Vaccinia virus persistence in a child against the background of immune deficiency.

1986 
: A young girl, vaccinated against smallpox 6 years before suffered from a persistent vaccinia virus infection and a congenital skin disease, i.e. epidermolysis bullosa. The virus was isolated from skin lesions at the vaccination site and remote sites and repeatedly from the blood; it was not isolated from bone-marrow specimen, saliva, pharynx or urine. The titre of virus-neutralizing antibodies was low (1:10), immunoglobulins A, M and G were within age-related limits; antibodies against measles and tetanus were at protective levels, skin tests were positive. Staphylococcal antitoxin titre was extremely high. The child's mother, not vaccinated against smallpox, possessed vaccinia--virus-neutralizing antibodies at high titre (over 1:320). Examination of the child did not show any quantitative immune deficiency. Immune deviations were found in the lymphocyte blast-transformation reaction on stimulation with PHA and specific antigen, as well as in the nonspecific-suppression test. The possible genesis of the virus persistence and the role of the virus in the clinical course of the disease are discussed.
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