Welcome to India's first Website with complete information on Infectious deseases, Vaccines, Immunisation and Immunoglobulins. + + + Become a registered member of the site and recieve latest balanced information from the world of Vaccines.

SAFETY

Rating for vaccineindia.org

Poll Manager

How Many Vaccination Centres maintain cold chain strictly?
 

Who's Online

We have 158 guests online

Statistics

Members : 1702
Content : 373
Web Links : 19
Content View Hits : 4077388
PDF Print E-mail

ROTA VIRUS DISEASE

 

Rota virus is the most common cause of severe diarrhea in infants and children

Responsible for 27,000 diarrheal deaths each year worldwide

Symptoms

  • Incubation period 1 – 3 days
  • Acute watery diarrhea – self-limiting, usually 2 – 7 days, possibly longer
  • Fever - first few days - can be high
  • Vomiting - first few days
  • G1 symptoms may last upto 2 – 3 weeks

             

Compared to other common causes of diarrhea – more severe with greater risk of dehydration & hospitalization

 

Rotavirus Strains

  • 7 different serogroups (A-G)
  • Only A-C cause human disease
  • Only A cause severe disease in children
  • Serotyping based on 2

            structural proteins (GVP7 & PVP4)

            – 11 possible “G” serotypes (1, 2, 3, 4, 9)

            – 11 possible “P” serotypes (4, 8)

  • Strains vary: By region and Over time
  • 5 serotypes (G1P8, G2P4, G3P8, G4P8, G9P8) cause 90% of all human infections.
  • G1P8 most prevalent globally.
  • No relation between strain and severity

 

Deaths due to rotavirus annually *

India : 122,270  World : 527,000 (4,75,000 – 5,80,000)

  • 29% of all deaths due to diarrhea globally.
  • 20% of all deaths in children <5 years of age from India are due to diarrhea.
  • 39.2% of all diarrhea-related hospital admissions among children aged <5 years in India (range from 35% in Mumbai to 53% in Trichy).
  • 23% of deaths due to rotavirus in world.

OPD visits >25 million

Hospitalization >2 million

*Umesh Parashar, et al Global Mortality Associated with Rotavirus among Children

 

Reinfection is common but symptoms will be less significant.

Transmission is Feco-oral, person-person, fomites. Clean water, hygiene unlikely to have substantial effect on virus transmission.

  • First infection usually does not lead to permanent immunity
  • Reinfection can occur at any age
  • Subsequent infections generally less severe

 

Most Common Types of Rotavirus Strains Found by the IRSN

G1 P[8]

22.10%

G2 P[4]

25.70%

G9 P[8]

8.50%

G12 P[4] 6[][8]

6.50%

 

International authorities (WHO, Institutes for Medicine, GAVI) highlight need for rotavirus vaccines

  • Disease not prevented by good sanitation & hygiene
  • Despite potential for ORS, IV fluids often needed for severe disease

Glass R et al. Lancet 2006;368:323-332

 

 

Comments   

 
Amber Volkart
-2 # age group of rota virusAmber Volkart 2011-09-10 14:39
Dear,
plea se inform the age-group of rota virus infection...

than ks and regards,
ambe r
Reply | Reply with quote | Quote
 
 
canavanqwc
0 # Continued on the shoulders of giants, ascendancy is relatively uncomplicatedcanavanqwc 2012-05-18 19:21
You are an pundit on this, please [url=[censored] :[censored][cen sored]www.cinae scort.com[censo red]shenzhen-es cort.html]shenz hen massage[[censor ed]url] avoid us to explain.
Reply | Reply with quote | Quote
 
 
dr.g.a.manjunath
0 # latest straindr.g.a.manjunath 2013-06-09 21:11
Can u plz inform me the latest strain prevailing in india ?
Reply | Reply with quote | Quote
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh