We have studied prospectively 478 subjects exposed to hepatitis B virus and 20 pregnant women who developed HBs antigen during the last trimester of pregnancy. The results suggest that the DNA polymerase assay might be useful for the diagnosis of hepatitis B infection and that in confirmed cases of
Dane particles and associated DNA-polymerase activity in saliva of chronic hepatitis B carriers
✍ Scribed by Gabriel Macaya; Kirsten A. Visoná; Dr. Víactor M. Villarejos
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 751 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
To investigate furhter the problem of salivary transmission of type B hepatitis, salivas free of blood contamination from three HBsAg-positive carriers with chronic active hepatitis were examined by CsCl equilibrium density gradients and electron microscopy (EM). In the CsCl gradient HBsAg of whole salivas distributed in a band centered at 1.19gm/cm3 with a clearly defined shoulder at 1.24 gm/cm3; the HBsAg was found mainly in the mucous component. On EM examination, fractions from the 1.19 gm/cm3 peak contained spherical HBsAg particles of 22 +/- 3 nm diameter, whereas in the 1.24 gm/cm3 shoulder Dane particles 43 nm in diameter with 28 nm cores were found. Specific hepatitis B virus associated DNA-polymerase activity also was found in the 1.24 gm/cm3 shoulder where the Dane particles occurred and was absent from the saliva of healthy controls. When salivas were incubated for three hours at 37 degrees C the total amount of HBsAg diminished and the 1.24 gm/cm3 shoulder disappeared, probably as a result of endogenous degradation of the Dane particles and the free HBsAg. These findings clearly indicate that the hepatitis B viral particle is present in the saliva of chronic HBsAg carriers with active disease and further confirm that saliva is an important vehicle of infection.
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an ford, Ca 1 i forn ia 94305 Fifty patients with chronic HBs antigenemia and Dane particle-associated DNA polymerase and HBeAg in their serum were contrasted to 46 HBsAg positive patients who had neither serum DNA polymerase or HBeAg. The time from acute onset and the duration of antigenemia were l
A commercial radioimmunoassay was adapted to detect serum Dane particle-associated HBeAg in patients whose sera contained the homologous antibody. HBeAg was released from Dane particles with guanidine HC1. Dane particles were separated from anti-HBe by gel-filtration (Sepharose 4B) and ultracentrif
## Abstract Levels of serum hepatitis B virus DNA‐polymerase (HBV‐DNAP) were studied longitudinally over variable periods of time in 16 HBV chronic carriers using a modified assay procedure developed to increase reproducibility. Ten patients were tested on a short‐term basis at 3‐ to 6‐hr intervals