Literature detail

Investigation of a potential zoonotic transmission of orthoreovirus associated with acute influenza-like illness in an adult patient.

Kaw Bing Chua1 Kenny Voon Meng Yu Canady Keniscope Kasri Abdul Rasid Lin-Fa Wang
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. National Public Health Laboratory, Sg. Buloh, Selangor, Malaysia. [email protected]
PMID 22022394 2011 PLoS One eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Bats are increasingly being recognized as important reservoir hosts for a large number of viruses, some of them can be highly virulent when they infect human and livestock animals. Among the new bat zoonotic viruses discovered in recent years, several reoviruses (respiratory enteric orphan viruses) were found to be able to cause acute respiratory infections in humans, which included Melaka and Kampar viruses discovered in Malaysia, all of them belong to the genus Orthoreovirus, family Reoviridae. In this report, we describe the isolation of a highly related virus from an adult patient who suffered acute respiratory illness in Malaysia. Although there was no direct evidence of bat origin, epidemiological study indicated the potential exposure of the patient to bats before the onset of disease. The current study further demonstrates that spillover events of different strains of related orthoreoviruses from bats to humans are occurring on a regular basis, which calls for more intensive and systematic surveillances to fully assess the true public health impact of these newly discovered bat-borne zoonotic reoviruses.

Acute Disease Adult Animals Antibodies, Viral Female Fluorescent Antibody Technique Genome, Viral Humans Influenza, Human Malaysia Male Middle Aged Orthoreovirus Phylogeny Sequence Homology, Amino Acid Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Bat-to-human spillover of orthoreoviruses causing acute respiratory illness in Malaysia was demonstrated.

Location
Supporting text

The current study further demonstrates that spillover events of different strains of related orthoreoviruses from bats to humans are occurring on a regular basis.

Method
virus isolation; epidemiological study
Study design
case report
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Malaysia
Country inferred
Malaysia