Adenoviruses of subgenus F (types 40 and 41) cause infantile gastroenteritis and adenoviruses principally of types 1-7 are found in feces during respiratory or generalized infections. Adenoviruses (mostly types 3, 4, 8, 19, or 37) are also linked with follicular or epidemic conjunctivitis. The diagn
Polymerase chain reaction for rapid detection of ocular adenovirus infection
β Scribed by Dr. D. J. Morris; A. S. Bailey; R. J. Cooper; Dr. P. C. Turner; Dr. R. Jackson; G. Corbitt; A. B. Tullo
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 739 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Adenoviruses are associated with endemic and epidemic acute conjunctivitis, large nosocomial outbreaks reflecting virus transmission on unwashed hands or inadequately sterilised ophthalmic instruments. The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) proved more sensitive than antigen detection by immune dotβblot test for the rapid diagnosis of ocular adenovirus infection (sensitivities in a retrospective study 112/123 (91%) versus 72/123 (59%), P< 0.001). Indeed, in a prospective comparison, DNA amplification and virus isolation generated similar numbers of positive results (34 versus 32), though five PCR positive results were possibly false positives. The sensitivity of the PCR was largely independent of adenovirus subgenus or serotype, though reduced sensitivity with subgenus B strains could not be excluded. Specimen preparation for DNA amplification using a simple lysis buffer proved more effective than phenolβchloroform extraction. The immune dotβblot test gave unavoidable false positive results, but with the PCR this problem could be minimized by technical modifications. The PCR could replace antigen detection and virus isolation as the initial test for adenoviruses in conjunctival swabs, with cell culture only being retained for adenovirus serotyping in PCR positive specimens and for other viruses such as herpes simplex. Β© 1995 WileyβLiss, Inc.
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