HIV-1/2 indeterminate western blot results: Follow-up of asymptomatic blood donors in belo horizonte, minas gerais, Brazil

7Citations
Citations of this article
32Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The clinical and public health importance of indeterminate results in HIV-1/2 testing is still difficult to evaluate in volunteer blood donors. At Fundação Hemominas, HIV-1/2 ELISA is used as the screening test and, if reactive, is followed by Western blot (WB). We have evaluated 84 blood donors who had repeatedly reactive ELISA tests for HIV-1/2, but indeterminate WB results. Sixteen of the 84 donors (19.0%) had history of sexually transmitted diseases; 18/84 (21.4%) informed receiving or paying for sex; 3/84 (3.6%) had homosexual contact; 2/26 women (7.6%) had past history of multiple illegal abortions and 3/84 (3.6%) had been previously transfused. Four out of 62 donors (6.5%) had positive anti-nuclear factor (Hep2), with titles up to 1:640. Parasitological examination of the stool revealed eggs of S. mansoni in 4/62 (6.4%) donors and other parasites in 8/62 (12.9%). Five (5.9%) of the subjects presented overt seroconversion for HIV-1/2, 43/84 (51.2%) had negative results on the last visit, while 36/84 (42.9%) remained WB indeterminate. Although some conditions could be found associated with the HIV-1/2 indeterminate WB results and many donors had past of risky behavior, the significance of the majority of the results remains to be determined.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Carneiro-Proietti, A. B. F., Cunha, I. W., Souza, M. M., Ouveira, D. R., Mesquita, N. M., Andrade, C. A., … Proietti, F. A. (1999). HIV-1/2 indeterminate western blot results: Follow-up of asymptomatic blood donors in belo horizonte, minas gerais, Brazil. Revista Do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo, 41(3), 155–158. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0036-46651999000300004

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free