Publication | Closed Access
Short report: detection of Leishmaniavirus in human biopsy samples of leishmaniasis from Peru.
30
Citations
6
References
1998
Year
Short ReportVirus MarkerParasitic DiseaseViral DiagnosticsParasitic ProtozoaVirus PhylogenyPathogenesisVisceral LeishmaniasisDiagnosisPathologyVirologyParasite GenomicsMicrobiologyProtozoan Parasite LeishmaniaMedicineHuman Biopsy SamplesParasitologyDouble-stranded Rna Virus
Leishmaniavirus is a double-stranded RNA virus that persistently infects some strains of the protozoan parasite Leishmania. There is considerable interest in the possibility that the presence of this virus alters parasite phenotype and may affect disease pathogenesis. If so, the virus marker could provide a valuable prognostic indicator for human leishmaniasis, particularly in those cases caused by New World parasite strains. The virus has been detected in cultured L. braziliensis, L. b. guyanensis, and L. major. To date there has been no information as to the extent of infection in samples prior to culturing in the laboratory. This study demonstrates, through the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, that Leishmaniavirus exists in human biopsy samples of leishmaniasis prior to manipulation in culture.
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