{{intro}}.. powered by Wikipedia

Introduction

Rotavirus was estimated to be the cause of 37 deaths annually when data were extrapolated to the US population (Fischer et al, 2007)

Hosts

Animals and humans

Transmission / Exposure Route

Fecal-oral and usually person-to-person but sometimes via contaminated water, food, or shellfish. Airborne respiratory transmission is possible.[1]

Case Fatality Ratio

Rotavirus was estimated to be the cause of 37 deaths annually when data were extrapolated to the US population [3]

Incubation Period

1-3 days[2]

Burden of Disease

Rotavirus was estimated to be the cause of ~60,000 hospitalizations annually when data were extrapolated to the US population.[3]

Duration of Infectiousness and disease

Symptomology

Symptoms of infected individuals include fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. Loss of appetite and dehydration are also common, and especially harmful to infants and young children.[2]

Latency

Asymptomatic Rates

Excretion Rates (see Exposure)

Immunity

Microbiology

A genus of double-stranded RNA virus in the family Reoviridae

Enviromental Survival

Resistant to disinfection.

Dose Response Models

Route: oral, Response:

beta-Poisson

$$P(response)=1-[1+dose\frac{2^{\frac{1}{a}}-1}{N^{50}} ]^{-a}$$

Optimized parameters:
a = 2.53E-02
N50 = 6.17E+00
ID50 = 6.17E+00

Data from Other Sources

Read more:

{{title}}

by {{author}} On Global Water Pathogen Project

Classification:

{{e.Rank | capitalize}}: {{e.ScientificName}}

Other names:

  • {{syn}}


NCBI Publications on Risk Assesment:

The NCBI Web Service is currently unavailable.