Infection with rotavirus, the commonest cause of gastro-enteritis in children, may lead to childhood diabetes. |
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And there's good evidence that they can reduce the duration of rotavirus diarrhoea and gastro-enteritis in infants. |
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I didn't know it was rotavirus, kids always get sick when they are young but this was the scariest experience I've ever been through with her. |
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Our study found that the child's rotavirus was often not the only case of gastroenteritis in the family. |
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These new-generation vaccines are not without risk and at least one, a tetravalent rotavirus vaccine, has been discontinued due to its association with bowel intussusception. |
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Various highly contagious viruses are to blame, but rotavirus is one of the most frequent causes. |
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Rotateq is a new vaccine to prevent rotavirus infection especially for children in daycare. |
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They called for trials of new candidate rotavirus vaccines as soon as possible. |
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The IRC also assessed eight new proposals for rotavirus vaccine in 2009, compared with just one the year before. |
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The present statement provides information concerning the clinical disease and rotavirus vaccines in Canada. |
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As a result, rotavirus gastroenteritis is responsible for greater morbidity than other common childhood diarrheal illnesses. |
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There are no interchangeability data, so whenever possible, the rotavirus vaccination series should be completed with the same product. |
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Cows can be vaccinated against rotavirus and the other organisms that cause scour, passing the protection on to their calves via colostrum and milk. |
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Thirty-seven samples were checked for three types of human adenovirus, as well as rotavirus, enterovirus and fecal coliforms. |
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They are pathogenic agents, bringing cholera, bacillary dysentery, salmonella, or the rotavirus. |
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Statement on the recommended use of pentavalent human-bovine reassortant rotavirus vaccine. |
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Because rotavirus gastroenteritis is not a nationally notifiable disease, the exact prevalence and associated disease burden are not known. |
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All stools collected should be tested for rotavirus antigen by means of a commercial enzyme immunoassay kit. |
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In 2006, the GAVI Alliance, for example, initiated support for vaccines against rotavirus and pneumococcus, to weaken the grip of some of the biggest child killers. |
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Viraemia is a common finding in immunocompetent children with rotavirus infection. |
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No deaths have been attributed to the two approved rotavirus vaccines. |
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Adherence to recommendations regarding the time of administration should be ensured because the safety of rotavirus vaccine administration outside of these recommendations is unknown. |
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One new vaccine targets rotavirus, which causes severe and often fatal diarrhea, and the second prevents pneumococcus, a major cause of pneumonia, meningitis, and sepsis. |
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In June 2009, WHO recommended that rotavirus vaccine be included in all national immunisation programmes, a decision based on clinical trials of vaccine efficacy in countries with high child mortality. |
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They include the norovirus, which causes winter vomiting, and rotavirus, which results in severe diarrhoea and kills thousands of children in developing countries. |
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It was due to this experience with RotaShield that new rotavirus vaccines required extremely large and carefully performed studies for the assessment of safety, particularly for the relatively rare event of intussusception. |
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Routine rotavirus vaccination is recommended for infants. |
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There are few recognized risk factors for severe rotavirus disease. |
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The CPS Infectious Diseases and Immunization Committee recently released a statement called Recommendations for the use of rotavirus vaccines in infants. |
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The incubation period of rotavirus infection is one to five days. |
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However, to provide the level and duration of protection against rotavirus gastroenteritis that was observed in the clinical studies, infants should receive all 3 doses. |
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However, immunity to rotavirus is believed to be polygenic and probably involves antigens in addition to G and P antigens. |
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The rotavirus infection rates were based on data from an infectivity trial in adults, but rotavirus primarily affects children. |
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Similarly to other studies, we did not consider an increased risk for intussusception or any other adverse events after rotavirus vaccination. |
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One of the main causes of diarrhoea is rotavirus, so the development, four years ago, of a vaccine against this virus might have been thought good news for the poor world. |
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In 1999, for instance, doctors reported cases of intussusception, a sometimes deadly intestinal disorder, in a few infants given a new vaccine against rotavirus. |
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The U. S. Centers for Disease Control estimates that prior to the introduction of a rotavirus vaccine in 2006, every child in the country had been infected by age five. |
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The study claimed that rotavirus is a leading cause of severe dehydration and diarrhoea in infants across the world which must be prevented through timely vaccination. |
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More recently, such intergenogroup reassortant strains were identified in Thailand, implying the ongoing spread of unusual rotavirus strains in Asia. |
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Enteric viruses primarily include the diarrhea-causing Rotavirus, Norwalk virus, and other Calciviruses. |
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Rotavirus is responsible for up to half of all scours in calves. |
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Coli, Enterovirus, Rhinovirus, Rotavirus, Salmonella, Shigella, Vibrio and Yersinia. |
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