Recovery of hepatitis A virus from a water supply responsible for a common source outbreak of hepatitis A
A.B. Bloch,
S.L. Stramer,
J.D. Smith,
H.S. Margolis,
H.A. Fields,
T.W. McKinley,
C.P. Gerba,
J.E. Maynard and
R.K. Sikes
American Journal of Public Health, 1990, vol. 80, issue 4, 428-430
Abstract:
An outbreak of hepatitis A occurred in a north Georgia trailer park served by a private well. Of 18 residents who were serosusceptible to hepatitis A virus (HAV), 16 (89%) developed hepatitis A. Well water samples were collected 3 months after illness onset in the index case and 28 days after illness onset in the last trailer park resident. Hepatitis A virus antigen (HAVAg) was detected in the samples by enzyme immunoassay from three of the five cell lines following two 30-day passages and from a fourth cell line following a third passage of 21 days.
Date: 1990
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:aph:ajpbhl:1990:80:4:428-430_1
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