Respiratory Virus

             Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a very common virus that causes mild cold-like symptoms in adults and older healthy children. It can cause serious respiratory problems in young babies, especially those born prematurely, who have heart or lung disease, or who are immunocompromised. #
             RSV was first founded in an outbreak of copious rhinorrhea in a colony of chimpanzees; the "chimpanzee coryza agent" was soon isolated from human infants with similar illnesses.#
             Respiratory Synctial Virus (RSV) is an infection that is contagious that resembles the common cold a lot of times. RSV is the most common viral pathogen that causes lower respiratory tract infections in infants.# RSV infection in infancy cause severe bronchiolitis and pneumonia and may incline children to the following development of asthma, the most common chronic illness of childhood. RSV is the most single related cause of pneumonia and bronchiolitis. Epidemics of the virus are seen each winter, 80% of infections typically occur during a three-month period.# The virus is not typically severe during infancy but it is rare if it happens. (As, in my case I was born with the RSV virus and was hospitalized for eighteen days and was put on assisted ventilation.) In infants RSV infection can spread to the bronchial tubes and lungs. The virus can also infect adults, in where the infection can cause viral pneumonia, which is sometimes followed by a bacterial infection of the lower respiratory system.#
             RSV is the largest single cause of childhood hospitalization and is therefore a major drain on public health resources. Each year more than 90,000 infants are hospitalized with the RSV infection, and nearly 75% of bronchiolitis cases and more than 50% of pneumonia cases are hospitalized also because of the infection.#The infection usually lasts from four to twenty-one days. If the infection is severe it could last a ...

More Essays:

APA     MLA     Chicago
Respiratory Virus. (1969, December 31). In MegaEssays.com. Retrieved 18:03, April 26, 2024, from https://www.megaessays.com/viewpaper/92149.html