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Pediatric Annals, 2022
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a ubiquitous virus and infects nearly every child before their second birthday. Causing a wide array of symptoms, ranging from a mild cold to respiratory failure and even death, it is an illness that every general pediatrician will encounter on a yearly basis.
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Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a ubiquitous virus and infects nearly every child before their second birthday. Causing a wide array of symptoms, ranging from a mild cold to respiratory failure and even death, it is an illness that every general pediatrician will encounter on a yearly basis.
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Minerva Pediatrica, 2018
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common cause of infant hospitalization and causes a high burden of disease in the elderly, too. This enveloped negative-stranded RNA virus has been recently reclassified in the Pneumoviridae family. Infections of the respiratory cells happens when the two major surface glycoproteins, G and F, take contact ...
Pierangeli, Alessandra +2 more
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Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common cause of infant hospitalization and causes a high burden of disease in the elderly, too. This enveloped negative-stranded RNA virus has been recently reclassified in the Pneumoviridae family. Infections of the respiratory cells happens when the two major surface glycoproteins, G and F, take contact ...
Pierangeli, Alessandra +2 more
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Immunofluorescence with respiratory syncytial virus
Virology, 1962Abstract The growth of respiratory syncytial (RS) virus in tissue cultures of HEp-2 cells at a low multiplicity of infection has been studied by means of several staining procedures including immunofluorescence, as well as by serial infectivity titrations.
A L, KISCH, K M, JOHNSON, R M, CHANOCK
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Respiratory syncytial virus proteins
Virology, 1976Abstract Respiratory syncytial (RS) virus grown in BS-C-1 cells was concentrated from the fluid of infected cultures by precipitation with polyethylene glycol (PEG) and banded by isopycnic centrifugation in sucrose or metrizamide density gradients. At least six virus-specified polypeptide bands, one of which was heterogeneous, could be resolved by ...
W H, Wunner, C R, Pringle
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Respiratory Syncytial Virus and Parainfluenza Virus
New England Journal of Medicine, 2001Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), originally recovered from a colony of chimpanzees with coryza and designated chimpanzee coryza agent,1,2 and human parainfluenza virus types 1, 2, 3, and 4 have been known primarily as respiratory pathogens in young children. They are now recognized as important pathogens in adults as well.
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Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 1997Since the first report of BRSV in the 1970s, the understanding of this agent and its respective disease has increased dramatically. Current evidence supports a major role for this virus in bovine respiratory disease. Advances in diagnostics have increased the ability to demonstrate this virus in field outbreaks of respiratory disease.
J C, Baker, J A, Ellis, E G, Clark
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Respiratory syncytial virus infection
The Lancet, 1999Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), long recognised as the major viral pathogen of the lower respiratory tract of infants, has also been implicated in severe lung disease in adults, especially the elderly. This fact, and the demonstration that passive prophylaxis with either polyclonal or monoclonal antibody to RSV prevents severe lung disease in high ...
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Respiratory virus infections and performance
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1990Abstract Minor illnesses, such as colds and influenza, are frequent, widespread and a major cause of absenteeism from work and education. Yet the clinical symptoms of such illnesses may not be so great as to stop people from working or from carrying out everyday activities.
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Fever in Respiratory Virus Infections
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1986The case records of 258 children with adenovirus; influenza A or B virus; parainfluenza 1, 2, or 3 virus; or respiratory syncytial virus infections were studied retrospectively with special attention to the degree and duration of fever. A temperature of 39.0 degrees C or higher was most frequently recorded in adenovirus, influenza A, and influenza B ...
A, Putto, O, Ruuskanen, O, Meurman
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Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 2010Bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV) is a major cause of respiratory disease and a major contributor to the bovine respiratory disease (BRD) complex. BRSV infects the upper and lower respiratory tract and is shed in nasal secretions. The close relatedness of BRSV to human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) has allowed researchers to use BRSV and ...
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