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Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Human Parvovirus B19 Infection in an Urban Area in Brazil (Niterói City Area, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
Solange Artimos de Oliveira; Luiz Antonio Bastos Camacho; Antonio Carlos de Medeiros Pereira; Tereza Filomena Faillace; Sérgio Setúbal & Jussara Pereira do Nascimento
Abstract
This study was designed to analyse the clinical and epidemiological data from
human parvovirus B19 cases in a six-year study of rash diseases conduct in an
urban area in Brazil (Niterói city area, State of Rio de Janeiro). A total
of 673 patients with acute rash diseases were seen at two primary health care
units and at a general hospital. A clotted blood sample was collected from all
subjects at the time of consultation. Forty-nine per cent (330 cases) of the patients
were negative for dengue, rubella and measles IgM or for low avidity IgG to HHV-6.
Of these 330, 105 (31.8%) were identified as IgM positive to parvovirus B19 by
using an antibody capture EIA. During the study period, three distinct peaks of
parvovirus infection were detected, suggesting that the disease appears to cycle
in approximately 4-5 years. B19 infection was characterized by variable combinations
of fever, flu-like symptoms, arthropathy, and gastrointestinal symptoms. Frequency
of fever and arthropathy was substantially higher in adults, 75% [χ2
(1 D.F.) = 11.39, p = 0.0007] and 62.5% [χ2 (1 D.F.) = 29.89,
p = 0.0000], respectively. "Slapped-cheek" appearance and reticular
or lace-like rash were seen in only 30.1% of the children. No adult presented
this typical rash. The lack of the typical rash pattern in a large proportion
of parvovirus B19 and the similarity of clinical manifestations to other rash
diseases, specially to rubella, highlight the difficulty of diagnosing B19 infection
on clinical grounds alone.
Keywords
human parvovirus B19 - diagnosis - IgM - epidemiology - clinical features - Niterói, Rio de Janeiro - Brazil
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