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New respiratory virus found
in U.S. kids
By Martin F. Downs
Last Updated:
2003-06-02 9:51:26 -0400 (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK
(Reuters Health) - A new virus continues to show up
wherever investigators look for it -- and it isn't SARS.
It's the human metapneumovirus (hMPV), which has now
been discovered in American children.
Researchers
at the Yale University School of Medicine found that 19
out of 296 New Haven, Connecticut, children who had
respiratory infections of unknown cause were infected
with hMPV. Symptoms included wheezing, cough and fever.
"I think this
virus probably accounts for a small but significant
portion of respiratory tract illness in children," study
author Dr. Jeffrey S. Kahn told Reuters Health.
The findings
appear in the latest issue of the journal Pediatrics.
In children,
15 to 34 percent of cases of pneumonia and a lung
infection called bronchiolitis have no known cause. The
most common causes are flu viruses, parainfluenza
viruses and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Samples
screened in the study were negative for these viruses.
"If you step
back and look at pneumonia in general, about 50 percent
of the time we can identify a cause," Kahn said.
"Obviously, in the other 50 percent we don't know what
causes it. So that suggests that there are unknown
pathogens out there."
Human
metapneumovirus came to light in 2001, when researchers
in the Netherlands identified the virus in children.
"When it was
first reported, everybody said, 'wow, that's very
interesting,' and everybody started going back to their
freezers where they kept samples, and started to probe
samples. Now it's been found in many countries," Kahn
said.
In March of
this year, researchers reported finding hMPV in adults
in Rochester, New York. That was the first indication
that it is circulating in the United States. It has also
been found in the UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, Finland,
and France.
The
implications of these discoveries are not yet fully
understood. "The disease caused by this virus is really
just beginning to be explored," Kahn said.
It's certain
that hMPV can make people sick enough to land them in
the hospital. But Kahn said that the severity of the
illness it causes may change from year to year. More
research will be needed to find out how the virus
behaves and the extent of its impact.
The existence
of hMPV may answer some nagging questions for
pediatricians. "We see otherwise healthy kids getting
very bad lung infections," Kahn said. It's possible that
hMPV interacts with other viruses to cause more serious
infections.
Before
scientists determined that a new kind of coronavirus
causes SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, they
thought that hMPV might play a role. Six out of eight
SARS patients in Canada had both hMPV and the
coronavirus, leading researchers to wonder if one of the
viruses worsened the effects of the other. Later, they
found that the coronavirus alone causes SARS.
Copyright 2002 Reuters.
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