Astrovirus Research Essential Ideas, Everyday Impacts, Future Directions

Astrovirus Research Essential Ideas, Everyday Impacts, Future Directions by Stacey Schultz-Cherry, published by Springer New York on November 9, 2014, spans 186 pages and is presented in English. This book explores the significance of astroviruses, first identified in 1975, and their prevalence in children, particularly in relation to diarrhea. It addresses the potential for asymptomatic carriers to contribute to the virus’s spread and highlights the stability of astroviruses in various environments.
Readers will find comprehensive information on the history, molecular biology, and epidemiology of astroviruses, as well as their implications for human health. The book delves into the mechanisms of viral replication, immune responses, and the potential for astroviruses to cause severe illness in vulnerable populations, such as premature infants and immunocompromised children. Additionally, it discusses the role of astroviruses in zoonotic diseases and food safety, making it a valuable resource for professionals in microbiology, immunology, and public health.
Official synopsis Publisher
Astroviruses were first identified in the feces of children in 1975. Since then, they have been found in ~ 3 to 20% of children with diarrhea. Given that serological studies have demonstrated that up to 90% of children have been exposed to at least one strain of astrovirus by age 9, the prevalence of infection may be much higher. Supporting this are studies demonstrating that astroviruses can also be isolated in a subset of asymptomatic individuals, suggesting that a proportion of infected individuals shed the virus asymptomatically or for some time after the resolution of other symptoms of infection. Asymptomatic carriers may be a major reservoir for astroviruses in the environment and could contribute to dissemination of the virus. Astroviruses are extremely stable in the environment and can be transmitted nosocomially, directly from infected individuals and potentially animals, and through contaminated food and water. Although typically an acute disease, astrovirus infection in premature infants may be associated with the development of necrotizing enterocolitis and in new-onset celiac disease in children. Immunocompromised children are even more susceptible often developing persistent infections that lead to wasting or even systemic infections associated with fatal encephalitis. In spite of its importance, little is known about astrovirus pathogenesis, molecular biology, epidemiology, or cell biology. The goal of this book is to provide the latest and most up-to-date information on this medically important and rapidly evolving group of viruses. It will include sections on the history of astroviruses and their disease in humans; information on viral replication and immune responses; new information on how astroviruses induce disease including the expression of a viral enterotoxin regulating intestinal epithelial cell tight junctions, the isolation and identification of new astrovirus genotypes in mammals including humans, and astroviruses of veterinary importance. Finally, the book will also introduce the complexity of astrovirus epidemiology and potential as an important new zoonotic disease, and its role in food-borne disease. This will be the first book of its kind and will be of great interest to microbiologists, virologists, infectious disease specialists, immunologists, pediatricians, public health and food safety experts, veterinarians, poultry industry specialists, and researchers and clinicians interested in enteritis.
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