Publication | Open Access
Longitudinal study of rotavirus infections among children from Belém, Brazil
98
Citations
27
References
1989
Year
The authors prospectively followed 80 children aged 0–3 years in peripheral Belém, Brazil, from December 1982 to March 1986, recording all diarrhoeal episodes. During 441 diarrhoeal episodes, 36 (8.2 %) were rotavirus, with rotavirus alone in half of those cases; the virus was mainly subgroup II (1N2L profile), reinfections occurred in 12 children, and rotavirus diarrhoea was more severe, often asymptomatic early and symptomatic after 4 months, with no protective effect of breast‑feeding.
SUMMARY From December 1982 to March 1986 a group of 80 children between 0 and 3 years old who lived in the peripheral area of Belém, Brazil, were followed up for episodes of diarrhoea. A total of 441 diarrhoeal episodes were recorded and 36 (8·2%) were associated with rotavirus. This agent was the only pathogen in 50% of rotavirus-related episodes of acute diarrhoea, and strains were characterized by analysis of RNA in polyacrylamide gels. Forty-one belonged to subgroup II (long pattern) and five to subgroup I. Reinfections by rotavirus were noted in 12 children involving either the same or different subgroups. Ten distinct electrophoretypes were detected in the study period and the predominant one had the ‘1N2L’ profile. The cumulative age-specific attack rate for diarrhoea reached 2–8 by the end of the first year of life; a frequency of 2–3 episodes of diarrhoea per child per year was observed throughout the complete investigation. In comparing the age-specific attack rates for diarrhoea between breast-fed and bottle-fed children, a peak at 6 months of age was noted in the former, and at 1 month in the latter. A comparison by Fischer's exact test (P = 0·21) provided no evidence for protection against clinical rotavirus disease by maternal milk. By the same test, however (P = 0·021), we found significant evidence that early rotavirus infections were more likely to be asymptomatic and that infections after 4 months were more likely to be symptomatic. The clinical picture in children with rotavirus-related diarrhoea was more severe than in those suffering from acute diarrhoea due to another agent.
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