Authors
Peter FM Teunis, Christine L Moe, Pengbo Liu, Sara E. Miller, Lisa Lindesmith, Ralph S Baric, Jacques Le Pendu, Rebecca L Calderon
Publication date
2008/8
Journal
Journal of medical virology
Volume
80
Issue
8
Pages
1468-1476
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Description
Noroviruses are major agents of viral gastroenteritis worldwide. The infectivity of Norwalk virus, the prototype norovirus, has been studied in susceptible human volunteers. A new variant of the hit theory model of microbial infection was developed to estimate the variation in Norwalk virus infectivity, as well as the degree of virus aggregation, consistent with independent (electron microscopic) observations. Explicit modeling of viral aggregation allows us to express virus infectivity per single infectious unit (particle). Comparison of a primary and a secondary inoculum showed that passage through a human host does not change Norwalk virus infectivity. We estimate the average probability of infection for a single Norwalk virus particle to be close to 0.5, exceeding that reported for any other virus studied to date. Infected subjects had a dose‐dependent probability of becoming ill, ranging from 0.1 (at a dose of 103 NV …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PFM Teunis, CL Moe, P Liu, S E. Miller, L Lindesmith… - Journal of medical virology, 2008