Long persistence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 swab positivity in a drowned corpse: a case report
Long persistence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 swab positivity in a drowned corpse: a case report
Blog Article
Abstract Background Since the beginning of the worldwide spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 to date, important knowledge has been obtained about the virus behavior in living subjects and on inanimate surfaces; however, there is still a lack of data on virus persistency on dead bodies and the risk of contagion from cadavers.Case presentation The present case shows the persistency of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 viral DRY EYE RELIEF genome in nasopharyngeal swabs performed on a drowned Caucasian man, aged 41 years old, who was Btowband Bridle completely asymptomatic when he was alive, up to 41 days after death.Specific real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (TaqMan 2019-nCoV Assay Kit v2; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Italy and Realquality RQ-SARS-CoV-2, AB Analytical) was used to evaluate the swabs.Conclusions This data reflect the importance of postmortem swabs in all autopsy cases, and not only in potential severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2-related death, and also highlight the necessity to evaluate virus positivity a long time after the moment of death, even if a low initial viral load was assessed.