Summary
In view of the high prevalence of rotavirus (RV) diarrhoea in Indian (Asian) infants in South Africa, a hospital-based study of 124 mothers and their neonates was carried out to establish the prevalence of maternal and neonatal circulating anti-RV antibodies, RV antibodies in breast-milk, and neonatal RV infections in this population. Thirty-four per cent of the mothers and 38% of the neonates had complement-fixing (CF) serum antibodies. There was a significant correlation between maternal and cord blood antibody levels (p<0.001; chi-square test). Fifteen per cent of hospital-born newborns showed asymptomatic RV excretion while still in hospital, mostly at 2–6 days of age, but some even earlier, with two shedding the virus before the age of 24 h. This excretion occurred in both seronegative and seropositive babies. The breast-milk of only 3.2% of the mothers was positive for CF-anti-RV antibodies, implying that either these were not present in the breast-milk or that the CF-test employed was not sufficiently sensitive for detecting these antibodies in milk specimens. Eighteen (18.2%) of 99 infants followed up showed evidence of RV infection 1–7 months after birth; none was symptomatic; 12 excreted RV in the stools while 6 others seroconverted. Asymptomatic reinfection was documented in 4 of 14 babies who had been infected initially as neonates.