Diagnosis of arboviruses using indirect sandwich IgG ELISA in horses from the Brazilian Amazon

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Abstract

Background: The Amazon as a whole is the largest reservoir of arboviruses worldwide, while the Brazilian Amazon hosts the largest variety of arboviruses isolated to date. In this study, the results of an indirect sandwich IgG ELISA, standardized for 19 arbovirustypes circulating among horses in Brazilian Amazon, were compared to results of the hemagglutination inhibition test. A screening test assessed the conditional probability distribution and a Pearson linear correlation test determined the correlation strength among the absorbance values recorded for viruses from the same family.Findings: Sensitivity varied between 40.85 and 100%; the specificity was low and ranged from 39.71 to 67.0%; and the accuracy varied between 41 and 65.2%. The test developed in this study yielded a large number of serological cross-reactions.Conclusions: The test can be employed to detect IgG antibodies within one arbovirus family; however, the hemagglutination test or other more specific techniques, such as the serum neutralization test in mice or the plaque-reduction neutralization test, are essential complementary methods for positive cases.

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Casseb, A. do R., Nunes, M. R. T., Rodrigues, S. G., Travassos da Rosa, E. S., Casseb, L. M. N., Casseb, S. M. M., … Vasconcelos, P. F. da C. (2014). Diagnosis of arboviruses using indirect sandwich IgG ELISA in horses from the Brazilian Amazon. Journal of Venomous Animals and Toxins Including Tropical Diseases, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1678-9199-20-29

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