Diagnosis of herpes simplex virus-1 keratitis using Giemsa stain, immunofluorescence assay, and polymerase chain reaction assay on corneal scrapings

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Abstract

Aims: To evaluate three tests used routinely for the diagnosis of herpes simplex virus (HSV) keratitis. Methods: Corneal scrapings from 28 patients with clinically typical dendritic corneal ulcer suggestive of HSV keratitis, and 30 patients with clinically non-viral corneal ulcers, were tested by (i) Giemsa stain for multinucleated giant cells, (ii) immunofluorescence assay (IFA) for HSV-1 antigen, and (iii) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for HSV-1 DNA, by investigators masked to clinical diagnosis. The control subjects were also investigated by smears and cultures for bacteria, fungus, and Acanthamoeba. Results: The specificity and positive predictive values of all three tests for the diagnosis of HSV keratitis were between 95-100%. The sensitivity of IFA and PCR was 78.6% and 81.2%, respectively, and the difference was not significant; however, their sensitivity and negative predictive value were significantly higher than Giemsa stain. Conclusions: While a combination of IFA and PCR constitute the choice of tests in clinically suspected cases of HSV keratitis, multinucleated giant cells in Giemsa stain can preempt testing by IFA and PCR in otherwise atypical cases of HSV keratitis.

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APA

Farhatullah, S., Kaza, S., Athmanathan, S., Garg, P., Reddy, S. B., & Sharma, S. (2004). Diagnosis of herpes simplex virus-1 keratitis using Giemsa stain, immunofluorescence assay, and polymerase chain reaction assay on corneal scrapings. British Journal of Ophthalmology, 88(1), 142–144. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.88.1.142

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