Title of article
HBV Subgenotypes D1, D2, D-del! Are ‘Old‘ Genotyping Methods Interpreted Correctly?
Author/Authors
Amini-Bavil-Olyaee, Samad University of Southern California - Keck School of Medicine, Harlyne J Norris Cancer Research Tower - Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, USA , Tacke, Frank RWTH-University Hospital - Department of Medicine III, Germany , Alavian, Moayed baqiyatallah university of medical sciences - Baqiyatallah Research Center for Gastroenterology and Liver Diseases, ايران
From page
1
To page
3
Abstract
Infections with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) are one of the major global public health problems. HBV has been categorized into different genotypes and subgenotypes that are distributed distinctively around the world. These classifications provide important information as the genotypes differ with respect to the clinical course of disease as well as in their response to antiviral therapy, and subgenotyping allows relevant conclusions about transmission routes, global or local spreading of infections or phylogenetic relations between viral strains.
Keywords
Hepatitis B virus , Genotype
Journal title
Hepatitis Monthly
Journal title
Hepatitis Monthly
Record number
2557760
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