Cytomegalovirus history and symptoms

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Template:Cytomegalovirus Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

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History

For most healthy individuals who acquire cytomegalovirus after birth there are few symptoms.[1] Some persons with symptoms experience an infectious mononucleosis-like syndrome [2], with prolonged fever, and a mild hepatitis. A very sore throat is also common. CMV infection without symptoms is common in infants and young children; as a result, it is common to not exclude from school or an institution a child known to be infected. Similarly, hospitalized patients are not typically separated or isolated. Similarly, most women have no symptoms and very few have a disease resembling mononucleosis but it is their developing fetuses that may be at risk for congenital CMV disease.

Common Symptoms

Symptoms of CMV can be:

References

  1. Ryan KJ, Ray CG (editors) (2004). Sherris Medical Microbiology (4th ed. ed.). McGraw Hill. pp. pp. 556, 566–9. ISBN 0838585299.
  2. Bottieau E, Clerinx J, Van den Enden E, Van Esbroeck M, Colebunders R, Van Gompel A, Van den Ende J (2006). "Infectious mononucleosis-like syndromes in febrile travelers returning from the tropics". J Travel Med. 13 (4): 191–7. PMID 16884400.

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