Hepatitis A virus – a general overview

Hepatitis A virus infection occurs globally and is causing a public health concern, primarily in developing countries due to its persistent circulation in the environment. The improved sanitary condition and increase in awareness of personal hygiene have led to the marked reduction of HAV prevalence...

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Main Authors: Yong, Han Tek, Radu, Son
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Food Science and Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia 2009
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/14993/1/14993.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/14993/
http://www.ifrj.upm.edu.my/16%20%284%29%202009/01%20IFRJ-2009-101%20Abbie%20Malaysia%20done%20Rev%20Article%204th%20proof.pdf
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spelling my.upm.eprints.149932015-09-23T06:51:07Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/14993/ Hepatitis A virus – a general overview Yong, Han Tek Radu, Son Hepatitis A virus infection occurs globally and is causing a public health concern, primarily in developing countries due to its persistent circulation in the environment. The improved sanitary condition and increase in awareness of personal hygiene have led to the marked reduction of HAV prevalence in industrialized countries during childhood and to a shift of the infection towards adulthood. HAV is an environmentally stable, positive single stranded RNA virus that is primarily transmitted by the fecal-oral route, person to person contact or ingestion of contaminated food and drink. One of the main causes leading to HAV infection is epidemiologically linked to the consumption of raw or undercooked shellfish particularly oysters and clams. Due to their filter-feeding style, these shellfishes readily concentrate viruses from the surrounding water containing municipal sewage, and as a consequence pose a health threat to consumers. Therefore, development of detection techniques possessing the requisite sensitivity and specificity for the practical routine monitoring purposes is of great importance necessary for the protection of shellfish-consuming public. Nucleic acid based method such as reverse transcription PCR has emerged as the popular method of choice in view of its rapidity, accuracy and sensitivity in contrary of the time-consuming conventional cell culture and hybridization techniques. However, detection of hepatitis A virus is firstly hampered by the non-cytophatic effect of wild type HAV strain, secondly, the low concentration of viral genome present in the environmental sample which requires effective isolation and concentration of virions and lastly the labor-extensive purification and thorough removal of the abundance of the PCR inhibitors which will unfavorably reduce the efficiency of PCR detection. Faculty of Food Science and Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia 2009 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/14993/1/14993.pdf Yong, Han Tek and Radu, Son (2009) Hepatitis A virus – a general overview. International Food Research Journal, 16 (4). pp. 455-467. ISSN 1985-4668; ESSN: 2231-7546 http://www.ifrj.upm.edu.my/16%20%284%29%202009/01%20IFRJ-2009-101%20Abbie%20Malaysia%20done%20Rev%20Article%204th%20proof.pdf
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Hepatitis A virus infection occurs globally and is causing a public health concern, primarily in developing countries due to its persistent circulation in the environment. The improved sanitary condition and increase in awareness of personal hygiene have led to the marked reduction of HAV prevalence in industrialized countries during childhood and to a shift of the infection towards adulthood. HAV is an environmentally stable, positive single stranded RNA virus that is primarily transmitted by the fecal-oral route, person to person contact or ingestion of contaminated food and drink. One of the main causes leading to HAV infection is epidemiologically linked to the consumption of raw or undercooked shellfish particularly oysters and clams. Due to their filter-feeding style, these shellfishes readily concentrate viruses from the surrounding water containing municipal sewage, and as a consequence pose a health threat to consumers. Therefore, development of detection techniques possessing the requisite sensitivity and specificity for the practical routine monitoring purposes is of great importance necessary for the protection of shellfish-consuming public. Nucleic acid based method such as reverse transcription PCR has emerged as the popular method of choice in view of its rapidity, accuracy and sensitivity in contrary of the time-consuming conventional cell culture and hybridization techniques. However, detection of hepatitis A virus is firstly hampered by the non-cytophatic effect of wild type HAV strain, secondly, the low concentration of viral genome present in the environmental sample which requires effective isolation and concentration of virions and lastly the labor-extensive purification and thorough removal of the abundance of the PCR inhibitors which will unfavorably reduce the efficiency of PCR detection.
format Article
author Yong, Han Tek
Radu, Son
spellingShingle Yong, Han Tek
Radu, Son
Hepatitis A virus – a general overview
author_facet Yong, Han Tek
Radu, Son
author_sort Yong, Han Tek
title Hepatitis A virus – a general overview
title_short Hepatitis A virus – a general overview
title_full Hepatitis A virus – a general overview
title_fullStr Hepatitis A virus – a general overview
title_full_unstemmed Hepatitis A virus – a general overview
title_sort hepatitis a virus – a general overview
publisher Faculty of Food Science and Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia
publishDate 2009
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/14993/1/14993.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/14993/
http://www.ifrj.upm.edu.my/16%20%284%29%202009/01%20IFRJ-2009-101%20Abbie%20Malaysia%20done%20Rev%20Article%204th%20proof.pdf
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score 13.214268