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Neonatal Rotavirus Infections

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1991
Rotavirus (RV) infections in newborns differ from those in older infants; the majority of RV infections that occur in neonates are mild or asymptomatic. Generally, fewer than one-third of RV-infected neonates have diarrhea, although rates have reached 77% in some hospital nursery populations. Cases with severe diarrhea, necrotizing enterocolitis, bowel
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Systemic rotavirus infection

Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy, 2007
A new paradigm of rotavirus disease is emerging and rotavirus infection is no longer considered to be localized and confined to the GI tract. New evidence indicates that rotavirus infection is systemic. Viral antigen and infectious virus frequently enter the circulation in both children and animal model systems.
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Rotavirus Infections

Medizinische Monatsschrift fur Pharmazeuten, 2011
Rotaviruses are genetically highly variable, non-enveloped viruses with a double-stranded, segmented ribonucleic acid genome. They are a major cause of gastroenteritis worldwide. In children aged less than 5 years, they are the most frequent agent of severe acute diarrheal illnesses.
Juana Angel   +2 more
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[Rotavirus infection].

Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine, 2013
Rotavirus is one of the universal viruses that causes diarrhea(acute gastroenteritis) in the worldwide, and the infections are sporadically accompanied with critical illness. Ten percent of affected individuals are admitted to hospitals. The complications are commonly serious dehydration, several diseases of central nervous system, sepsis and postrenal
Hisashi, Kawashima   +2 more
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Rotavirus Infection

Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 2012
S. Michael Marcy, Susan Partridge
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