Disinfection is an important measure to prevent hepatitis B virus (HBV) transmission by instruments. However, virucidal testing of disinfectants against HBV is difficult, because no simple quantitative infectivity assay exists. Since molecular changes of viral epitopes and the genome may indicate virus inactivation, we measured the alteration of these constituents with 0.065% peracetic acid (PAA) for exposure times up to 1 h. Plasma of a chronic HBV carrier with 10(9) HBV genomes/ml served as viral source in the form of a 10% dilution or of a purified HB-antigen preparation. Alterations of HBV epitopes were analyzed with four monoclonal antibodies in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Changes of the HBV genomes were determined by the inability to amplify the target sequence with a quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction, either of a short fragment (189 bp) or of the full-length (3,200 bp). The determination of the epitope and genome alteration was quantified as log10 reduction factor (RF) with the parallel line bioassay. Under a high protein load of 10% human plasma, PAA induced a HBV genome alteration of RF = 1.5 after an exposure time of 60 min. Similar RFs were seen with the four HB epitopes. Without protein load, the alteration of these epitopes amounted to a RF of more than 3.5 within 30 min. Such inhibition of PAA activity by protein load was also seen in the virucidal tests with parvovirus. Although the RF were higher in the virucidal tests, the time-dependent dose-response curves for the epitope and genome alteration and for the infectivity inactivation followed the same inactivation kinetics. The molecular alteration and disintegration epitope and genome test may therefore be suitable to measure antiviral activity of disinfectants against HBV.
Three commercial disinfectants (two quaternary formulations and one phenolic) were tested against human hepatitis B virus (HHBV). The treated virus was assayed for infectivity by the chimpanzee assay and for morphological alteration by the Morphological Alteration and Disintegration Test. The same agents were tested against duck hepatitis B virus in a duck hepatocyte infectivity assay. It is apparent that human and duck hepatitis viruses were relatively susceptible to disinfection, becoming noninfectious after < or = 10 min of contact with the disinfectant. The Morphological Alteration and Disintegration Test accurately predicted activity in the two infectivity tests. The anti-human hepatitis B virus effect of the low-level quaternary ammonium germicides is a novel finding and suggest that members of the family Hepadnaviridae are relatively susceptible to chemical agents.
The median percentages of peripheral blood immunoglobulin-positive (Ig+) lymphocytes (8%, n = 46), CD8+ (12%, n = 49) and CD57+ cell numbers (5%, n = 37) of patients suffering from multiple sclerosis (MS) were significantly (p < 0.05) lower than the values of age- and sex-matched healthy individuals (Ig+ cells: 13%, n = 46; CD8+ cells: 17%, n = 49; CD57+ cells: 9%, n = 37). Comparison of calculations on decreased peripheral blood cell counts and increased brain cell counts in MS patients revealed that sequestration of blood cells into the MS brain is a possible explanation of these findings.
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