High amounts of SARS-CoV-2 in aerosols exhaled by patients with Omicron variant infection
J Infect
.
2022 Jun;84(6):e126-e128.
doi: 10.1016/j.jinf.2022.02.015.
Epub 2022 Feb 17.
Authors
Jing Zheng
1
,
Zhongyi Wang
2
,
Jiaming Li
3
,
Yidun Zhang
1
,
Lina Jiang
1
,
Yingying Fu
3
,
Yifei Jin
3
,
Hongliang Cheng
3
,
Jingjing Li
3
,
Zehui Chen
1
,
Fei Tang
1
,
Bing Lu
4
,
Li Li
5
,
Xiaopeng Zhang
6
Affiliations
1
Xiamen Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 681 Shengguang Road, Xiamen 361021, China.
2
Beijing Institute of Biotechnology, 20 Dongdajie Road, Beijing 100071, China. Electronic address: zhongyi_wang@foxmail.com.
3
Academy of Military Sciences, 27 Taiping Road, Beijing 100850, China.
4
Academy of Military Sciences, 27 Taiping Road, Beijing 100850, China. Electronic address: 13693506666@163.com.
5
Xiamen Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 681 Shengguang Road, Xiamen 361021, China. Electronic address: 33216670@qq.com.
6
Beijing Institute of Biotechnology, 20 Dongdajie Road, Beijing 100071, China. Electronic address: zxp8565@aliyun.com.
PMID:
35183607
PMCID:
PMC8852223
DOI:
10.1016/j.jinf.2022.02.015
No abstract available
Publication types
Letter
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Comment
MeSH terms
Aerosols
COVID-19*
Exhalation
Humans
SARS-CoV-2*
Substances
Aerosols
Supplementary concepts
SARS-CoV-2 variants