The aim of this study was to evaluate the humoral immune response in late human trichinellosis with particular attention to the presence of IgG4 antibodies directed against the Trichinella-45-kDa glycoprotein (gp). This study re-evaluates subjects 15 years after they were involved in a trichinellosis outbreak that occurred in Central Italy following the consumption of raw boar meat infected with Trichinella britovi. The results show that ELISA tests using the E/S antigen identified five IgM- and eight IgG-positive patients and no IgA-positive patients. Tests using immunoblot (IB) with E/S antigens identified three IgM-, five IgA-, seven- IgG1- and three IgG4-positive sera. When the purified 45-kDa gp was used as an antigen, the IB revealed that six of the ten sera tested were positive for IgG4. Sera were also evaluated with a commercial kit, revealing that 11 of 12 patients had a highly sensitive reactivity against Trichinella proteins (64 and 44-43 kDa). In conclusion, humoral immune response against Trichinella is still present in these patients 15 years after the initial infection, including an IgG4 response directed to the 45-kDa gp.
Two out of five members of one household presented with clinical signs of trichinellosis after their return to the Netherlands. The family had consumed Trichinella-infected pork in Montenegro, formerly Yugoslavia. Serological tests were performed at 1, 2, 6, and 18 months after ingestion of the infected meat. Trichinella-specific IgM, IgG, and IgA antibodies measured in sera from symptomatic and asymptomatic patients remained positive up to 18 months after ingestion. The measured IgG4 antibody response directed to a 45 kDa Trichinella spiralis antigen also persisted 18 months after ingestion for three of the family members.
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