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HERO ID
6990244
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Hand-to-hand transmission of rhinovirus colds
Author(s)
Gwaltney, JM; Moskalski, PB; Hendley, JO; ,
Year
1978
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Annals of Internal Medicine
ISSN:
0003-4819
EISSN:
1539-3704
Language
English
PMID
205151
DOI
10.7326/0003-4819-88-4-463
Abstract
Rhinovirus was transmitted from experimentally infected volunteers (donors) to susceptible recipients and the efficiencies of spread by hand-to-hand contact and large- and small-particle aerosols compared. Transmission of infection was very efficient by the hand route: 11 of 15 hand-contact exposures initiated infection, compared with one of 12 large-particle (P less than 0.005) and none of 10 small-particle (P less than 0.005) exposures. Rhinovirus was present in nine of 18 (50%) nasal swab specimens, 28 of 43 (65%) hand rinses, and seven of 18 (39%) saliva specimens of donors; geometric mean titers of positive specimens were 10(1.5), 10(1.4), and 10(1.2) tissue culture infectious dose 50/ml (TCID 50/ml), respectively. Rhinovirus was present in 20 of 43 (46%) recipient hand rinses, with a geometric mean titer of 10(1.4)TCID50/ml. Virus on donors' hands was transferred to recipients' fingers during 20 of 28 (71%) 10-second hand-contact exposures. These findings support the concept that hand contact/self-inoculation may be an important natural route of rhinovirus transmission.
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