Parainfluenza virus infections in the Cirencester Survey: Seasonal and other characteristics
- 1 August 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Epidemiology and Infection
- Vol. 87 (3) , 393-406
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022172400069631
Abstract
Summary: Parainfluenza viruses were isolated 165 times during 14 years surveillance of the illnesses of a general practice population of around 3700. Type 1 isolations numbered 57, type 2 isolations 22 and type 3 isolations 86, representing annual rates of 33, 13 and 50 infections respectively per 10000 of population. Type 4 parainfluenza virus was not isolated. Three major classes of illness gave the following rates: sore throats (Throats) nine, acute febrile respiratory diseases (FRD) 23, acute non-febrile respiratory diseases (non-FRD) 71. The illnesses caused by the three types isolated were similar. Type 1 infections were most abundant in November and type 2 infections in December, and only 11.4 % of these types were isolated in the warm semester April through September. Type 3 infections were seasonally bi-modal, with a winter peak in January and an even greater prevalence (66% of the total) in the warm semester. Type 3 infections in the warmer months and in the later years of the Survey were usually more severe. Type 3 virus may therefore be heterogeneous, one subtype possessing and the other lacking the genetic mechanism of ‘cold-season’ prevalence. Geographical discontinuity between summer and winter isolations strengthens the case for the existence of the two subtypes of type 3 parainfluenza virus.Type 3 infections caused the majority of the infections in very young infants. Type 2 infections were widely distributed at all ages. Females were attacked more often than males: type 1, 68.4%; type 2,636%; type 3, 53.5%. Type 3 infections in males outnumbered those in females up to 60 years of age, whereas female predominance became apparent in types 1 and 2 before 10 years of age.All types were widely and sparsely distributed, areas of prevalence changing from year to year. Recurrences occurred only twice, both with type 3 infections. Six persons suffered both a type 1 and a type 3 infection, and one person suffered both a type 2 and a type 3 infection.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Streptococcus pyogenes in the throat: a study in a small population, 1962–1975Epidemiology and Infection, 1981
- The role of season in the epidemiology of influenzaEpidemiology and Infection, 1981
- Persistent parainfluenza virus shedding during isolation at the South PoleNature, 1981
- SEROLOGIC EVIDENCE FOR PARAINFLUENZAVIRUS INFECTION DURING ISOLATION AT SOUTH POLE STATION, ANTARCTICAAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1980
- Epidemic mechanisms of Type A influenzaEpidemiology and Infection, 1979
- Influenza A2 neuraminidases and their changes during persistance of viruses in tissue cultures.1975
- Persistent Infection of Continuous Line of Pig Kidney Cells with a Variant of the WSN Strain of Influenza A0 VirusExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1972