Evaluation of serological techniques for titration of rubella antibody.

THE epidemic of rubella which raged Tthrough this country in 1964 and 1965 more clearly defined the role of this virus as an important and potentially preventable cause of congenital anomalies of the fetus. Since the virus was first isolated, the need for a rapid and reliable technique for the detection of rubella antibody has been recognized. The discovery of rubella hemagglutinin1'2 and the development of an improved method for preparing rubella complement fixing antigen giving high serum antibody titers3 were reported in 1967. Preliminary studies have indicated the usefulness of these new techniques for rubella antibody titration. Recent comparative studies4'5 have focused attention on the different patterns of antibody response shown by the various serologic tests generally available for rubella diagnosis. This report compares the results obtained with the hemagglutination inhibition (HI), complement fixation (CF), indirect neutralization (NT) and fluorescent antibody (FA) tests as performed in our laboratory in an effort to evaluate the usefulness of these techniques for serological diagnosis of acute rubella infection and for testing immunity to rubella.

[1]  R. Huebner,et al.  RUBELLA ANTIBODY DETERMINATIONS , 1967, Pediatrics.

[2]  E. H. Lennette,et al.  The hemagglutination inhibition test for rubella: a comparison of its sensitivity to that of neutralization, complement fixation and fluorescent antibody tests for diagnosis of infection and determination of immunity status. , 1967, Journal of immunology.

[3]  J. Stewart,et al.  Rubella Hemagglutinin Prepared with Alkaline Extraction of Virus Grown in Suspension Culture of BHK-21 Cells , 1967, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[4]  J. Stewart,et al.  Rubella Complement Fixing Antigen Prepared by Alkaline Extraction Of Virus Grown in Suspension Culture of BHK-21 Cells , 1967, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[5]  R. D. Douglas,et al.  Rubella-virus hemagglutination-inhibition test. , 1967, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  J. Stewart,et al.  Rubella hemagglutinin prepared in serum free suspension culture of BHK-21 cells. , 1967, Annales medicinae experimentalis et biologiae Fenniae.

[7]  H. Maassab,et al.  Rubella Antibodies in Human Serum: Detection by the Indirect Fluorescent-Antibody Technique , 1964, Science.

[8]  E. Norrby Hemagglutination by Measles Virus. 4. A Simple Procedure for Production of High Potency Antigen for Hemagglutination-Inhibition (HI) Tests , 1962, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[9]  T. H. Weller,et al.  Propagation in Tissue Culture of Cytopathic Agents from Patients with Rubella-Like Illness.∗ , 1962 .

[10]  E. Buescher,et al.  Recovery of Rubella Virus from Army Recruits , 1962, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[11]  R. Bussell,et al.  Hemagglutination and hemagglutination-inhibition studies with ECHO viruses. , 1962, Journal of immunology.