Abstract

Norwalk virus (NV) and Sapporo virus (SV) were approved as type species of the genus Norwalk-like viruses and the genus Sapporo-like viruses, respectively, within the family Caliciviridae. To clarify the importance of NV and SV as causes of gastroenteritis outbreaks in infants, stool samples obtained from 36 outbreaks of nonbacterial gastroenteritis that occurred during 1976-1995 in an infant home in Sapporo, Japan, were examined for diarrhea viruses using electron microscopy, enzyme immunoassays, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and sequencing of the PCR products. NV and SV were associated with 15 (42%) of the 36 outbreaks and were more prevalent than rotavirus (RV) A, which was associated with 10 (28%) of the 36 outbreaks. Our data indicate that NV and SV were the most common cause of outbreaks of viral gastroenteritis in infants and were indeed more prevalent than RV-A in Sapporo, Japan, during 1976-1995.

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