Inhibitory effects of selected antiviral compounds on newly isolated clinical varicella-zoster virus strains.
Article 1986 en
Authors
MB
Masanori Baba
KK
Kenji Konno
SS
Shirô Shigeta
Abstract
1 min read
Nine anti-herpes compounds, idoxuridine (IDU), bromovinyldeoxyuridine (BVDU), bromovinylarabinofuranosylurasil (BVaraU), carbocyclic bromovinyldeoxyuridine (C-BVDU), chloroethyldeoxyuridine (CEDU), acyclovir (ACV), dihydroxypropoxymethylguanine (DHPG), adenine arabinoside (Ara-A), and phosphonoformate (PFA) were examined for their inhibitory activities against the replication of twenty-six newly isolated clinical strains of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) in human embryonic fibroblast cell cultures. The order of (decreasing) efficacy was: BVaraU greater than BVDU greater than or equal to C-BVDU greater than CEDU greater than or equal to IDU greater than ACV greater than Ara-A greater than DHPG greater than PFA. There was little variation in the susceptibility of the 26 VZV strains to each particular compound, except for one strain which was resistant to IDU.
Robert Snoeck, M. Gérard, Catherine Sadzot‐Delvaux, Graciela Andreï, Jan Balzarini, D. Reymen, N. Ahadi, J.-M. De Bruyn, J Piette, Bernard Rentier, Nathan Clumeck, De Clercq Erik
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.