Human metapneumovirus (hMPV) has been recently discovered as an etiological agent of acute respiratory infections. Our purpose was to asses the virological and clinical features of children with respiratory infections caused by hMPV. We examined 658 nasopharyngeal swab samples obtained from 637 children with respiratory infections for hMPV by using reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). A total of 268 samples from 637 children were inoculated onto tertiary monkey kidney cells. A total of 36 serum samples (26 in the acute phase and 10 in the convalescent phase) from the 26 hMPV-positive children were tested for immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgM antibodies to hMPV by using an indirect immunofluorescence assay. We detected hMPV in 57 (8.9%) of the 637 samples by using RT-PCR and isolated 7 (2.6%) hMPV strains of the 268 samples in cell cultures. A total of 12 (46.2%) of 26 hMPV-positive children were suspected to have primary infection with hMPV as determined by an indirect immunofluorescence assay. The infected children were diagnosed as having wheezy bronchitis (36.8%), upper respiratory tract infection (26.3%), bronchitis (22.8%), and pneumonia (14.0%). We showed that two hMPV groups were circulating in different regions during the same period and that reinfection with hMPV frequently occurs in childhood. The RT-PCR test is the most sensitive test for detection of hMPV, and a serological test may be useful to differentiate between primary infection and reinfection with hMPV.
Viral culture and real-time PCR assays were used together to identify causative pathogens in 83% of febrile outpatient children with RTI; specific viruses were associated with particular clinical diagnoses.
Granulopoiesis was investigated in five patients with congenital neutropenia (CN) (one Kostmann type, four benign forms). In semisolid agar culture, the marrow cells of all five patients produced normal numbers of CFU-c (colony-forming unit-culture). The size and classification of colonies were normal. In suspension culture in vitro with exogenous colony-stimulating factor (CSF) generated from omental-conditioned medium (OMCM), the myeloid precursors of all patients could proliferate and differentiate into normal polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs). But in the absence of exogenous CSF, myeloid precursors of the patient with Kostmann-type CN did not proliferate or differentiate into PMNs at all. In the four patients with benign neutropenia, however, PMNs were found even without exogenous CSF similar to normal individuals. These results suggest that patients with CN may have normal granulopoietic stem cells with normal proliferative and differentiating capacity in response to exogenous CSF. When a small amount of normal human serum was added to normal marrow cultures stimulated by exogenous CSF, the colony growth increased in a superadditive manner. The enhancing activity of serum from neutropenic patients differed from that of normal serum. Especially, the addition of serum from the patient with Kostmann type CN to normal marrow cultures did not show this enhancement effect. The sera of patients with benign neutropenia had less enhancement effect than did normal control serum. These findings might be interpreted as showing an imbalance between CSF enhancer and inhibitors in the patients' serum.
SUMMARY: Previously, we conducted a 3-year prospective study to determine the viral causes of acute respiratory tract infections among 495 febrile pediatric outpatients. We collected 495 nasopharyngeal aspirate specimens, and used both real-time PCR assays and viral culture to test each for respiratory viruses other than coronavirus. Here, we used real-time PCR to test the 495 archival specimens for four human coronavirus strains. We identified 15 coronavirus-positive specimens: eight with OC43, 5 with NL63, 2 with HKU1, and none with 229E. Of the 15 children (5 boys) infected with human coronavirus, the mean age was 3.5 years, and the age range was 1.1 to 5.8 years; one child was diagnosed with lower respiratory infection; the other 14 were diagnosed with upper respiratory infection. Of these 15 patients, none were hospitalized, 5 were infected with coronavirus alone, 8 were co-infected with another virus, and 2 were co-infected with 2 other viruses. The multi-virus infections involved 6 adenoviruses, 3 respiratory syncytial viruses, 2 parainfluenza viruses, and 1 rhinovirus. In conclusion, the burden of human coronaviruses was relatively light among this cohort of 495 pediatric outpatients, and the incidence of these infections was low.
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