Medline ® Abstract for Reference 36
of 'Clinical manifestations of varicella-zoster virus infection: Herpes zoster'
36
TI
Evidence for antigen-specific immune deviation in patients with acute retinal necrosis.
AU
Kezuka T, Sakai J, Usui N, Streilein JW, Usui M
SO
Arch Ophthalmol. 2001;119(7):1044.
BACKGROUND:
Because experimental acute retinal necrosis (ARN) induced by herpes simplex virus in mice develops only if mice fail to acquire virus-specific delayed hypersensitivity (DH), although they produce antiviral antibodies (ie, anterior chamber-associated immune deviation), we sought to determine whether a similar inverse correlation exists for patients with varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-induced ARN.
DESIGN:
Patients with acute, VZV-induced ARN and age-matched control subjects were skin tested with VZV and purified protein derivative antigens to evaluate DH. Varicella-zoster virus-induced ARN was diagnosed using polymerase chain reaction and intraocular antibody quotient. Serum samples were collected and analyzed for anti-VZV and anti-herpes simplex virus antibody titers. Acute retinal necrosis activity was assessed clinically, and DH skin tests were repeated 3 months after onset when ocular recovery had taken place.
RESULTS:
Whereas controls displayed intense DH when tested with VZV and purified protein derivative antigens, a subset of patients with ARN displayed absent VZV-specific DH (although their purified protein derivative responses were normal). Patients with the most severe ARN had the lowest DH responses to VZV antigens. Serum anti-VZV antibody titers were higher in patients with ARN than in controls, and antiviral titer correlated inversely with the intensity of anti-VZV DH responses. Varicella-zoster virus-specific DH responses were restored in patients who recovered from ARN.
CONCLUSION:
Varicella-zoster virus-ARN develops in a setting where DH reactivity to viral antigens is absent, implying that virus-specific DH might ameliorate the severity of ARN.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE:
Linking virus-specific DH to vulnerability to ARN in individuals infected with VZV might reveal an underappreciated pathogenic mechanism.
AD
Department of Ophthalmology, Tokyo Medical University, 6-7-1, Nishishinjuku, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 160-0023, Japan. tkezuka@tokyo-med.ac.jp
PMID
