Diarrhea in neonates, followed as a cohort, and their families was studied prospectively. The families were followed for an average of 16.3 months. Stool and serum specimens were obtained at least every three months. Stool specimens were examined for viruses by electron microscopy and cultured for enteropathogens, and serum specimens were tested for antibodies to rotavirus and Norwalk virus. During the study, 237 episodes of gastroenteritis were observed in 104 infants and their 62 siblings. Rotavirus, detected 82 times in 72 children, was by far the most common enteropathogen. It was associated with gastrointestinal symptoms in 72% (with diarrhea in 65%). Rotavirus diarrhea occurred mostly in winter months and was significantly more frequently associated with respiratory symptoms than were diarrheas with other etiologies. Rotavirus infection was uncommon in the first six months of life, but by two years of age, 62% of the infants had had at least one infection. Neither breast feeding nor the presence of antibody to rotavirus in cord blood appeared to be protective.
To study the epidemiologic and clinical features of rotavirus infections, we enrolled 98 families in a prospective study of diarrhea in households with newborn children. Families were seen at three-month intervals and whenever ill. The mean follow-up period was 16.4 months. Rotavirus infections were documented by electron microscopy of feces, indirect fluorescent-antibody assays in serum or both. The 43 infections identified in adults represented an attack rate of 0.17 per adult per year. Ninety-three per cent of these infections occurred from November through May. Seventeen adults had gastrointestinal symptoms, most often diarrhea (in 14) or abdominal cramps (in 11). Rotavirus infections occurred in 36 of 102 adults whose children had rotavirus infection, as compared with four of 86 without infected children (P less than 0.001). Serum rotavirus antibody did not correlate with a reduced risk of infection or symptomatic disease. Rotavirus is a mild but common infection in parents of young children.
The rate of isolation of Escherichia coli belonging to the traditional serotypes enteropathogenic for infants was studied prospectively in two groups. Group 1 consisted of children with diarrhea and of controls without gastrointestinal disease who were matched for age and inpatient or outpatient status. Group 2 consisted of families entered in a prospective study of rotavirus infections. In group 1 enteropathogenic Escherichia coli were found in 13 (6%) of 220 children younger than 12 months of age and in nine (6%) of 143 children 12--35 months of age, all of whom had diarrhea. Enteropathogenic E. coli were found in only one of an equal number of matched controls (P = 0.002 and 0.004, respectively). In group 2 enteropathogenic E. coli were present in seven (18%) of 38 specimens obtained during diarrheal episodes, as compared with five (1%) of 492 specimens obtained when there was no diarrhea (P less than 0.001). The enteropathogenic E. coli isolated were not enterotoxigenic. The most common serogroup was O111, but many different O:H serotypes were detected. Thus, the association of enteropathogenic E. coli with endemic diarrhea was significant, even though no enteropathogenic mechanism was apparent.
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