Norovirus, also known as the winter vomiting bug, is one of the most common causes of gastroenteritis in the UK according to NHS England. It is a genus that encompasses a range of non encapsulated RNA virus species. The CDC (Centre for Disease Prevention and Control) estimates that 1 in 5 cases of infectious gastroenteritis are caused by norovirus, with 685 million cases per year worldwide.
Symptoms
- Develop within 15 - 50 hours of infection (quoted from the European Centre of Disease Control and Prevention), with patients experiencing nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea, which may be accompanied by headaches, low-grade fevers, and myalgia.
- The majority of patients experience both vomiting and diarrhoea
- 10 - 22% reported a headache and up to 47% of patients reported fevers (Clinical Microbiology Reviews, Norovirus, January 2015)
Transmission
- Faecal-oral route, with the virus becoming aerosolized when the patient vomits or when a toilet containing infected bodily fluids (vomit or faeces) is flushed.
- Viral particles are transmitted directly to surrounding potential hosts and to surrounding surfaces, from which they can be transmitted by cross-contamination (for example a patient visitor touching the patient environment, then eating without first washing their hands).
- Infection may also be transmitted from an infected individual in the process of direct physical contact, or contact with food preparation.
- The virus enters the cell via host receptor-mediated endocytosis and replicates in the small intestine. Norovirus is highly contagious, the European Centre of Disease Control and Prevention estimates that only 10 - 100 viral particles are required to cause an active infection.
- Norovirus is not at present considered to be a notifiable disease in the UK.
Limiting transmission
- Isolation of infected strongly recommended where possible, particularly in areas where the risk of person to person transmission is high, for example, in hospitals schools, and care facilities
- Good hand hygiene using soap and water is essential
- Alcohol hand gel has been shown to be less effective in reducing transmission
Investigations