PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

High prevalence of GII norovirus in hospitalized children with acute diarrhea, in Beijing.

  • Liping Jia,
  • You Zhang,
  • Liying Liu,
  • Huijin Dong,
  • Linqing Zhao,
  • Yuan Qian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0179839
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. e0179839

Abstract

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This study was addressed to the relationship between norovirus and acute diarrhea in hospitalized children, including hospital-acquired infection (HAI) and community-acquired infection (CAI) in a children's hospital in Beijing. RT-PCR was used to detect norovirus in stool specimen, followed by sequence analysis for PCR products. From 2010 to 2013, a total of 1248 specimens, including 661 from the HAI group and 587 from the CAI group were tested for norovirus. Norovirus were detected in 380 of 1248 (30.4%) diarrheal specimens. The positive rate for norovirus detection was higher in children within HAI group than CAI group (35.3%, 232/661 vs. 25.6%, 148/587), and the difference was significant (X2 = 14.35, PConclusionThe data elaborated the importance of norovirus in hospital associated infectious diarrhea. The prevalence of norovirus is higher from HAI group than CAI group, and the norovirus from the patients in CAI group could be the source of infection in HAI group.