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Enteroviruses have been examined for their possible role in the
etiology of type 1 diabetes for nearly 40 years. It is now evident
from studies in several countries that enterovirus infection
accompanies or precedes the onset of diabetes in many individuals.
These evidences include the isolation of coxsackievirus B4 from the
pancreas of a child at diagnosis of type 1 diabetes, several
epidemiological and prospective studies showing that some cases of
type 1 diabetes are strongly associated with enterovirus
infections, seasonal incidence studies, case-control studies that
show an increased prevalence and levels of IgM antibodies to
enterovirus in newly diagnosed patients. Other evidences involves
several case studies in which diabetes develops after an
enterovirus infections, increased T cell response to enterovirus
antigens in type 1 diabetic patients, suggestions that enterovirus
infections during pregnancy might initiate the events leading to
childhood diabetes, and a higher frequency of enterovirus RNA in
the serum/blood of type 1 diabetic patients at diagnosis. This book
Provides a better understanding of enteroviral biology and the
potential alternative pathogenic mechanisms through which
enteroviruses may cause diabetes.
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