Adenoviruses usually cause asymptomatic or mild infection, but occasionally they produce various severe syndromes including neurological disorders. Association of adenovirus infection with acute flaccid paralysis has been investigated. Shedding of adenovirus with feces was detected in 1.05% of young children (mostly infants) with acute flaccid paralysis syndrome versus 0.42% in healthy contact children (P < 0.01). However, 85% of adenoviruses in the pediatric AFP patients belonged to HAdV-C species, which does not have a known neuropathogenic potential. Also, 40% of adenoviruses were isolated from patients with consequently established diagnosis of traumatic neuritis at the discharge, which was not compatible with virus ethology of neurological lesions. Higher adenovirus prevalence in young neurological patients could be affected by an underlying immune deficiency or by congestion in children's hospitals. Indeed, among 70 patients (40 infants, 30 adults) with primary immune deficiencies, asymptomatic shedding of adenoviruses was found in 10-17%; in one adult patient a mixture of HAdV-C2 and HAdV-D15 persisted for several months. Adenoviruses also could be detected in feces of 12% and 57% of healthy young children from two orphanages, respectively. A significant fraction of samples in these groups contained adenovirus mixtures. Therefore, immune deficiencies and congested groups in children's facilities (orphanages and hospitals) could affect significantly the prevalence of adenovirus shedding. The role of adenoviruses in AFP requires further study.
Significantly divergent polioviruses (VDPV) derived from the oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) from Sabin strains, like wild polioviruses, are capable of prolonged transmission and neuropathology. This is mainly shown for VDPV type 2. Here we describe a molecular-epidemiological investigation of a case of VDPV type 3 circulation leading to paralytic poliomyelitis in a child in an orphanage, where OPV has not been used. Samples of feces and blood serum from the patient and 52 contacts from the same orphanage were collected twice and investigated. The complete genome sequencing was performed for five polioviruses isolated from the patient and three contact children. The level of divergence of the genomes of the isolates corresponded to approximately 9–10 months of evolution. The presence of 61 common substitutions in all isolates indicated a common intermediate progenitor. The possibility of VDPV3 transmission from the excretor to susceptible recipients (unvaccinated against polio or vaccinated with inactivated poliovirus vaccine, IPV) with subsequent circulation in a closed children’s group was demonstrated. The study of the blood sera of orphanage residents at least twice vaccinated with IPV revealed the absence of neutralizing antibodies against at least two poliovirus serotypes in almost 20% of children. Therefore, a complete rejection of OPV vaccination can lead to a critical decrease in collective immunity level. The development of new poliovirus vaccines that create mucosal immunity for the adequate replacement of OPV from Sabin strains is necessary.
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