of group C rotavirus among adults. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 182(3), 678–684. https://doi.org/10.1086/315772

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