AN “OUTBREAK” OF JUVENILE DIABETES MELLITUS: CONSIDERATION OF A VIRAL ETIOLOGY
- 1 October 1974
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in American Journal of Epidemiology
- Vol. 100 (4) , 277-287
- https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a112036
Abstract
Huff. J. C., J. C. Hierholzer (Respiratory Virology Section, Center for Disease Control. Atlanta, Ga. 30333) and W. A. Farris. An “outbreak” of juvenile diabetes mellitus: consideration of a viral etiology. Am J Epidemiol 100:277–287. 1974.—Nine of twelve cases of juvenile diabetes mellitus, representing an unusual geographic and temporal cluster, were investigated for evidence that a specific viral infection might be etiologically related to their occurrence. Eight diabetics had experienced recent “viral-like” illnesses, predominantly repiratory, but these illnesses bore no uniform temporal relation to their onsets of diabetes. Diabetics demonstrated no serologic evidence of a recent viral illness common to all. Elevated titers to only one virus, coxsackie B-3, were more prevalent in diabetics than in controls (33% vs. 6%), but geometric mean titers of diabetics to a panel of 26 common viral antigens were similar to those of controls. These data neither support nor negate the hypothesis that infection with a specific virus precipitates juvenile diabetes mellitus.Keywords
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