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Title: Epidemiological patterns of rotaviruses causing severe gastroenteritis in young children throughout Australia from 1993 to 1996. Author: Bishop RF, Masendycz PJ, Bugg HC, Carlin JB, Barnes GL. Journal: J Clin Microbiol; 2001 Mar; 39(3):1085-91. PubMed ID: 11230431. Abstract: Rotavirus strains that caused severe diarrhea in 4,634 (2,533 male) children aged less than 5 years and admitted to major hospitals in eight centers throughout Australia from 1993 to 1996 were subject to antigenic and genetic analyses. The G serotypes of rotaviruses were identified in 81.9% (3,793 of 4,634) children. They included 67.8% (from 3,143 children) serotype G1 isolates (containing 46 electropherotypes), 11.5% (from 531 children) serotype G2 isolates (27 electropherotypes), 0.8% (from 39 children) serotype G3 isolates (8 electropherotypes), and 1.6% (from 76 children) serotype G4 isolates (9 electropherotypes). G6 (two strains) and G8 (two strains) isolates were identified during the same period. G1 serotypes were predominant in all centers, with intermittent epidemics of G2 serotypes and sporadic detection of G3 and G4 strains. With the exception of two strains (typed as G1P2A[6] and G2P2A[6]) all serotype G1, G3, and G4 strains were P1A[8] and all serotype G2 strains were P1B[4]. Two contrasting epidemiological patterns were identified. In all temperate climates rotavirus incidence peaked during the colder months. The genetic complexity of strains (as judged by electropherotype) was greatest in centers with large populations. Identical electropherotypes appeared each winter in more than one center, apparently indicating the spread of some strains both from west to east and from east to west. Centers caring for children in small aboriginal communities showed unpredictable rotavirus peaks unrelated to climate, with widespread dissemination of a few rotavirus strains over distances of more than 1,000 km. Data from continued comprehensive etiological studies of genetic and antigenic variations in rotaviruses that cause severe disease in young children will serve as baseline data for the study of the effect of vaccination on the incidence of severe rotavirus disease and on the emergence of new strains.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]