1969
DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a121048
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Rhino Virus Infections of Children in Hospital; Isolation of Three Possibly New Rhinovirus Serotypes1

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Cited by 21 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…HEV, human enterovirus; EV, echovirus; CV, coxsackievirus; HPV, human poliovirus. (Phillips et al, 1968) URT illness 7,9,13,14,17,56,64 1968 Children (Read et al, 1997) Recurrent asthma 13,29,32,48,49,81 1997 Adult (Military) (Bloom et al, 1963) URT illness 1A, 1B, 2 1963 Adult (Outpatients) (Suzuki et al, 2007) PVOD 40,75,78,80 2007 Adult (Military) (Rosenbaum et al, 1971) Common cold 1A, 2, 38, 7, 64, SD-7407 1971 Adult (Office workers) ARTI 4,9,10,12-14,16,24,35,39 1966 Adult (Lung transplant) (Kaiser et al, 2006) Graft dysfunction 3,27,64 2006 Adult (LTCF) (Louie et al, 2005) LRT illness 82 2005 Adult (Surgery) (Craighead et al, 1969) LRT illness 13 1969 Post-mortem (infants) (Urquhart and Grist, 1972;Urquhart and Stott, 1970SIDS 15, 22 1972 Adult (Isolation) (Holmes et al, 1976) LRT illness 2 1976 Children (isolation) (Stott et al, 1969) LRT illness 1B,10,16,18,19,32,33,38,40,49,51,65,78 1979 URT illness 12,23,50 Children (Krilov et al, 1986) LRT illness 1B,44,53,56,63,88 1986 Children Adults (Reilly et al, 1962) ARTI-Ab NEG for common viruses 10,12,13,18,19,23-25,27,28 1962 7-12,19-22,58 Ab, antibody; ARTI, acute respiratory tract infection; ILI, influenza-like illness; LRT, lower respiratory tract; LTCF, long term care facility; PVOD, post-viral olfactory disease; SD-7407, untyped HRV strain; SIDS, sudden infant death syndrome; URT, upper respiratory tract.…”
Section: Cell Culture Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…HEV, human enterovirus; EV, echovirus; CV, coxsackievirus; HPV, human poliovirus. (Phillips et al, 1968) URT illness 7,9,13,14,17,56,64 1968 Children (Read et al, 1997) Recurrent asthma 13,29,32,48,49,81 1997 Adult (Military) (Bloom et al, 1963) URT illness 1A, 1B, 2 1963 Adult (Outpatients) (Suzuki et al, 2007) PVOD 40,75,78,80 2007 Adult (Military) (Rosenbaum et al, 1971) Common cold 1A, 2, 38, 7, 64, SD-7407 1971 Adult (Office workers) ARTI 4,9,10,12-14,16,24,35,39 1966 Adult (Lung transplant) (Kaiser et al, 2006) Graft dysfunction 3,27,64 2006 Adult (LTCF) (Louie et al, 2005) LRT illness 82 2005 Adult (Surgery) (Craighead et al, 1969) LRT illness 13 1969 Post-mortem (infants) (Urquhart and Grist, 1972;Urquhart and Stott, 1970SIDS 15, 22 1972 Adult (Isolation) (Holmes et al, 1976) LRT illness 2 1976 Children (isolation) (Stott et al, 1969) LRT illness 1B,10,16,18,19,32,33,38,40,49,51,65,78 1979 URT illness 12,23,50 Children (Krilov et al, 1986) LRT illness 1B,44,53,56,63,88 1986 Children Adults (Reilly et al, 1962) ARTI-Ab NEG for common viruses 10,12,13,18,19,23-25,27,28 1962 7-12,19-22,58 Ab, antibody; ARTI, acute respiratory tract infection; ILI, influenza-like illness; LRT, lower respiratory tract; LTCF, long term care facility; PVOD, post-viral olfactory disease; SD-7407, untyped HRV strain; SIDS, sudden infant death syndrome; URT, upper respiratory tract.…”
Section: Cell Culture Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Picornaviruses recognize a variety of receptors (Rossmann, 1994;Khan et al, 2008;Uncapher et al, Minor group HRV strains are underlined, major group are shown in bold. M (only found in HRV A; propensity for monkey cells) and H strains (located in both species; grew in human cell cultures) (Gwaltney and Jordan, 1964;Stott et al, 1969;Rosenbaum et al, 1971;Tyrrell and Parsons, 1960;Tyrrell and Bynoe, 1961;Ketler et al, 1962;Taylor-Robinson and Tyrrell, 1962;Cooney and Kenny, 1977;Bloom et al, 1963) are indicated with superscripts and generally correlate with receptor usage (Macnaughton, 1982). Assignment of some strains to this sub-classification may also have been influenced by the viral load in the inoculum (Douglas et al, 1966a;Hamre, 1967).…”
Section: The Rhinovirionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…When they are included in the PCR testing menu, HRVs raise the frequency of pathogen detection above one per sample [111]. Studies find that HRV strains are very frequent contributors to co-infections [112] and co-detections [113], sometimes presenting this in terms of their minor contributing role in serious respiratory disease [112,113]. More likely this reflects the insensitivity of old cell culture-based methods that simply failed to propagate many HRV strains and in the process created paradigms for the HRVs that reduced their profile for further study.…”
Section: Polymerase Chain Reactionmentioning
confidence: 99%