Skip to main content
Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 1970 Jun;91(6):585–592. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a121171

SEROEPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDIES OF CORONAVIRUS INFECTION IN ADULTS AND CHILDREN1

KENNETH MCINTOSH 1, ALBERT Z KAPIKIAN, HORACE C TURNER, JANET W HARTLEY, ROBERT H PARROTT 3, ROBERT M CHANOCK
PMCID: PMC7109868  PMID: 4315625

Abstract

McIntosh, K. A. Z. Kapikian, H. C Turner, J. W. Hartley, R. H. Parrott and R. M. Chanock. (Lab. of Infectious Diseases, NIAID, NIH, Bethesda, Md. 20014) Sero-epidemiologic studies of coronavirus infection in adults and children. Amer. J. Epid., 1970, 97: 585–592-A seroepidemiologic study of infection by coronavirus strains 229E, OC38, OC43, and mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) strain A-59, is described. In adults with upper respiratory disease, two “outbreaks” of coronavirus infection occurred, one during the winter of 1965–1966 associated with complement fixing (CF) antibody responses to OC38, OC43 and MHV, and the other during the following winter associated with CF antibody responses to 229E. In hospitalized children, infection with 229E was rare; infection with OC38, OC43, and MHV occurred less often in hospitalized children with lower respiratory tract disease (3.5%) than in a control group with non-respiratory tract disease (8.2%). The limitations of the CF test using available coronavirus antigens are discussed.

Keywords: antibodies, complement fixation tests, coronaviruses, respiratory tract diseases, serology, viruses


Articles from American Journal of Epidemiology are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

RESOURCES