Abstract

In immunologic normal hosts, both children and adults, B19 can cause acute, generally self-limiting diseases. The infection leads to a viremia that can be present, at high titre, for about one week, then the onset of a specific immune response controls the infection. B19 infection in pregnancy can be associated with non-immunologic foetal hydrops or foetal death. In immunocompromised hosts, B19 can persist over several months and sometimes years. Persistent or recurrent B19 infections can be associated with chronic clinical manifestations or with transient clinical syndromes, generally related to the recrudescence of viral replication. Since the infection has been associated with a wide variety of clinical manifestations and some clinical features of B19 infection, such as anemia, artropathy and rash, can be common to other pathogens, a laboratory diagnosis of B19 infection is required. A diagnostic protocol must consider both the type of pathology and the type of patient. In immunocompetent individuals serological and virological testing is complementary, while in immunocompromised patients viral detection is the diagnosis of choice. Viral detection methods are generally based, nowadays, on the direct detection of B19 genome in clinical specimens. B19 DNA is mainly detected by hybridizations assays and by the most sensitive PCR assays. Serological diagnosis of B19 infection is generally achieved by detection of IgM and IgG antibodies to the B19 structural proteins VP1 and VP2. IgM detection is most often performed by capture assays, both in EIA and RIA formats, IgG are mainly detected by indirect EIA and immunofluorescence tests.

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