๐ Novel coronavirus and central nervous system.
An outbreak of a novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) that emerged in Wuhan has rapidly spread throughout China and has now become a global public health concern. As of the early March, a total of 100,000 cases have been confirmed in multiple countries. Clinical characteristics of 2019-nCoV that respiratory symptoms, such as cough, are the most common.[1] This is consistent with the finding that the majority of patients are virus-positive in nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs suggesting it mainly invades and infects the respiratory system, a hypothesis supported by pathological data.[2] In addition, it has been reported that patients' stool has tested positive for 2019-nCoV, indicating that the virus could spread from the respiratory tract to the digestive tract, or that individuals could be infected via the faecal-oral route. However, the neuroinvasive potential of 2019-nCoV remains poorly understood.
keywords
๐ public health (392)
๐ poorly understood (52)
๐ novel coronavirus (684)
๐ respiratory tract (344)
author
๐ค Sun, Tong
๐ค Guan, Junwen
year
โฐ 2020
journal
๐ Eur J Neurol
issn
๐
volume
number
page
citedbycount
0
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