Mills E L
Annu Rev Med. 1984;35:469-79. doi: 10.1146/annurev.me.35.020184.002345.
Epidemiological and experimental evidence support the hypothesis that primary viral infection increases host susceptibility to secondary microbial invasion. The evidence is most compelling for a correlation between upper respiratory tract viruses and bacterial sinopulmonary disease; and cytomegalovirus and opportunistic fungal, bacterial and protozoal pathogens invading multiple sites. While a number of virus-induced alterations in host defenses have been described, the determinants of virus pathogenicity are still poorly understood.