Verses, viruses, and the vulnerability of the blood supply in industrialized countries.

J Med Virol

Infectious Disease Diagnostics, Tierra Verde, Florida 33715, USA.

Published: August 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Significant advancements have been made in detecting transfusion-transmitted viruses like HBV, HCV, and HIV over the past 30 years, significantly reducing the risk of transmission in industrialized countries.
  • Despite these improvements, there are ongoing concerns about other blood-borne infectious agents, including various viruses, bacteria, and prion diseases that could still be transmitted through transfusion.
  • The review provides an overview of the prevalence and diagnosis of these emerging diseases and discusses newly identified non-pathogenic blood-borne viruses like GB virus C and Torque Tenoviruses.

Article Abstract

In the last 30 years, tremendous progress in identifying transfusion-transmitted viruses such as HBV, HCV, and HIV in industrialized countries has been achieved. Currently, the residual risk of transmitting these viruses through transfusion is very low especially after the introduction of "minipool" nucleic acid-amplification tests. Despite these major technical advances, there remains a legitimate concern as to the transmission of other blood-borne infectious agents through blood transfusion. Among these agents are HBV mutants, occult HBV, and HCV infections, malaria, Chagas, West Nile, dengue, and vesiviruses, bacterial infections such as Yersinia enterocolitica, and tick borne diseases such as human monocytic ehrlichiosis, human granulocytic ehrlichiosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and Lyme and prion diseases such as Creutzfeldt and variant Creutzfeldt. Most of these agents are very rarely transmitted by transfusion in industrialized countries. However, an awareness of their possible transmission is essential for the control of spread of these diseases among the public by human-to-human transmission via blood transfusion. This review summarizes the current status of prevalence and diagnosis of these emerging diseases and also updates our knowledge on recently discovered non-pathogenic blood-borne viruses such as GB virus C and Torque Tenoviruses.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.20864DOI Listing

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