Paired sera from 21 women whose children had malignancy and 15 women who were diagnosed as having abnormal pathology in the cervix and matched normal controls were studied for presence of BK antibodies by the ELISA technique. BK antibody was detected in 74% of the women in the first serum sample obtained. Evidence of BK antibody rises were observed in eight of 72 women (11%) and was distributed equally among women with abnormal children and women with abnormal pathology in the cervix and controls and that the level of antibody was not influenced by vaccination with killed polio vaccine during this pregnancy. Our serological data fails to show an association between infection with BK virus and malignancy in the children or carcinoma in situ of the cervix.
Penicillin treatment and antibody response were studied using a rhesus monkey model for intraamniotic infection with type III group B streptococci (T3GBS). Acute and convalescent phase sera from mothers and their offspring were tested with a radioactive antigen-binding assay to determine the concentration of antibody to the capsular T3GBS antigen. The frequency of placentitis was significantly lower in penicillin-treated animals (3 of 8) than in controls (10 of 10; P less than .01). The penicillin group also had a significantly lower neonatal mortality (1 of 9) than controls (6 of 10; P less than .05). Both groups of rhesus mothers developed a significant increase in concentration of antibody to T3GBS, but the antibody response was of lesser magnitude in the penicillin-treated group. This experimental model appears to be useful for studying both therapy for intraamniotic infection and the humoral immune response to infection with T3GBS.
Coinfection with herpesviruses in young children born to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected women was studied with blood samples from children who were 9-12 months and 15-24 months of age. Three groups of children were included: (I) HIV-uninfected, asymptomatic (HIV-); (II) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and/or culture-positive and asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic (HIV+ asymptomatic); and (III) PCR and/or culture-positive and symptomatic (HIV+ symptomatic). Significantly more of the HIV+ symptomatic patients had cytomegalovirus (CMV) antibody than the HIV patients. In addition, CMV antibody levels were significantly higher in the HIV+ symptomatic patients than in either of the other two groups. Human herpesvirus 7 (HHV-7) antibody titers were significantly different among the three groups of patients; however, no pairwise comparisons were significant. No differences were found for HHV-6 or Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) antibody frequencies or titers. These findings suggest that infection with CMV is a cofactor or an opportunistic infection causing symptomatic HIV infections in young children.
The immunological responses of patients with clinical signs of SSPE were examined by the direct migration inhibition, complement-mediated antibody cytoxicity and the lymphocyte-mediated cytotoxicity assay techniques. Peripheral lymphocytes migrated similarly to controls when exposed to measles antigen. Lymphocytes from SSPE patients responded to a SSPE strain of measles infected cells in a manner similar to lymphocytes from controls. A factor which interfered with the expected activity of sensitized lymphocytes to measles virus was detected in some cerebral spinal fluid obtained from SSPE patients. The blocking activity varied from 100% in 4 of 20 patients with SSPE to no blocking in 2 of the SSPE patients. The occurrence of blocking factor in SSPE patients could not be related to sex or age of the patient, serum of CSF antibody levels, and duration of disease or outcome.
For hepatitis B, universal screening of pregnant women for HBsAg along with the combined use of hepatitis B vaccine and HBIG in infants of infected mothers appears to be the best way to detect and prevent vertically transmitted infection. Cytomegalovirus is the most common congenital viral infection, but the lack of a good screening test precludes its accurate and rapid diagnosis. For HPV-B19, larger and more controlled studies are needed to confirm the safety and effectiveness of fetal blood transfusions in the management of hydrops fetalis caused by this infection. Finally, the fact that most mothers of HSV- and toxoplasma-infected neonates have no history of infection, and are asymptomatic at the time of delivery, underscores the need for a high index of clinical suspicion in sick neonates.