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Anti-rhinosporidial antibody levels in patients with rhinosporidiosis and in asymptomatic persons, in Sri Lanka.

Mycopathologia 2004 August
The only report hitherto, from India in 1982, on anti-rhinosporidial antibody levels in patients with rhinosporidiosis recorded that antibody was not detected in Indian patients. The present report describes the use of the dot-ELISA assay of serum anti-rhinosporidial IgG, IgM and IgA and salivary sIgA in patients with diverse clinical presentations, in rural asymptomatic persons who had bathed in ground waters that probably harboured the causative pathogen, Rhinosporidium seeberi, and in laboratory persons who were exposed to R. seeberi. Ultrasonic extracts of purified endospores and sporangia of R. seeberi were used as antigen. The geometric mean (reciprocal) titres of serum antibody detected in patients were IgM 142.1, IgG 178.5, IgA 84.6, with ranges of 0-640, 30-960 and 0-160 respectively, salivary sIgA titres ranged from 0 to 18 with a mean of 4.6. The levels of antibody had no correlation with the site, the number of sporangia, duration and recurrence of the disease. Asymptomatic persons from the same endemic area as patients showed mean titres of IgM 89.6, IgG 69.1, IgA 95.5, with salivary sIgA titres of 3.1. Asymptomatic personnel who had been working in a laboratory where rhiniosporidial work was being done, showed mean titres of 169.6 IgM, 62.8 IgG, and 6.5 salivary sIgA. These results indicate that an anti-rhinosporidial antibody response occurs in rhinosporidial patients, as well as in asymptomatic persons who were exposed to R. seeberi in the environment. Anti-R. seeberi antibody does not appear to be protective in rhinosporidiosis since appreciable titres were present in patients with recurrent, single, multiple or disseminated lesions of long duration.

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