The sensitivity and the specificity of a new commercial rapid 10-min adenovirus antigen immunochromatography (IC) test were determined by comparison with the sensitivity and specificity of virus isolation. Of 169 pharyngeal swabs from children with suspected adenovirus respiratory tract infections, 95 (56%) were culture positive for adenovirus. The IC test was sensitive (detecting 69 of these 95 infections [72.6%]) and completely specific (identifying 74 of 74 specimens [100%]) when it was compared with cell culture. The test detected adenovirus serotypes 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7 with almost equal sensitivities. This test is not only rapid and easy to perform but also sensitive and specific for adenovirus respiratory tract infections. The test is sufficiently rapid to be used at the bedside or in an outpatient clinic, with the result being available during a patient’s first examination.
Natural measles infection usually confers life-long immunity which is transferred from mothers to their offspring, protecting them from natural measles until the age of about 12 months. Recently, however, natural measles has been observed with increased frequency in infants under the age of 12 months. Natural measles outbreaks in the city of Sapporo have been suppressed by widely applied measles vaccination. Passive measles immunity in 160 neonates (cord blood), born during the last 17 y in Sapporo, Japan was determined by a neutralization (NT) antibody test. The mothers of these infants had had natural measles infection during childhood. Geometric mean titres (GMTs) of cord blood NT antibodies gradually decreased after 1989 and the GMTs of the most recently born infants were significantly lower than those of infants born in the first few years of the study. These observations suggest that even in mothers who experienced natural measles in childhood, recurrent exposure to natural measles is necessary in order to maintain adequate antibody levels for effective passive immunity of their infants.
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