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Volume 23, Number 2—February 2017
Dispatch

Persistent Infections with Diverse Co-Circulating Astroviruses in Pediatric Oncology Patients, Memphis, Tennessee, USA

Valerie Cortez, Pamela Freiden, Zhengming Gu, Elisabeth Adderson, Randall Hayden, and Stacey Schultz-CherryComments to Author 
Author affiliations: St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA

Main Article

Figure 1

Enteric virus infections identified from remnant fecal samples from pediatric patients with cancer, Memphis, Tennessee, USA, 2008. The percentage of samples and patients testing positive for human astrovirus was higher than the percentages testing positive for either norovirus or sapovirus. *Due to limited sample availability, 31 samples could not be tested for sapovirus.

Figure 1. Enteric virus infections identified from remnant fecal samples from pediatric patients with cancer, Memphis, Tennessee, USA, 2008. The percentage of samples and patients testing positive for human astrovirus was higher than the percentages testing positive for either norovirus or sapovirus. *Due to limited sample availability, 31 samples could not be tested for sapovirus.

Main Article

Page created: January 17, 2017
Page updated: January 17, 2017
Page reviewed: January 17, 2017
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