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Diagnosis of viral diseases

Diagnosis of viral diseases. Diagnosis of viral diseases. Three General Approaches for Laboratory Diagnosis of Viral Infections : Direct detection -Microscopy or staining. Virus Isolation -PCR. Serology -Antibodies. Viral Serology. Detection of SPECIFIC antibodies.

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Diagnosis of viral diseases

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  1. Diagnosis of viral diseases

  2. Diagnosis of viral diseases Three General Approaches for Laboratory Diagnosis of Viral Infections : Direct detection -Microscopy or staining. Virus Isolation -PCR. Serology -Antibodies .

  3. Viral Serology • Detection of SPECIFIC antibodies. • Indirect : Primary and secondary responses to viral infections • IgM antibody during acute phase (1st exposure) • IgG antibody during convalescence (2nd exposure) • IgA mucosal antibody (respiratory infections, GI)

  4. Serology Tests • Serology Tests Commonly Used : • Haemagglutination. • Haemagglutination Inhibition. • Complement fixation. • Indirect Fluorescent Assay (IFA). • Indirect EIA (ELISA).

  5. Viral Serology • Indirect Fluorescent Assay (IFA) • Indirect EIA (ELISA)

  6. Viral Serology • Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays (ELISAs) : • Enzyme-Linked ImmunoSorbent Assay, or ELISA, is a biochemical technique used mainly in immunology to detect the presence of an antibody or an antigen in a sample. The ELISA has been used as a diagnostic tool in medicine • Enzyme reacts with substrate to produce colored product . • Very sensitive . • Not expensive.

  7. ELISA Procedures

  8. Advantages of Viral serology : 􀂃 • Determine immune status – person or population • Verify immune response to vaccination • Diagnosis of chronic infection/ reactivation ? • Diagnosis of recent infection ? (IgM & IgA) • Wide range of tests available • Uses serum – easily collected and transported • (compared with biopsy tissue or DNA )

  9. Viral markers • Some common viral markers detected by serology : • HAV • HBV • HCV • CMV • OTHERS

  10. HEPATITIS A • Serology: • Acute – IgM – lasts 3-6 months . • Chronic – IgG – lifetime . • Liver enzymes – increases in ALT, AST, bilirubin

  11. EVENTS IN HEPATITIS A VIRUS INFECTION Clinical illness Infection ALT IgM IgG Viremia Response HAV in stool 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Week

  12. HEPATITIS B • Serology: - acute: • HBsAg+ (HBsAb-) = acute infection or chronic carrier • HBeAg+ = highly infectious • HBsAb = immune – naturally or vaccine • Window phase = HBsAg- and HBsAb- will be HBcAb+ (IgM – acute)

  13. HEPATITIS C • ss +RNA Flavivirus (former non-A, non-B) • Marked genetic heterogeneity due to hypervariable region • Mutates under immunologic pressure and becomes chronic • Vaccines are difficult to develop • Immunoglobulin not effective

  14. Serologic Pattern of Acute HCV Infection with Recovery anti-HCV Symptoms +/- HCV RNA Titer ALT Normal 6 1 2 3 4 0 1 2 3 4 5 Years Months Time after Exposure

  15. EBV Serology • EBV VCA IgG: Positive • EBV VCA IgM: Positive • EBNA IgG: Negative • EBV AI: <60% • Acute EBV 􀂄􀂄

  16. THANK YOU

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