Determination of tumor necrosis factor-alpha levels in dengue virus infected patients by sensitive biotin-streptavidin enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Nyckelord
Abstrakt
A modified sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using biotin-streptavidin system (BS-ELISA) was developed to determine levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in serum samples of children infected with dengue virus (n=99) and healthy controls (n=41). The minimum detectable concentration of TNF-alpha by the BS-ELISA was 3.3 pg/ml. The mean TNF-alpha level was highest in those patients with dengue shock syndrome (DSS) or dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) grade III (37.44+/-42.0 pg/ml). Lower levels were found in DHF grade I (28.44+/-42.7 pg/ml), DHF grade II (24. 21+/-25.4 pg/ml) and dengue fever (DF) (14.10+/-24.0 pg/ml). TNF-alpha in the sera of DF and DHF patients could be detected on days 2-6 after the onset of fever, the high level occurring on day 5. TNF-alpha was detected in 41.4% (24.01+/-35.2 pg/ml) of dengue virus infected patients and 7.3% (4.2+/-15.6 pg/ml) of control subjects. The sera of patients contained significantly higher levels of TNF-alpha than the sera of controls, P-value<0.001. DHF patients had significantly higher levels of TNF-alpha than DF patients (P-value=0.020) but no difference in the TNF-alpha levels from sera of DHF grades I-III patients was observed (P-value=0.295). The results indicate that the BS-ELISA is a very sensitive method for determining TNF-alpha in serum samples of DF and DHF patients. The TNF-alpha levels might be associated with dengue virus infection and related to disease severity of DHF.