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A clinical and epidemiological study of human parvovirus B19 infection in fetal hydrops using PCR southern blot hybridization and chemiluminescence detection

✍ Scribed by Wattre, Pierre; Dewilde, Anny; Subtil, Damien; Andreoletti, Laurent; Thirion, Vincent


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
40 KB
Volume
54
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


Ninety-eight samples from 80 cases of spontaneous abortions after fetal death or hydrops fetalis from 12,000 pregnant women were examined using PCR. DNA was extracted from amniotic fluid, fetal blood, ascitic fluid and fetal biopsies or placenta specimens using QIA amp kits (QIAGEN). A 270-bp length fragment located within the B19 gene NS1 was amplified using PCR followed by electrophoresis and southernblot hybridization assay using a horseradish peroxidase-labelled probe and chemiluminescence detection. This assay was able to detect 1 to 10 DNA copies in a 10 µl sample. Parvovirus B19 was identified in 11 cases (14% of fetal hydrops; 1 case for 1,100 pregnancies). Amniotic fluid was the most common and reliable sample to assess the diagnosis. Gestational age ranged from 17 to 28 weeks (mean 23 weeks). IgM antibodies were detected in 3 maternal sera, 2 patients of which reported an exposure to B19 infection during pregnancy. In 2 cases, intrauterine blood transfusions led to the cessation of symptoms and to birth of normal babies.