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Insights into SEN Virus Prevalence, Transmission, and Treatment in Community‐Based Persons and Patients with Liver Disease Referred to a Liver Disease Unit
Author(s) -
Steve G. Wong,
Daniélé Primi,
Hiroshige Kojima,
Alessandra Sottini,
Antonio Giulivi,
Manna Zhang,
Julia Uhanova,
Gerald Y. Minuk
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/342329
Subject(s) - medicine , liver disease , disease , transmission (telecommunications) , population , chronic liver disease , viral hepatitis , viral disease , serology , hepatitis c virus , gastroenterology , immunology , virus , cirrhosis , antibody , electrical engineering , environmental health , engineering
To document the prevalence and routes of transmission of SEN virus (SEN-V) in community-based individuals and patients referred to a liver disease unit, stored serum samples obtained from 160 Canadian Inuit and 140 patients with liver disease were tested for SEN-V DNA by polymerase chain reaction. In the community-based population, SEN-V was present in 57 (36%) of 160 persons. SEN-V-positive individuals tended to be younger and were more often male. Liver enzyme levels and serologic markers for hepatitis A and B viruses were similar in SEN-V-positive and SEN-V-negative individuals. SEN-V was present in 30 (21%) of the 140 patients with liver disease. Age, sex, risk factors for viral acquisition, prevalence of symptoms, and liver biochemical and histological findings were similar in SEN-V-positive and SEN-V-negative patients. These results indicate that SEN-V infection is a common viral infection in both healthy individuals and patients with chronic liver disease, that transmission likely occurs via nonparenteral routes, and that SEN-V infection is not associated with higher rates of or more-severe liver disease in persons with preexisting liver disease.

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