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Volume 10, Number 2—February 2004
THEME ISSUE
2004 SARS Edition
Laboratory Study

Detection of SARS Coronavirus in Patients with Suspected SARS

Kwok H. Chan*, Leo L.L.M. Poon†, V.C.C. Cheng*, Yi Guan†, I.F.N. Hung*, Joseph S.M. Peiris‡Comments to Author , Loretta Y.C. Yam§, Wing H. Seto*, Kwok Y. Yuen†, and Joseph S. Malik Peiris†Comments to Author 
Author affiliations: *Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, People’s Republic of China (SAR); †University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR; ‡Hospital Authority Head Office, Hong Kong SAR; §Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong SAR

Main Article

Table 4

RT-PCR for diagnosis of SARS-CoV in the first 5 days of illness in patients with serologically confirmed SARS-CoV infectiona

Specimens evaluated Positive/tested (%)
Nasopharyngeal aspirate 29/98 (29.6)
Swabs (throat, nose) 15/53 (28.3)
Sputum 5/9 (55.6)
Stool 5/25 (20.0)
Urine 0/15 (0.0)

aSARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome; SARS-CoV, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus; RT-PCR, reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction.

Main Article

Page created: January 25, 2011
Page updated: January 25, 2011
Page reviewed: January 25, 2011
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