与一家老年护理机构有关的大规模、长期的人类杯状病毒感染爆发。

Adriana Milazzo, Ingrid G Tribe, Rod Ratcliff, Chris Doherty, Geoff Higgins, Rod Givney
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本报告从微生物学和流行病学角度调查了一起与一家老年护理机构有关的急性胃肠道疾病暴发,并试图确定是否存在点传染源。护理人员保存了一份病例登记册,其中包括发病日期、发病时间和症状。对粪便标本进行常规胃肠道病原体和人杯状病毒(HuCV)检测。共报告81例。从25例病例中收到标本供检测。25份标本中23份(92%)逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR) huv RNA阳性。2份阴性样品均含有RT-PCR抑制剂。描述性流行病学表明,人员配置做法对延长疫情很重要。未发现传染源。相反,环境污染、气溶胶传播和未考虑到HuCV感染的自然史的工作做法可能是导致此次在老年人护理机构的居民、工作人员和访客及其接触者中爆发的规模(81例)和持续时间(3周)的原因。由huv(以前称为诺瓦克样病毒或小圆形结构病毒)引起的机构性暴发极难控制。受感染的工作人员可能在很大程度上加剧疫情的扩大。目前,利用聚合酶链反应诊断常规可以快速确认HuCV感染,但实验室技术的进步尚未转化为更快或更有效的干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A large, prolonged outbreak of human calicivirus infection linked to an aged-care facility.

This report investigates an outbreak of acute gastrointestinal illness, microbiologically and epidemiologically linked to an aged-care facility and seeks to determine if there was a point source of infection. A register of cases that included onset date and time of illness and symptoms was maintained by nursing staff. Faecal specimens were tested for conventional gastrointestinal pathogens and for human calicivirus (HuCV). There were 81 cases reported. Specimens were received for testing from 25 cases. Twenty-three of the 25 (92%) specimens were positive for HuCV RNA by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The 2 negative samples contained RT-PCR inhibitors. Descriptive epidemiology suggested that staffing practices were important in prolonging the outbreak. No point source of infection was identified. Instead environmental contamination, aerosol transmission and work practices that fail to take account of the natural history of HuCV infection probably contributed to the size (81 cases) and duration (3 weeks) of this outbreak among the residents, staff and visitors of an aged-care facility and their contacts. Institutional outbreaks caused by HuCV, formerly called Norwalk-like or small round structured viruses, are extremely difficult to control. Infected staff may contribute significantly to the amplification of outbreaks. Rapid confirmation of HuCV infection is now routinely possible using polymerase chain reaction diagnostics but progress in laboratory technology has not yet translated into faster or more effective interventions.

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