Articles
 

Relationship of IgG Avidity Index and IgM Levels for the Differential Diagnosis of Primary from Recurrent Cytomegalovirus Infections

Abstract

Since the incidence of symptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus infection is low (~0.05%) and risk factors are not well defined, it is difficult to develop strategies for prevention. The aim of this study was to recognise the utility of specific Immunoglobulin G avidity analysis for distinguishing primary infection from past/recurrent infection.
Sera from 50 women with cytomegalovirus specific Immunoglobulin M antibodies without proven seroconversion and infants born to these women were tested for presence of Immunoglobulin M antibodies by commercial enzyme immunoassay.
For cytomegalovirus specific immunoglobulin G avidity, sera were measured by commercial kit according to manufacturer's recommendations.
Among 50 sera form mothers, 26 showed the presence of Immunoglobulin M antibodies out of which 15 had low avidity antibodies. Out of 50 sera from children, 18 showed the presence of Immunoglobulin M antibodies. Out of these 18 sera from children, 12 were symptomatic, which all showed the presence of low avidity antibodies.
The results showed that an avidity index <40% and presence of Immunoglobulin M antibodies is highly suggestive of a recent primary infection.

Files
IssueVol 6, No 4 (2007) QRcode
SectionArticles
Keywords
Avidity index IgM antibody

Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
1.
Anita Chakravarti, Bineeta Kashyap, Anupriya Wadhwa. Relationship of IgG Avidity Index and IgM Levels for the Differential Diagnosis of Primary from Recurrent Cytomegalovirus Infections. Iran J Allergy Asthma Immunol. 1;6(4):197-201.