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Title: Detection of picobirnavirus in HIV-infected patients with diarrhea in Argentina. Author: Giordano MO, Martinez LC, Rinaldi D, Gúinard S, Naretto E, Casero R, Yacci MR, Depetris AR, Medeot SI, Nates SV. Journal: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Hum Retrovirol; 1998 Aug 01; 18(4):380-3. PubMed ID: 9704944. Abstract: Diarrhea due to enteric pathogens is an important complication of advanced HIV infection. Picobirnaviruses are agents recently linked with human enteritis. In total, 197 fecal samples collected from HIV-infected and noninfected patients with and without diarrhea were investigated for the presence of rotavirus and picobirnavirus by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Picobirnavirus was detected in 8.8% of 57 HIV-infected patients with diarrhea, but it was detected in neither those without diarrhea (p<.018) nor in the group of subjects uninfected with HIV (p<.022). All genomic electropherotypes of picobirnavirus strains had a wide pattern. Picobirnavirus genome segments varied in size between 2.4 and 2.7 and 1.6 and 1.9 kbp for the slow and fast migrating bands, respectively. Rotaviruses were not detected in any of the clinical groups studied. Two methods for the extraction of nucleic acid-phenol/chloroform and guanidinium thiocynate (GTC)/silica-were compared. Detection of picobirnavirus by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was 2.5 times more sensitive following guanidinium thiocynate RNA extraction. This investigation offers preliminary results about the circulation of picobirnavirus in HIV-infected patients in Córdoba, Argentina. In 1988, a new group of viruses containing a bisegmented double-stranded RNA genome was described and named "picobirnavirus" (PBV). Viruses with similar properties have subsequently been found in fecal specimens collected from HIV-infected and noninfected patients with gastrointestinal symptoms in several countries. The present study used polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) to examine fecal specimens from 197 HIV infected and noninfected adults, with and without diarrhea, from Cordoba, Argentina, for rotavirus and PBV. PBVs were detected in the stools of 5 HIV-infected patients with diarrhea (8.8%), but in none of the other subgroups (HIV-positive patients without diarrhea, HIV-negative patients with diarrhea, HIV-negative patients without diarrhea). 3 of the 5 stool samples positive for PBV were also positive for intestinal parasites (mixed infection), but these parasites were found with equal frequency in HIV-infected patients without diarrhea. Rotaviruses were not detected in any of the subgroups. PBV genome segments varied in size between 2.4-2.7 and 1.6-1.9 kbp for the slow and fast migrating bands, respectively. PBV detection by the PAGE technique was 2.5 times more sensitive after guanidinium thiocyanate RNA extraction. Further research is required to determine the duration of excretion of PBVs in HIV-infected patients with diarrhea and understand the immune response to infection.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]