RESUMO
BACKGROUND: A series of complications caused by enteroviruses, including meningitis, encephalitis, acute flaccid paralysis, acute cardiopulmonary failure, respiratory infection, and myocardial injury have been reported in hand, foot and mouth disease/herpangina (HFMD/HA). However, the complication of diarrhoea caused by enteroviruses has been neglected, and a summary of its clinical features and impact on HFMD/HA is unavailable. METHODS: We included inpatients with HFMD/HA admitted to the Paediatric Department of Zhujiang Hospital during 2009-2012. We summarised and compared clinical data for cases with and without diarrhoea, and determined enterovirus serotypes by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and genotyping based on a partial-length fragment of viral protein 1 or the 5'-untranslated region. RESULTS: There were 804 inpatients with HFMD/HA and 28 (3.5%) presented with diarrhoea. Gastrointestinal symptoms were mild in most cases of diarrhoea (82.1%), with high prevalence of no dehydration (82.1%), short duration of diarrhoea (78.6%) and watery stools (75.0%). The prevalence of multi-organ dysfunction syndrome (10.7 vs 0.40%) (p = 0.001), hepatic injury (14.3 vs 3.4%) (p = 0.019), myocardial injury (21.4 vs 6.1%) (p = 0.002) and convulsion (21.4 vs 7.2%) (p = 0.016) was significantly higher in the diarrhoea than no diarrhoea group. There was no significant difference between the two groups regarding prevalence of death, altered consciousness, paralysis, central nervous system involvement, or acute respiratory infection. CONCLUSIONS: Most patients with diarrhoea caused by enteroviruses circulating in Guangdong Province in 2009-2012 had mild or moderate gastrointestinal symptoms. Although enterovirus-related diarrhoea caused additional multi-organ dysfunction syndrome, hepatic injury and myocardial injury in children with HFMD/HA, timely intervention efficiently reduced disease severity and improved outcome.
Assuntos
Infecções por Enterovirus/epidemiologia , Enterovirus/isolamento & purificação , Doença de Mão, Pé e Boca/epidemiologia , Adolescente , Criança , Pré-Escolar , China/epidemiologia , Diarreia/epidemiologia , Diarreia/virologia , Infecções por Enterovirus/virologia , Feminino , Genótipo , Doença de Mão, Pé e Boca/virologia , Herpangina/epidemiologia , Herpangina/virologia , Humanos , Masculino , PrevalênciaRESUMO
The envelope domain III (EDIII) of the dengue virus (DENV) has been confirmed to be involved in receptor binding. It is the target of specific neutralizing antibodies, and is considered to be a promising subunit dengue vaccine candidate. However, several recent studies have shown that antiEDIII antibodies contribute little to the neutralizing or enhancing ability of human DENVinfected serum. The present study involved an analysis of the neutralization and antibodydependent enhancement (ADE) activities of EDIIIreactive antibodies in human convalescent sera from patients with primary DENV1 infection and rabbit antiserum immunized with recombinant DENV1 EDIII protein. The results indicated that serum neutralization was not associated with titres of EDIIIbinding antibodies in the human DENV1infected sera. The depletion of antiEDIII antibodies from these serum samples revealed that the antiEDIII antibodies of the patients contributed little to neutralization and ADE. However, the EDIIIreactive antibodies from the rabbit antiserum exhibited protective abilities of neutralization at a high dilution (~1:50,000) and ADE at a low dilution (~1:5,000) for the homotypic DENV infection. Notably, the rabbit antiserum displayed ADE activity only at a dilution of 1:40 for the heterotypic virus infection, which suggests that EDIIIreactive antibodies may be safe in secondary infection with heterotypic viruses. These results suggest that DENV EDIII is not the predominant antigen of the DENV infection process; however, purified or recombinant DENV EDIII may be used as a subunit vaccine to provoke an effective and safe antibody response.