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ECHOVIRUS-17 INFECTIONS IN BRITAIN 1969-71

The Lancet, 1973
Abstract Echovirus 17 was isolated from the brain of a child who died of encephalitis and from several other patients in Devon between December, 1969 and February, 1971. This had previously been an unimportant enterovirus, but during these three years it spread throughout the United Kingdom and was isolated from 152 patients, 89 of whom had ...
R J, Hart, D L, Miller
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Perinatal Echovirus and Croup B Coxsackievirus infections

Clinics in Perinatology, 1988
Enteroviral infections late in pregnancy are common, especially during periods of high prevalence of community infection. Most of these infections, however, are not associated with significant maternal or neonatal disease. Conversely, as many as 65 per cent of women who give birth to infants with proven enteroviral infection have symptomatic disease ...
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Congenital Echovirus 11 Infection in a Neonate

Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 2023
Neonates infected with enterovirus in utero would be fulminant at birth or develop symptoms within a few days. Echovirus 11 causes life-threatening hepatic necrosis with coagulopathy and adrenal hemorrhagic necrosis. The prognosis depends on the enterovirus serotype and the absence of serotype-specific maternal antibodies at the time of delivery.
Tomohiro Hirade   +8 more
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RENAL MEDULLARY HÆMORRHAGE AND ECHOVIRUS INFECTION

The Lancet, 1980
J. Longworth-Krafft, P. Morgan-Capner
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