Importance of rotavirus and adenovirus types 40 and 41 in acute gastroenteritis in Korean children.

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To examine the role of rotavirus (Rv) and adenovirus types 40 and 41 (Ad40/41) in Korean children with acute gastroenteritis, we evaluated 345 children with acute gastroenteritis and 90 children without acute gastroenteritis in Seoul, Korea, during a 29-month period. Stools were tested for group A Rv antigen and for Ad40/41 by using monoclonal antibody (MAb)-based assays. Rv was found in 68% of the ill children and 19% of the controls (P less than 0.001), whereas Ad40/41 was detected in 9% of the ill children and 2% of the controls (P less than 0.05). Also, 6% of the ill children and 0.01% of the controls excreted Rv and Ad40/41 simultaneously. Among the ill children, 96% of children with Rv and 94% of those with Ad40/41 were younger than 24 months. Although a peak of Rv infection was detected in early winter in both years of the study, there was no apparent seasonal trend with Ad40/41. Diarrhea with more than 10 stools per day, vomiting, or fever was most strongly associated with Rv shedding, whereas the first two manifestations were associated with coinfection of Rv and Ad40/41. To investigate the genetic and serotypic diversity of Rv strains, we tested 195 and 144 fecal Rv specimens isolated from the gastroenteritis cases, respectively, by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the segmented RNA genome and by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with serotype-specific MAbs. Of the 195 specimens, 154 yielded RNA patterns characteristic of group A Rv: 18% had short electrophoretic migration patterns, 81% had long patterns, and 1% had a mixture of short and long patterns. Of the 144 specimens, serotype specificity was determined in 51%: 89% were serotype 1, 10% were serotype 2, and 1% were serotype 3. Analysis of the specimens for which electropherotypes and serotypes were available indicated that a given RNA pattern corresponded to a particular serotype, except in one strain that showed short patterns but serotype 1. We suggest that Rv and Ad40/41 in stools be accepted critically as an important cause of diarrhea among young children in Korea.

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