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  4. A chronicle of SARS-CoV-2: Seasonality, environmental fate, transport, inactivation, and antiviral drug resistance
 
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A chronicle of SARS-CoV-2: Seasonality, environmental fate, transport, inactivation, and antiviral drug resistance

Source
Journal of Hazardous Materials
ISSN
03043894
Date Issued
2021-03-05
Author(s)
Kumar, Manish  
Mazumder, Payal
Mohapatra, Sanjeeb
Kumar Thakur, Alok
Dhangar, Kiran
Taki, Kaling
Mukherjee, Santanu
Kumar Patel, Arbind
Bhattacharya, Prosun
Mohapatra, Pranab  
Rinklebe, Jörg
Kitajima, Masaaki
Hai, Faisal I.
Khursheed, Anwar
Furumai, Hiroaki
Sonne, Christian
Kuroda, Keisuke
DOI
10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.124043
Volume
405
Abstract
In this review, we present the environmental perspectives of the viruses and antiviral drugs related to SARS-CoV-2. The present review paper discusses occurrence, fate, transport, susceptibility, and inactivation mechanisms of viruses in the environment as well as environmental occurrence and fate of antiviral drugs, and prospects (prevalence and occurrence) of antiviral drug resistance (both antiviral drug resistant viruses and antiviral resistance in the human). During winter, the number of viral disease cases and environmental occurrence of antiviral drug surge due to various biotic and abiotic factors such as transmission pathways, human behaviour, susceptibility, and immunity as well as cold climatic conditions. Adsorption and persistence critically determine the fate and transport of viruses in the environment. Inactivation and disinfection of virus include UV, alcohol, and other chemical-base methods but the susceptibility of virus against these methods varies. Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are major reserviors of antiviral drugs and their metabolites and transformation products. Ecotoxicity of antiviral drug residues against aquatic organisms have been reported, however more threatening is the development of antiviral resistance, both in humans and in wild animal reservoirs. In particular, emergence of antiviral drug-resistant viruses via exposure of wild animals to high loads of antiviral residues during the current pandemic needs further evaluation.
Publication link
https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0304389420320331-ga1_lrg.jpg
URI
http://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/IITG2025/23736
Subjects
Antiviral drugs | Coronavirs | COVID-19 | Ecotoxicity | Persistance | resistance | Virus | Water
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