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Prevalence and association of human parvovirus B19V with hepatitis B and C viruses in Nigeria. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Co-infection of parvovirus B19 with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is common, but its clinical significance remains debated, as shown in a study of 76 HBV patients, 17 with HBV/HCV co-infection, and 44 healthy controls.
  • Antibodies against parvovirus B19 were present in a significant number of patients, with 32-47% detection rates across groups, while the presence of parvovirus B19 DNA varied, being higher in symptomatic HBV patients compared to asymptomatic carriers.
  • Although there was a higher prevalence of B19 DNA in symptomatic HBV cases, the study did not find conclusive evidence that parvovirus B19 infection increases liver disease severity, indicating

Article Abstract

Co-infection of parvovirus B19 with hepatitis B virus has been found in patients with acute and chronic hepatitis. The clinical significance of parvovirus B19 in hepatitis B co-infected patients is still controversial. In this study parvovirus B19 antibodies and DNA were investigated in serum samples from 76 patients with HBV infection, 17 with HBV/HCV co-infection and 44 healthy controls. In the sera from patients with HBV infection, anti-B19V IgM and IgG antibodies were detected in 24/76 (32%) and 25/76 (33%), in 6/17 (35%) and 8/17 (47%) of HBV/HCV co-infected patients, and in 14/44 (32%) and 12/44 (12%) of a non-hepatitis healthy controls, respectively. B19V DNA was detected in 8/76 (11%) of patients with HBV infection and in 3/17 (18%) of patients with a HBV/HCV co-infection, and in 4/44 (9%) healthy controls. The occurrence of parvovirus B19 DNA was significantly higher in patients with symptomatic HBV 4/20 (20%) compared to asymptomatic HBV carrier 4/56 (7%) (P<0.05). Ten of the positive B19V DNA sequences belonged to B19V genotype 1 while two belonged to genotype 3. The results of this study showed a significant difference in the prevalence of parvovirus B19 DNA in symptomatic HBsAg positive as compared to asymptomatic HBsAg positive individuals; however, the conclusion that parvovirus B19 infection increased the frequency of liver disease was not supported. Long-term longitudinal studies are, however, required to determine the synergistic effect of parvovirus B19 infection in HBV or HBV and HCV co-infected persons.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.22008DOI Listing

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