Serodiagnosis of western equine encephalitis virus infections: relationships of antibody titer and test to observed onset of clinical illness.

Autor: Calisher CH, Emerson JK, Muth DJ, Lazuick JS, Monath TP
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association [J Am Vet Med Assoc] 1983 Aug 15; Vol. 183 (4), pp. 438-40.
Abstrakt: Sera from horses and human beings with clinically diagnosed western equine encephalitis (WEE) virus infections were tested for hemagglutination-inhibition (HI), complement-fixation (CF), and neutralizing (N) antibody to WEE virus. These tests confirmed infection in 43.8% (HI), 56.3% (CF), and 80.4% (N) of horses and 54.5% (HI), 59.1% (CF), and 77.3% (N) of human beings. Use of the N test as an adjunct to the HI and CF tests increased the likelihood of serologic confirmation to 91.7%. In both horses and human beings, N antibody increased steeply at the end of the 1st week after onset. The results suggested that the presence of a high HI, CF, and/or N antibody titer in a single serum obtained from horses during the acute phase of illness caused by WEE virus can be used as presumptive evidence for infection with this virus.
Databáze: MEDLINE