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Profile of Acute Infectious Markers in Sporadic Hepatitis E

Authors :
Qiang Yan
Mun-Hon Ng
Jun Zhang
Li Guan
Jia-Ping Cai
J. Wai Kuo Shih
Xing Ai
Zhong-Ze Wang
Han-Min Jiang
Fengcai Zhu
Ting Wu
Xuefeng Zhang
Ningshao Xia
Yi-Jun Wang
Shoujie Huang
Lang Jiang
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Iss 10, p e13560 (2010), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2010.

Abstract

Laboratory diagnosis of acute infection of hepatitis E virus (HEV) is commonly based on the detection of HEV RNA, IgM and/or rising IgG levels. However, the profile of these markers when the patients present have not been well determined. To clarify the extent of misdiagnosed sporadic hepatitis E in the initial laboratory detection, serial sera of 271 sporadic acute hepatitis cases were collected, detected and the dynamics of each acute marker during the illness course were analyzed. 91 confirmed cases of hepatitis E were identified based on the presentation of HEV RNA, IgM or at least 4 fold rising of IgG levels. 21 (23.1%) hepatitis E cases were false negative for the viral RNA and 40 (44.0%) for rising IgG, because occurrence of these markers were confined to acute phase of infection and viremia had already subsided and antibody level peaked when these patients presented. IgM was detected in 82 (90.1%) cases. It is the most prevalent of the three markers, because the antibody persisted until early convalescence. Nine cases negative for IgM were positive for rising IgG and one was also positive for the viral RNA; all of these nine cases showed high avid IgG in their acute phase sera, which indicated re-infection. In summary, it is not practicable to determine the true occurrence of sporadic hepatitis E. Nevertheless, it could be closely approximated by approach using a combination of all three acute markers.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ada53ff73d34f82398847e6ca865fad