Biology, asked by ekathiraathira7, 6 months ago

target organ of echo virus?

Answers

Answered by sowmyau1979
1

Answer:

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Explanation:

During this low-grade viremia, the virus spreads to reticuloendothelial tissues, including the liver, spleen, bone marrow, and distant lymph nodes. Secondary sites of infection include the CNS, liver, spleen, bone marrow, heart, and lungs. More than 90% of echoviral infections are asymptomatic

Answered by crazyplayz
1

Answer:

this your answer

Echoviruses are members of the Enterovirus genus in the Picornaviridae family. They make up the largest Enterovirus subgroup, consisting of 29 serotypes. Echoviruses are common human pathogens that cause a range of illnesses, from minor febrile illness to severe, potentially fatal conditions (eg, aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, paralysis, myocarditis). [1] Individual serotypes have different temporal patterns of circulation and cause different clinical manifestations. Changes in circulating serotypes and variations in the genotype of the same subtype can be associated with large-scale outbreaks. [1, 2]

Enteroviruses are divided into 5 subgenera: polioviruses, group A coxsackieviruses, group B coxsackieviruses, echoviruses, and the newer enteroviruses. Each subgenus contains numerous unique enterovirus serotypes differentiated based on neutralization of specific antisera. [3]

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