Human parvovirus B19 infection in HIV-positive patients

Author:

Aguiar Fábio S.1,Lopes Daniella P.1,Bazin Anna Ricordi1,Setúbal Sérgio1,Cohen Bernard J.2,Nascimento Jussara P.3

Affiliation:

1. Universidade Federal Fluminense

2. Central Public Health Laboratory

3. Universidade Federal Fluminense; Fundação do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz

Abstract

Parvovirus B19 infects predominantly erythroid cells, leading to transient inhibition of erythropoiesis. Immunocompromised patients may be unable to produce neutralizing antibodies and may develop severe chronic anemia. Epidemiological studies done on Niterói population showed that B19 infection occurs periodically in late spring and summer. We report a study from 55 HIV infected patients attending an infectious diseases outpatient clinic in this city during a 5-month period in which B19 circulation was well documented. All patients were under anti-retroviral therapy. No anti-B19 IgM was found, but a high prevalence of IgG anti-B19 (91%) was observed. In six patients, B19 DNA was found by dot-blot hybridization techniques, but this was not confirmed by PCR. None of these 6 patients manifested anemia and only one had CD4 cell count below 200 x 10(7)/L. We conclude that persistent infection causing anemia is an infrequent finding in our HIV positive patients under drug therapy.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Parasitology

Reference24 articles.

1. Clinical relevance of parvovirus B19 as a cause of anemia in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection;Abkowitz JL;Journal of Infectious Diseases,1997

2. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report,1992

3. Secondary infection with parvovirus B19 in an HIV positive patient [Letter];Bremner JAG;AIDS,1993

4. Parvovirus B19 as a cause of anemia in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients;Bremner JAG;Journal of Infectious Diseases,1994

5. Persistent parvovirus B19 infection;Brown KE;Reviews of Medical Microbiology,1995

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