Association of Human Parvovirus B19 Infection with Development and Clinical Course of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
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Published:2019-10-01
Issue:5
Volume:73
Page:411-418
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ISSN:1407-009X
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Container-title:Proceedings of the Latvian Academy of Sciences. Section B. Natural, Exact, and Applied Sciences.
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language:en
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Short-container-title:
Author:
Rasa-Dzelzkalēja Santa1, Čapenko Svetlana1, Krūmiņa Angelika2, Lin Yung-Cheng3, Murovska Modra1
Affiliation:
1. Institute of Microbiology and Virology , Rīga Stradiņš University , 5 Rātsupītes Str., LV-1067 , Rīga , Latvia 2. Department of Infectology and Dermatology , Rīga Stradiņš University , 3 Linezera Str., LV-1006 , Rīga , Latvia 3. Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology , National Taiwan Ocean University , Keelung , Taiwan
Abstract
Abstract
Our aim was to estimate the presence of B19V infection markers, the level of cytokines and time period since the appearance of infection in association with ME/CFS clinical symptoms. In 200 ME/CFS patients and 104 control group individuals the presence of B19V-specific IgG/IgM class antibodies, B19V NS1 gene sequence, mRNA expression, viral load and level of cytokines were determined. B19V-specific IgG-antibodies were found in 70% of ME/CFS patients and 67.4% of controls, IgM-antibodies in 8% of patients and in none of controls, B19V genomic sequences in 29% of patients and 3.8% of controls. 58.6% of positive patients had active and 41.4% had latent/persistent B19V infection. B19V NS1 gene expression was detected in 43% of patients. B19V load varied from < 0.2 copies to median 38.2 copies/µg of DNA. According to the antibody pattern, 36% of patients had a recent, and 43% had sustained B19V infection. Patients with the B19V genomic sequence and NS1 specific antibodies significantly more often had lymphadenopathy and multi-joint pain. Onset of the symptoms corresponded to time of appearance of B19V infection. IL-10 and TNF-levels were higher in patients with elevated B19V load. B19V genome 1 was identified in Latvian ME/CFS patients. The results indicated that at least in some cases B19V infection plays an important role in ME/CFS development
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Multidisciplinary
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