pubmed-article:1288640 | pubmed:abstractText | By testing 2362 children and infants from Craiova (Romania), for both HIV-antibody and HBs-antigen presence in the blood, a high rate of positivity was noticed in orphanages and in dystrophia units. A rate of "signal" (i.e. about 4% for HIV-antibodies, and 2.5% for HIV-antibody/HBs antigen), in hospitalized patients (pediatric service), was found as well. Four reasons support the horizontal way of virus transmission as the main route: most of seropositive subjects belong to 1-to-3-year age range, suggesting a virtual contamination before introduction of disposable syringes in Romania care units and hospitals; many HIV-seropositive cases have received frequent parenteral treatments, during repeated hospitalizations for acute respiratory disease; only few of the mothers of seropositive infants exhibited HIV-antibody presence; a relatively high rate of "double" seropositivity, i.e. HIV-antibody/HBs antigen, within tested serum samples was noticed. | lld:pubmed |