Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses

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Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses. / Hebbelstrup Jensen, Betina; Jokelainen, Pikka; Nielsen, Alex Christian Yde; Franck, Kristina Træholt; Rejkjær Holm, Dorthe; Schønning, Kristian; Petersen, Andreas M; Krogfelt, Karen A.

In: Scientific Reports, Vol. 9, No. 1, 3286, 01.03.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hebbelstrup Jensen, B, Jokelainen, P, Nielsen, ACY, Franck, KT, Rejkjær Holm, D, Schønning, K, Petersen, AM & Krogfelt, KA 2019, 'Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses', Scientific Reports, vol. 9, no. 1, 3286. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40077-9

APA

Hebbelstrup Jensen, B., Jokelainen, P., Nielsen, A. C. Y., Franck, K. T., Rejkjær Holm, D., Schønning, K., Petersen, A. M., & Krogfelt, K. A. (2019). Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses. Scientific Reports, 9(1), [3286]. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40077-9

Vancouver

Hebbelstrup Jensen B, Jokelainen P, Nielsen ACY, Franck KT, Rejkjær Holm D, Schønning K et al. Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses. Scientific Reports. 2019 Mar 1;9(1). 3286. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40077-9

Author

Hebbelstrup Jensen, Betina ; Jokelainen, Pikka ; Nielsen, Alex Christian Yde ; Franck, Kristina Træholt ; Rejkjær Holm, Dorthe ; Schønning, Kristian ; Petersen, Andreas M ; Krogfelt, Karen A. / Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses. In: Scientific Reports. 2019 ; Vol. 9, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{6065e52dcd9e4be4a5f8624415fc792c,
title = "Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses",
abstract = "Viral gastroenteritis causes high morbidity worldwide. In this study, stool samples from 179 children aged 0-6 years attending Danish day care centers were investigated for gastrointestinal viruses. Each child was observed for one year with submission of samples and questionnaires every two months. Adenovirus, norovirus, rotavirus, and sapovirus were detected in samples using real-time PCR. A total of 229 (33%) of the 688 samples collected tested positive for at least one virus. At the first sampling point, adenovirus was shed by 6%, norovirus genotype I by 3% and genotype II by 12%, rotavirus A by 9%, and sapovirus by 21% of the 142 children included in the risk factor analyses. Increasing age was identified as a protective factor against testing positive for gastrointestinal virus, whereas nausea during the previous two months was positively associated with testing positive. Odds of shedding adenovirus were 9.6 times higher among children treated with antibiotics within the previous two months than among children who were not. Gastrointestinal viruses were shed year-round and high viral loads were observed in samples from both symptomatic and asymptomatic children, suggesting children in day care as a reservoir and a possible source of spreading of viruses into the community.",
author = "{Hebbelstrup Jensen}, Betina and Pikka Jokelainen and Nielsen, {Alex Christian Yde} and Franck, {Kristina Tr{\ae}holt} and {Rejkj{\ae}r Holm}, Dorthe and Kristian Sch{\o}nning and Petersen, {Andreas M} and Krogfelt, {Karen A}",
year = "2019",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1038/s41598-019-40077-9",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Scientific Reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "nature publishing group",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Children Attending Day Care Centers are a Year-round Reservoir of Gastrointestinal Viruses

AU - Hebbelstrup Jensen, Betina

AU - Jokelainen, Pikka

AU - Nielsen, Alex Christian Yde

AU - Franck, Kristina Træholt

AU - Rejkjær Holm, Dorthe

AU - Schønning, Kristian

AU - Petersen, Andreas M

AU - Krogfelt, Karen A

PY - 2019/3/1

Y1 - 2019/3/1

N2 - Viral gastroenteritis causes high morbidity worldwide. In this study, stool samples from 179 children aged 0-6 years attending Danish day care centers were investigated for gastrointestinal viruses. Each child was observed for one year with submission of samples and questionnaires every two months. Adenovirus, norovirus, rotavirus, and sapovirus were detected in samples using real-time PCR. A total of 229 (33%) of the 688 samples collected tested positive for at least one virus. At the first sampling point, adenovirus was shed by 6%, norovirus genotype I by 3% and genotype II by 12%, rotavirus A by 9%, and sapovirus by 21% of the 142 children included in the risk factor analyses. Increasing age was identified as a protective factor against testing positive for gastrointestinal virus, whereas nausea during the previous two months was positively associated with testing positive. Odds of shedding adenovirus were 9.6 times higher among children treated with antibiotics within the previous two months than among children who were not. Gastrointestinal viruses were shed year-round and high viral loads were observed in samples from both symptomatic and asymptomatic children, suggesting children in day care as a reservoir and a possible source of spreading of viruses into the community.

AB - Viral gastroenteritis causes high morbidity worldwide. In this study, stool samples from 179 children aged 0-6 years attending Danish day care centers were investigated for gastrointestinal viruses. Each child was observed for one year with submission of samples and questionnaires every two months. Adenovirus, norovirus, rotavirus, and sapovirus were detected in samples using real-time PCR. A total of 229 (33%) of the 688 samples collected tested positive for at least one virus. At the first sampling point, adenovirus was shed by 6%, norovirus genotype I by 3% and genotype II by 12%, rotavirus A by 9%, and sapovirus by 21% of the 142 children included in the risk factor analyses. Increasing age was identified as a protective factor against testing positive for gastrointestinal virus, whereas nausea during the previous two months was positively associated with testing positive. Odds of shedding adenovirus were 9.6 times higher among children treated with antibiotics within the previous two months than among children who were not. Gastrointestinal viruses were shed year-round and high viral loads were observed in samples from both symptomatic and asymptomatic children, suggesting children in day care as a reservoir and a possible source of spreading of viruses into the community.

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-019-40077-9

DO - 10.1038/s41598-019-40077-9

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30824842

VL - 9

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

IS - 1

M1 - 3286

ER -

ID: 214646920