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Before Ruth Bishop's identification in Melbourne of human
rotavirus in 1973, paediatricians could offer only platitudes by way of
explanation when confronted with young children with acute diarrhoea.
Since then it has become clear that rotavirus is the most common cause
of gastroenteritis in children under 2 years of age living in either
developed or developing countries.1 Its pathogenic
mechanisms have been largely elucidated, mainly by studying an
analogous infection in piglets caused by transmissible gastroenteritis
agent.2 3 Rotavirus probably causes diarrhoea by
increasing the turnover of enterocytes along the villus axis, leading
to the population of blunted villi by immature cells that are incapable
of normal absorption, and are more crypt-like and secretory in
nature.4-6 Rotavirus can also reduce
sucrase-isomaltase expression in human enterocytes by blocking
sucrase-isomaltase transport to the apical membrane without apparent
cell destruction. Reduction in activity is correlated to rotavirus
induced alterations in the enterocyte cytoskeleton.7 There
is also a single unconfirmed report of elaboration of a secretagogue by
rotavirus: purified NSP4 (non-structural glycoprotein of rotavirus)
potentiates chloride secretion by a calcium dependent signalling
pathway.8
In some children a clinical episode indistinguishable from acute
gastroenteritis is followed by protracted diarrhoea, so called post-gastroenteritis syndrome. This is more likely to occur in developing countries, where pre-existing malnutrition and enteropathies may lead to protracted diarrhoea in 8-20% of children initially presenting with acute gastroenteritis.9 In developed
countries this happens in up to 5% of cases, and its causes are far
from clear.10 Secondary lactose intolerance may occur, and
many children exhibit an intolerance to cows' milk protein and often
several other proteins.10 11 Management is pragmatic, and
comprises mainly nutritional support. Most children in developed
countries survive, but in developing countries mortality is still
high.12
A recent report from the Melbourne group now suggests that persistent
rotavirus infection may play a greater role in post-gastroenteritis syndrome and protracted diarrhoea than previously
thought.13 Until now, rotavirus excretion was generally
thought to stop within 10 days of the onset of symptoms in most
children, and within 20 days of onset in all.14 15 Enzyme
immunoassay (EIA) is the technique commonly used for detection of
rotavirus in stool, but reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain
reaction (RT-PCR) is up to 25 times more sensitive than EIA in
detecting rotavirus in serially diluted faecal suspensions. It has both
higher sensitivity and specificity.16 17 Using an RT-PCR
technique, Bishop's group studied the duration of rotavirus excretion
in 37 children admitted to hospital with acute rotavirus
infection.13 Excretion ceased within 10 days in 17 children and within 20 days in 26 of the 37 children. However, extended
excretion between 25-57 days was seen in 11 children. Only one child
seemed to have been re-infected with rotavirus. In contrast, rotavirus
excretion estimated by EIA ranged from 4-29 days, and only 12 children
had detectable excretion between 10 and 29 days. Extended excretion of
rotavirus was significantly linked with intermittent antirotavirus IgA
coproantibody boosts. Most of these boosts were associated with
rotavirus excretion. Eight of the 11 children with extended rotavirus
excretion between 25 and 57 days developed mild diarrhoea and vomiting
associated with excretion or coproantibody boosts during the 100 days' surveillance.
It is clear that prolonged rotavirus excretion is not only a feature of
immunodeficency18 but is also seen in about one third of
immunocompetent young children. Intermittent mild diarrhoea seen in
significantly increased numbers of children excreting rotavirus for one
to two months could explain some cases of post-gastroenteritis syndrome. Moreover, children excreting rotavirus for prolonged periods
could become reservoirs of human rotavirus and contribute to its
survival between epidemics. As new diagnostic procedures indicate that
rotavirus infection may be the cause of protracted diarrhoea in some
children, who may have otherwise undetected infection, an effective
rotavirus vaccine becomes even more important.
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