Abstract

A retrospective viral load study was performed on clinical specimens from 154 patients with laboratory-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS); the specimens were prospectively collected during patients' illness. Viral load in nasopharyngeal aspirates (n = 142) from day 10 to day 15 after onset of symptoms was associated with oxygen desaturation, mechanical ventilation, diarrhea, hepatic dysfunction, and death. Serum viral load (n = 53) was associated with oxygen desaturation, mechanical ventilation, and death. Stool viral load (n = 94) was associated with diarrhea, and urine viral load (n = 111) was associated with abnormal urinalysis results. Viral replications at different sites are important in the pathogenesis of clinical and laboratory abnormalities of SARS.

Keywords

Viral loadUrinalysisMechanical ventilationMedicineDiarrheaRespiratory systemInternal medicineImmunologyGastroenterologyUrineVirus

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Publication Info

Year
2004
Type
article
Volume
10
Issue
9
Pages
1550-1557
Citations
289
Access
Closed

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Ivan Fan‐Ngai Hung, Vincent Chi‐Chung Cheng, Alan Wu et al. (2004). Viral Loads in Clinical Specimens and SARS Manifestations. Emerging infectious diseases , 10 (9) , 1550-1557. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1009.040058

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DOI
10.3201/eid1009.040058