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coxsackievirus

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Coxsackievirus

A large subgroup of the genus Enterovirus in the family Picornaviridae. The coxsackieviruses produce various human illnesses, including aseptic meningitis, herpangina, pleurodynia, and encephalomyocarditis of newborn infants. See Picornaviridae

Coxsackieviruses measure about 28 nanometers in diameter; they resemble other enteroviruses in many biological properties, but differ in their high pathogenicity for newborn mice. At least 23 antigenically distinct types in group A are now recognized, and 6 in group B.

After incubation for 2–9 days, during which the virus multiplies in the enteric tract, clinical manifestations appear which vary widely. Diagnosis is by isolation of virus in tissue culture or infant mice. Stools are the richest source of virus. Neutralizing and complement-fixing antibodies form during convalescence and are also useful in diagnosis. See Antibody, Complement-fixation test

The coxsackieviruses have worldwide distribution. Infections occur chiefly during summer and early fall, often in epidemic proportions. Spread of virus, like that of other enteroviruses, is associated with family contact and contacts among young children. See Animal virus, Virus classification

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Bioscience. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

coxsackievirus

[ku̇k′säk·ē‚vī·rəs]
(virology)
A large subgroup of the enteroviruses in the picornavirus group including various human pathogens.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
Coxsackie viruses are small, acid-stable RNA viruses that are widely present in environmental media.
The virus family he discovered was eventually given the name Coxsackie for the town of Coxsackie, New York, a small town on the Hudson River where Dalldorf had obtained the first faecal specimens.
Further, oxime 2a emerged as promising antiviral agent against both Coxsackie Virus B4 in Vero cell culture and Coxsackie Virus B4 in HeLa cell culture with an EC50 value of 20 and 45g/mL, respectively.
KVE refers to viral (herpes simplex virus/eczema herpeticum, vaccinia vims/eczema vaccinatum, and Coxsackie virus/eczema coxsackium) infection superimposed on AD.
Many studies show that the most frequent myocarditis viral infection is caused by an enterovirus, mainly coxsackie virus.
A virus in the enterovirus family, usually coxsackie A16, causes HFM.
Herpangina is a disease mainly of children and is caused by various strains of enterovirus mainly Coxsackie viruses A1-A6, A8, A10, A12 or A22, but similar syndromes can be caused by other viruses, especially Coxsackie B and echoviruses.
The patients' IgM and IgG turned out positive for Coxsackie B virus by ELISA.
Coxsackie B viruses were linked to T1D when a coxsackievirus B4 (CVB4) strain was isolated from the pancreas during the autopsy of a 10-year-old child who had died from diabetic ketoacidosis.
Fifty-eight locations span the state from Buffalo to Troy and south to Peekskill--all serviced by distribution centers in West Coxsackie, N.Y., and Austinburg, Ohio.
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