Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
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Detection of enteric viruses in activated sludge by feasible concentration methods.First molecular detection of group A rotavirus in urban and hospital sewage systems by nested-RT PCR in Shiraz, Iran.Bacterial meningitis: a density-equalizing mapping analysis of the global research architecture.Mucosal and cutaneous human papillomaviruses detected in raw sewagesDetection of human food-borne and zoonotic viruses on irrigated, field-grown strawberries.FRNA Bacteriophages as Viral Indicators of Faecal Contamination in Mexican Tropical Aquatic Systems.Factors affecting the utilisation of improved ventilated latrines among communities in Mtwara Rural District, Tanzania.Tracking Human Adenovirus Inactivation by Gamma Radiation under Different Environmental Conditions.Bacterial lipopolysaccharide binding enhances virion stability and promotes environmental fitness of an enteric virus.Treated wastewater effluent as a source of microbial pollution of surface water resources.Waterborne human pathogenic viruses of public health concern.Water quality indicators: bacteria, coliphages, enteric viruses.Oncogenic Papillomavirus and Polyomavirus in Water Environments: Is There a Potential for Waterborne Transmission?Enteroviral encephalitis in children: clinical features, pathophysiology, and treatment advances.Urban effluent discharges as causes of public and environmental health concerns in South Africa's aquatic milieu.Elimination of viruses from domestic wastewater: requirements and technologies.First Detection of Human Papillomaviruses and Human Polyomaviruses in River Waters in Italy.Efficiency of hepatitis A virus removal in six sewage treatment plants from central Tunisia.One-year Surveillance of Human Enteric Viruses in Raw and Treated Wastewaters, Downstream River Waters, and Drinking Waters.Resistance of Echovirus 11 to ClO2 Is Associated with Enhanced Host Receptor Use, Altered Entry Routes, and High Fitness.The Influence of Household- and Community-Level Sanitation and Fecal Sludge Management on Urban Fecal Contamination in Households and Drains and Enteric Infection in Children.Human enteric viruses--potential indicators for enhanced monitoring of recreational water quality.Pathogenic Escherichia coli and enteric viruses in biosolids and related top soil improvers in Italy.Detection of Human Enteric Viruses in Freshwater from European Countries.High prevalence of type 41 and high sequence diversity of partial hexon gene of human adenoviruses in municipal raw sewage and activated sludge.Assessment of human virus removal during municipal wastewater treatment in Edmonton, Canada.Comparison of Two Concentration Methods for the Molecular Detection of Enteroviruses in Raw and Treated Sewage.Relationship between viral detection and turbidity in a watershed contaminated with group A rotavirus.Quantitative RT-PCR detection of hepatitis A virus, rotaviruses and enteroviruses in the Buffalo River and source water dams in the Eastern Cape Province of South AfricaThe Detection Rate of Enteric Viruses and Clostridium difficile in a Waste Water Treatment Plant Effluent.Assessment of the risks for human health of adenoviruses, hepatitis A virus, rotaviruses and enteroviruses in the Buffalo River and three source water dams in the Eastern Cape.Detection of Enteroviruses in Influent and Effluent Flow Samples from Wastewater Treatment Plants in Italy.Assessment of enteric viruses in a sewage treatment plant located in Porto Alegre, southern Brazil.Quantitative detection and characterization of human adenoviruses in the Buffalo River in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa.Experimental adaptation of human echovirus 11 to ultraviolet radiation leads to resistance to disinfection and ribavirin.Escherichia coli Contamination across Multiple Environmental Compartments (Soil, Hands, Drinking Water, and Handwashing Water) in Urban Harare: Correlations and Risk Factors.Pathogenic Strains Recovered from Selected Aquatic Resources in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, and Its Significance to Public HealthOverview of Trends in the Application of Metagenomic Techniques in the Analysis of Human Enteric Viral Diversity in Africa's Environmental RegimesEstimating virus occurrence using Bayesian modeling in multiple drinking water systems of the United StatesRemoval of Pathogens by Membrane Bioreactors: A Review of the Mechanisms, Influencing Factors and Reduction in Chemical Disinfectant Dosing
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Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
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articolo scientifico
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artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
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scientific article published on 14 June 2010
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vedecký článok
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vetenskaplig artikel
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videnskabelig artikel
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vědecký článek
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name
Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
@en
Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
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type
label
Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
@en
Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
@nl
prefLabel
Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
@en
Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
@nl
P2860
P356
P1476
Inadequately treated wastewater as a source of human enteric viruses in the environment.
@en
P2093
Siyabulela S Gusha
Thulani Sibanda
P2860
P304
P356
10.3390/IJERPH7062620
P577
2010-06-01T00:00:00Z
2010-06-14T00:00:00Z