RESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: Human enteric adenovirus (EAd) types 40 and 41 cause diarrhea in young children, but little is known about their association with outbreaks of diarrhea in the child care setting. This study evaluated EAd as a cause of outbreaks of diarrhea among infants and toddlers in day care centers. DESIGN: Stool specimens were collected weekly regardless of symptoms during four periods from January 1986 to April 1991, from children 6 to 24 months of age enrolled in prospective studies of diarrhea in day care centers. All diarrhea stool specimens were tested for bacterial enteropathogens, rotavirus, and Giardia lamblia. A total of 131 outbreaks occurred during the study. No etiologic agent was identified in 77 outbreaks. Stool specimens from 75 of these 77 outbreaks and from another 21 outbreaks of diarrhea with a known cause were evaluated for EAd with a monoclonal antibody-based enzyme immunoassay. RESULTS: A total of 4402 stool specimens from 613 children from these 96 outbreaks was tested for EAd. The virus was detected in specimens collected during 10 outbreaks, 3 of which occurred in 1986, 3 in 1988, 1 in 1989, 1 in 1990, and 2 in 1991. Of 249 children, 94 (38%) in these 10 EAd outbreaks were infected with EAd. In 51 children (54%) the infection was symptomatic and in 43 (46%) it was asymptomatic. Outbreaks lasted 7 to 44 days (mean 24.5 days). Duration of EAd excretion ranged from 1 to 14 days (mean 3.9 days), with excretion occurring from 7 days (mean 2.6) before diarrhea began to 11 days (mean 5.3 days) after diarrhea stopped. CONCLUSION: Enteric adenovirus types 40 and 41 are an important cause of outbreaks of diarrhea among children attending day care centers, often involve children in more than one room, and frequently produce asymptomatic infection.