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Rotavirus

Rotavirus is a virus that can cause severe diarrhea, fever, and vomiting in people who become infected with it. It is often spread when a person comes in contact with a contaminated surface or ingests contaminated food or water. Rotavirus infections are especially common in children under the age of 5. Treatment for rotavirus infection consists of caring for the symptoms while the body kills the virus.

 

What Is Rotavirus?

Rotavirus is a virus that can cause severe diarrhea, usually with fever and vomiting. It is the leading cause of diarrhea in infants and young children in the United States and worldwide. Rotavirus results in the hospitalization of approximately 55,000 to 70,000 children each year in the United States and the death of over 600,000 children annually worldwide.
 
Almost all children in the United States are likely to be infected with rotavirus before their fifth birthday.
 

Understanding Rotavirus

Rotaviruses are members of the Reoviridae family of viruses. Rotavirus is a double-stranded RNA (ribonucleic acid) virus. A rotavirus has a characteristic wheel-like appearance when viewed by electron microscopy. The name rotavirus is derived from the Latin word "rota," meaning "wheel" (see Rotavirus Pictures).
 
There are a number of different strains of rotavirus that cause infections in humans; four strains are common in the United States. Children can be infected with rotavirus more than once, but usually the first infection is the most severe, and each subsequent infection causes less severe symptoms of the disease.
 

How Is Rotavirus Spread?

Large amounts of rotavirus are shed in the stools of infected people. This contaminated stool can easily spread to hands and objects. Because rotavirus can live for a long time outside of a host, rotavirus transmission can then occur quite easily through the following methods:
 
  • Ingestion of contaminated food or water
  • Direct contact with contaminated surfaces.
     
Children can spread rotavirus both before and after they become sick with diarrhea. They can sometimes pass the virus to other members of the family and to other people with whom they have close contact.
 

Incubation Period for Rotavirus

Once the rotavirus has entered the body, it travels to the small intestine, where it begins to multiply. Approximately two days later, rotavirus symptoms can begin. This period between infection with the rotavirus and the beginning of symptoms is known as the "rotavirus incubation period."
 

Symptoms of Rotavirus

Not all people who are infected with the virus will develop rotavirus symptoms. If rotavirus symptoms do occur, the illness begins suddenly. Common symptoms of rotavirus include:
 
  • Vomiting
  • Upset stomach
  • High fever (greater than 102.2°F)
  • Watery diarrhea
  • Severe dehydration
  • Loss of interest in eating
  • Mucus in stool.
     

Making a Rotavirus Diagnosis

In order to make a rotavirus diagnosis, the doctor will ask a number of questions about a patient's medical history and will perform a physical exam, looking for signs and symptoms of rotavirus. If the doctor suspects rotavirus, he or she may test the stool for it.
 

Treatment for Rotavirus

There is no medicine that will kill rotavirus. Therefore, rotavirus treatment goals are focused on providing supportive care while the body fights the infection. Supportive care refers to treating symptoms, such as dehydration, that occur as a result of the rotavirus infection.
 
Fortunately, for people with healthy immune systems, the body is able to effectively kill rotavirus, and after 3 to 9 days, rotavirus symptoms usually improve.
 

Rotavirus Prevention Methods

While it is important that you wash your child's hands (as well as your own), better hygiene and sanitation have not significantly reduced incidents of rotavirus disease. A new, recently licensed vaccine (RotaTeq®) is the best way to protect your child against rotavirus disease.
 
(Click Rotavirus Prevention or Rotavirus Vaccine for more information.)
 

Rotavirus in Adults

Rotavirus can also be transmitted to adults. An adult rotavirus infection is less common and usually less severe. In adults, rotavirus infection most often is seen in:
 
  • Family members of affected children
  • The elderly
  • People with conditions or medications that decrease the function of the immune system, such as people with HIV, AIDS, or cancer.
     

How Common Are Rotavirus Infections?

In the United States, rotavirus is responsible for approximately 5 to 10 percent of all cases of diarrhea among children under 5 years of age. However, because rotavirus causes more severe diarrhea than other pathogens, it accounts for a greater proportion of severe diarrhea cases (for example, 40 to 50 percent of diarrhea hospitalizations).
 
Rotavirus accounts for more than 500,000 physician visits and approximately 55,000 to 70,000 hospitalizations each year among children under 5 years of age. An estimated 1 in 200,000 children with rotavirus diarrhea die from the complications of the infection.
 
(Click Rotavirus Statistics for more information.)
 

Other Names for Rotavirus

Because rotavirus is the name of the virus, people commonly refer to a rotavirus infection as:
 
  • Viral gastroenteritis
  • Stomach flu
  • Rotavirus gastroenteritis
  • Infantile diarrhea
  • Winter diarrhea.
     
Written by/reviewed by: Arthur Schoenstadt, MD
Last reviewed by: Arthur Schoenstadt, MD