Abstrakt: |
Serological surveillance of suspected orthopoxvirus infections in man is important for confirming the success of the worldwide smallpox eradication programme. An adsorption radioimmunoassay (RIA) was used to differentiate sera from patients who were naturally infected with human monkeypox or variola virus, and individuals who were immunized with vaccinia virus. The antisera were adsorbed with uninfected chicken chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) and vaccinia-infected CAM before reacting in RIA with vaccinia, monkeypox, and variola antigens. Each serum group showed characteristic patterns of residual antibody activity which made it possible to identify antibody specificities.When 45 human sera were tested by this method, 71% were identified as having vaccinia, variola, or monkeypox adsorption characteristics, while the remaining 29% could not be identified. Of the identified sera, 9 were characteristic of vaccinia, 8 of variola, and 15 of monkeypox. Six of the 15 monkeypox sera were virologically confirmed monkeypox infections, 6 were suspected monkeypox infections but were not virologically confirmed, and 3 were of unknown aetiology.The adsorption RIA provides a method of identifying serologically the poxvirus responsible for infection long after the acute phase of illness. |