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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Enterovirus Co-infections and Onychomadesis after Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease, Spain, 2008
María Alma BrachoJuan CórdobaFernando González-candelasAntonio SalazarAna Valerosubject
SerotypeMaleEpidemiologyviruseslcsh:Medicinemedicine.disease_causeCommunicable Diseases Emergingskin and connective tissue diseasesPhylogenybiologyintegumentary systementerovirusvirus diseasesEnterovirus B HumanInfectious DiseasesChild Preschoolnail sheddingFemaleFoot (unit)Microbiology (medical)complicationsCoxsackievirusOnychomadesislcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesNail Diseasesco-infectionstomatognathic systemmedicineEnterovirus InfectionsHumansviruseslcsh:RC109-216TypingSerotypingonychomadesisBase SequenceResearchlcsh:ROutbreakInfantand mouth diseasebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyHFMDEnterovirus A HumanNail diseaseSpainCase-Control StudiesfootDNA ViralEnterovirushandHand Foot and Mouth Diseasedescription
Mixed infection of enteroviruses may explain the rare complication of nail shedding. Onychomadesis after HFMD
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011-12-01 | Emerging Infectious Diseases |