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Viral Pollution of Surface Waters Due to Chlorinated Primary Effluents

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TLDR
The role of chlorinated primary effluents in viral pollution of the Ottawa River (Ontario) was assessed by examining 282 field samples of wastewaters from two different sewage treatment plants over a 2-year period.
Abstract
The role of chlorinated primary effluents in viral pollution of the Ottawa River (Ontario) was assessed by examining 282 field samples of wastewaters from two different sewage treatment plants over a 2-year period. The talc-Celite technique was used for sample concentration, and BS-C-1 cells were employed for virus detection. Viruses were detected in 80% (75/94) of raw sewage, 72% (68/94) of primary effluent, and 56% (53/94) of chlorinated effluent samples. Both raw sewage and primary effluent samples contained about 100 viral infective units (VIU) per 100 ml. Chlorination produced a 10- to 50-fold reduction in VIU and gave nearly 2.7 VIU/100 ml of chlorinated primary effluent. With a combined daily chlorinated primary effluent output of approximately 3.7 × 108 liters, these two plants were discharging 1.0 × 1010 VIU per day. Because the river has a mean annual flow of 8.0 × 1010 liters per day, these two sources alone produced a virus loading of 1.0 VIU/8 liters of the river water. This river also receives at least 9.0 × 107 liters of raw sewage per day and undetermined but substantial amounts of storm waters and agricultural wastes. It is used for recreation and acts as a source of potable water for some 6.0 × 105 people. In view of the potential of water for disease transmission, discharge of such wastes into the water environment needs to be minimized.

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Chemical disinfection of non-porous inanimate surfaces experimentally contaminated with four human pathogenic viruses

TL;DR: Only the following five disinfectants proved to be effective against all the four viruses tested, emphasizing the care needed in selecting chemical disinfectants for routine use in infection control.
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Evaluation of cell lines and immunofluorescence and plaque assay procedures for quantifying reoviruses in sewage.

TL;DR: Twelve continuous cell lines were tested to determine their sensitivity to reovirus types 1, 2, and 3 isolated from sewage, and Madin-Darby bovine kidney, rhesus monkey kidney, and human embryonic intestinal cells were most sensitive.
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Insights from a Systematic Search for Information on Designs, Costs, and Effectiveness of Poliovirus Environmental Surveillance Systems

TL;DR: While numerous studies reported the ability of environmental surveillance to detect polioviruses in the absence of clinical cases, the review revealed very limited information about the costs and limited information to support quantitative population effectiveness of conducting environmental surveillance.
Book ChapterDOI

Molecular detection of viruses in water and sewage

TL;DR: In this article, valid and reproducible methods for the detection of waterborne viral pathogens are crucial in order to determine the extent of contamination, the types of pathogens involved and the correlation between viral contamination and environmental factors.
References
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Journal Article

Biologic Characteristics of a Continuous Kidney Cell Line Derived from the African Green Monkey

TL;DR: The BS-C-1 continuous cell line provides the virologist with another tool for diagnostic and research work and perhaps for the large scale cultivation of viral agents for vaccines.
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Typing of Viruses by Combinations of Antiserum Pools. Application to Typing of Enteroviruses (Coxsackie and Echo)

TL;DR: The method has been successfully applied to the typing of new virus isolates and yielded combinations of results specific for each type according to the distribution of the sera in the pools.
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Antigenic analysis of polioviruses by kinetic studies of serum neutralization.

TL;DR: Kinetic studies of the serum neutralization of polioviruses show that each strain can be uniquely specified by its homologous antiserum, and these studies are equally applicable to all three poliovirus types.
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Viruses in water.

TL;DR: In this article, the problem of eliminating viruses pathogenic for man from water is considered in the light of present water treatment procedures, which are often inadequate for that purpose, particularly since growing demands for available water resources by a rising world population and expanding industry will make the recycling of wastewater almost inevitable in the future.
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Demonstration of solids-associated virus in wastewater and sludge.

TL;DR: Virus was demonstrated in fully digested sludge, sand at the site of a sewer leak, and dried sludge cake and mud 900 m downstream from a sewage disposal site, demonstrating the inadequacy of virus concentration techniques that do not include the processing of solids.
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