Open Journal of Ophthalmology

Volume 4, Issue 3 (August 2014)

ISSN Print: 2165-7408   ISSN Online: 2165-7416

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.27  Citations  

A Comparison of the Clinical and Molecular Diagnosis of Herpes Simplex Keratitis

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 1205KB)  PP. 65-74  
DOI: 10.4236/ojoph.2014.43011    4,430 Downloads   5,825 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Purpose: To compare the clinical and molecular diagnoses of Herpes Simplex Keratitis (HSK). Materials and Methods: Conjunctival swabs (after fluorescein and anaesthetic wash out) and detailed questionnaire data were obtained from 146 participants. Corneal rims and conjunctival epithelial cells were infected with Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) type 1 or HSV2 and supernatant collected. HSV1; HSV2; Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV) and Adenovirus (ADV) DNA was assessed using two real time Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) methods. Results: Of the 146 participants recruited, 54 were clinically diagnosed with typical epithelial lesions and 38 with atypical epithelial lesions, 17 with old inactive HSK and 37 healthy volunteers. HSV1 DNA was detected in 28 (30%) of the 92 participants with clinically suspect HSK. Patients who presented with typical epithelial lesions had a higher positive rate (46%) than those who presented with atypical type lesions (8%), when using primers against the Glycoprotein (Gp) G region of the virus. When the same samples were retested with primers against the GpB region, the positive rate for the typical and atypical cases increased to 52% and 11% respectively. Antiviral use at the time of sampling reduced the rate of PCR positivity by 20% (p < 0.05). ADV DNA was detected in 6% of the typical cases and 8% of the atypical cases. All control participants with no history of HSK were negative for HSV1 DNA. Sample quantity was confirmed by testing for housekeeping control genes, beta-actin and beta-2 macroglobulin. PCR results from in vitro control investigations of HSV1 and 2 infected corneal rims and conjunctival epithelial cells were 100% positive for infected and 100% negative for uninfected samples when assessed using both PCR methods. Conclusions: Clinical diagnosis of typical HSK is not always confirmed by PCR. Concomitant use of an antiviral reduces levels of PCR positivity. Given this and the findings that other ocular surface pathogens may mimic HSK pathology, and that choice of gene amplification region can also affect accurate detection of HSV1 by PCR, we propose the use of a multiplex assay. This would perform PCR using primers spanning a number of different regions within one gene and would also target a number of different viral genes to ensure potentially different HSV1 viral strains or other viruses do not affect the test and lead to disagreements between the clinical and molecular diagnosis of HSK. From these findings, this paper proposes a clinical supportive algorithmic guide to manage such disagreements.

Share and Cite:

McGilligan, V. , Moore, J. , Tallouzi, M. , Atkinson, S. , O’Neill, H. , Feeney, S. , Novitskaya, E. , Sharma, A. , Shah, S. , Jackson, J. , Frazer, D. and Moore, T. (2014) A Comparison of the Clinical and Molecular Diagnosis of Herpes Simplex Keratitis. Open Journal of Ophthalmology, 4, 65-74. doi: 10.4236/ojoph.2014.43011.

Cited by

[1] Ocular Surface Infection Mediated Molecular Stress Responses: A Review
International Journal of …, 2022
[2] Nonsurgical Management of Severe Viral Keratitis with Hypopyon and Retrocorneal Plaques: A Case Series
Ophthalmology and Therapy, 2022
[3] Hospital Based Study of Viral Keratitis: A Cross Sectional, Observational Study
JK Science: Journal of …, 2022
[4] Corneal Transplantation under Difficult Conditions: Clinical Pictures, Indications, Technique and Results.
2021
[5] Herpes Simplex Virus Keratitis in a University Tertiary Referral Centre–Clinical Features and Surgical Approaches
2021
[6] Shotgun sequencing to determine corneal infection
2020
[7] A systematic review on advances in diagnostics for herpes simplex keratitis
2020
[8] Patient priorities in herpes simplex keratitis
2019
[9] Challenges in the Diagnosis of Microbial Keratitis: A detailed review with update and general guidelines
2019
[10] Infectious Keratitis in a 23-Year-Old Patient With Netherton Syndrome
2019
[11] A 20‐year experience of ocular herpes virus detection using immunofluorescence and polymerase chain reaction
Clinical and Experimental Optometry, 2018
[12] Incidence and Risk Factors of New Onset Endotheliitis After Cataract Surgery
2018
[13] Manifestasi Klinis dan Managemen Keratitis Herpes Simpleks di RS. Dr. M. Djamil pada Januari 2012–Desember 2013
2018
[14] Herpes simplex keratitis: challenges in diagnosis and clinical management
Clinical ophthalmology (Auckland, NZ), 2017
[15] Kenneth J Hoffer, MD 411 Lincoln Blvd Santa Monica, CA 90402 August 5, 2015
2015
[16] Herpes simplex keratitis
2014
[17] Керимов Тимур Захирович

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.