| Literature DB >> 22966951 |
Imed Gaaloul1, Samira Riabi, Rafik Harrath, Mark Evans, Nidhal H Salem, Souheil Mlayeh, Sally Huber, Mahjoub Aouni.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Viral myocarditis is a major cause of sudden unexpected death in children and young adults. Until recently, coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) has been the most commonly implicated virus in myocarditis. At present, no standard diagnosis is generally accepted due to the insensitivity of traditional diagnostic tests. This has prompted health professionals to seek new diagnostic approaches, which resulted in the emergence of new molecular pathological tests and a more detailed immunohistochemical and histopathological analysis. When supplemented with immunohistochemistry and molecular pathology, conventional histopathology may provide important clues regarding myocarditis underlying etiology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22966951 PMCID: PMC3462138 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-12-212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Epidemiological data of investigated groups
| Age (year) | 18-42 | 23-35 |
| Gender | Male | Male |
| Cause of sudden death | Clinically suspected inflammatory heart disease | Unnatural traffic accident casualties |
Figure 1 Histological specimen (hematoxylin-eosin staining) from Sudden Unexpected Death victims demonstrating active myocarditis. [1A, 1B, 1C] Areas of diffuse myocardial necrosis with large inflammatory infiltrates (arrows). [1D]Control samples (unnatural traffic accident deaths) showing no significant pathological findings.
Figure 2 Immunohistochemical detection of enteroviral capsid protein VP1 in post-mortem myocardial samples. [2A, 2B] Enteroviral capsid protein VP1 detected inside myocytes (arrows) suggesting a confluent invasion of enterovirus. [2C] Control samples (unnatural traffic accident victims) showing no significant pathological findings.
Immunohistochemical and molecular-pathological investigations of the myocardium of sudden unexpected death victims
| 1 | + | > 30 | > 30 | + (CVB3) |
| 2 | + | > 30 | 27.6 | + (CVB3) |
| 3 | + | 23.3 | > 30 | + (CVB3) |
| 4 | + | 24.9 | > 30 | + (CVB3) |
| 5 | + | > 30 | > 30 | + (CVB1) |
| 6 | + | > 30 | > 30 | + (CVB3) |
Mean values of T and B-lymphocytes; 20 counted high power fields (HPF; x400); and detection of enteroviral capsid protein VP1.
Figure 3 Immunohistochemical studies for the identification of infected immune cells in the myocardium of sudden unexpected death victims. [3A] Immunohistochemical labeling of paraffin-embedded tissue sections with antibody recognizing T cell (arrows). [3B] Immunohistochemical labeling of paraffin-embedded tissue sections with antibody recognizing B cell (arrows).
Figure 4 Detection of Coxsackie B enterovirus RNA by RT-PCR in post-mortem myocardial samples from Sudden Unexpected Death victims (1 and 10: molecular size marker 100-bp DNA ladder; 2: Negative control RNA extraction; 3: Negative control RT-PCR mixture; 4 to 6 and 8: Samples from coxsackie B enterovirus-positive cases; 7: Samples from a coxsackie B enterovirus-negative case; 9: A positive control; coxsackievirus B3: 155 bp).