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Volume 23, Number 2—February 2017
Dispatch

Persistent Infections with Diverse Co-Circulating Astroviruses in Pediatric Oncology Patients, Memphis, Tennessee, USA

Valerie Cortez, Pamela Freiden, Zhengming Gu, Elisabeth Adderson, Randall Hayden, and Stacey Schultz-CherryComments to Author 
Author affiliations: St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA

Main Article

Figure 2

Co-circulating human astrovirus (HAstV) strains in pediatric patients with cancer in Memphis, Tennessee, USA. Six different HAstV genotypes were identified among the HAstV-positive fecal samples collected from pediatric patients in 2008 or in 2010–2011; more than one third of the viruses were noncanonical VA and MLB genotypes.

Figure 2. Co-circulating human astrovirus (HAstV) strains in pediatric patients with cancer in Memphis, Tennessee, USA. Six different HAstV genotypes were identified among the HAstV-positive fecal samples collected from pediatric patients in 2008 or in 2010–2011; more than one third of the viruses were noncanonical VA and MLB genotypes.

Main Article

Page created: January 17, 2017
Page updated: January 17, 2017
Page reviewed: January 17, 2017
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