Results 171 to 180 of about 9,456 (212)
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Fatal Echovirus Type 11 Infections
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1981Two infants with fatal echovirus type 11 infections are described. Disseminated intravascular coagulation developed in both patients, and at postmortem examination, diffuse hemorrhagic necrosis of multiple organ systems was evident, most strikingly in the liver.
N, Halfon, S A, Spector
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Fatal Outcome of Echovirus 7 Infection
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1989A 9-month-old boy died of a disseminated echovirus 7 (E7) infection with virus being cultured from his liver and spleen. His hepatic failure was complicated by candidiasis and marrow hypoplasia and aggravated by a possible immune deficiency.
D O, Ho-Yen +4 more
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Infectivity of type 4 echovirus-antibody complex
Virology, 1965Abstract The prototype 4 echovirus (Pesaseek) is not neutralized by concentrations of homologous scrum that readily neutralize the related DuToit strain. Neutralizing antibody-combining tests, using either inactivated or live virus preparations, showed that antibody was bound as firmly to the Pesaseek as to the DuToit strain.
C, WALLIS, J L, MELNICK
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Echovirus 3 Infection Associated With Anicteric Hepatitis
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1982Echovirus type 3 has been associated with a variety of clinical syndromes, including aseptic meningitis, upper respiratory tract infection, exanthem, paralysis, myocarditis, pericarditis, Reye's syndrome, and severe neonatal infection. 1 This article describes a young infant with suspected sepsis who had anicteric hepatitis during an echovirus 3 ...
R J, Leggiadro +2 more
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Epidemiological Features of Type 22 Echovirus Infection
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1993During a 25-year observation period, isolates of type 22 echovirus were obtained from 109 patients. 92% of the patients were < 2 years old. Echovirus type 22 was isolated with peaks both during late summer and autumn, as enterovirus infections, and during the winter months and early spring, as respiratory viruses.
A, Ehrnst, M, Eriksson
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Neonatal sepsis due to echovirus 18 infection
jpme, 1997Clinical manifestations of neonatal echovirus type 18 infections include a nonspecific febrile illness, diarrhea, and meningitis with or without exanthem. We report a successful outcome in a case of neonatal sepsis with shock caused by echovirus type 18, a complication not previously associated with this serotype.
S S, Shah, P G, Gallagher
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Ventricular tachycardia associated with echovirus infection.
JAMA, 1970A 16-year-old boy developed ventricular tachycardia during the course of febrile upper-respiratory tract infection. The arrhythmia was treated with cardioversion, and the patient recovered. The positive etiologic feature identified was an echovirus 4, which may have produced a myocarditis that would acount for the arrhythmia.
W F, Meehan, C A, Bertrand
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Echovirus Type 4 Infections in Scotland, 1971–72
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1975An outbreak of infection due to echovirus 4 in Scotland involving 194 cases during 1971-72 is described. Clinical and epidemiological information was obtained and analysed for 181 patients, of whom 149 (82%) developed aseptic meningitis. The majority of cases were older children (39%) and young adults (40%), although the highest attack rate was in ...
J C, Sharp, E J, Bell
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Disseminated echovirus infection after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
Pathology, 1997Disseminated enteric human cytopathogenic orphan (echo) virus infection after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation has been reported once previously: a patient developed a fatal infection with the virus being isolated from brain, lung and heart. We report a second case of disseminated echovirus infection in which virus was isolated from the stomach ...
A P, Schwarer +5 more
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Severe Encephalitis Associated with Disseminated Echovirus 22 Infection
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1989Severe encephalitis associated with disseminated echovirus 22 infection occurred in a previously healthy 5-month-old boy. Echovirus 22 was diagnosed by a seroconversion both in serum and cerebrospinal fluid and by isolation of the virus from several stool samples. The child damaged severely and at the age of 8 1/2 months infantile spasms developed.
M, Koskiniemi, R, Paetau, K, Linnavuori
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