Article
Virologic and clinical features of primary infection with human parvovirus 4 in subjects with hemophilia: frequent transmission by virally inactivated clotting factor concentrates.
University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush, Midlothian, UK.
Transfusion (impact factor:
3.22).
11/2011;
52(7):1482-9.
DOI:10.1111/j.1537-2995.2011.03420.x
pp.1482-9
Source: PubMed
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Citations (0)
- Cited In (1)
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Article: Human parvovirus 4 in nasal and fecal specimens from children, ghana.
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ABSTRACT: Nonparenteral transmission might contribute to human parvovirus 4 (PARV4) infections in sub-Saharan Africa. PARV4 DNA was detected in 8 (0.83%) of 961 nasal samples and 5 (0.53%) of 943 fecal samples from 1,904 children in Ghana. Virus concentrations ≤6-7 log(10) copies/mL suggest respiratory or fecal-oral modes of PARV4 transmission.Emerging Infectious Diseases 10/2012; 18(10):1650-3. · 6.79 Impact Factor
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Keywords
clinical presentations
Clotting factors inactivated
common clinical presentations
Development Study cohort
discovered parvovirus prevalent
hemophilia
Hemophilia Growth
human immunodeficiency virus positive
Human parvovirus 4
Ig)M responses
injecting drug users
intermediate time points
parenteral exposure
plasma-derived blood products
potential ongoing transmission
subjects seroconverting
transfusion-transmissible agent
transient IgM responses
viral inactivation
virally inactivated clotting factors