The use of chosen serological diagnostic methods in Lyme disease in horses. Part II. Western blot.
Abstract: In this investigation the Western blot test was treated as a method verifying results of the IFA, commercial ELISA and standardized ELISA tests (described in Part I). The verifying investigations were performed on 82 serum samples, which in the commercial ELISA were positive in 36 cases, dubious in 31 cases and negative in 15 cases as well as on 5 serum samples obtained from horses infected with Leptospira spp., which in the ELISA commercial were dubious (total of 87 sera samples). The antigens, against which the immunological response in horses was directed, were also established. The Milenia--Blot--Borrelia IgG test (MIDBO IgG-Kit 30 TESTS: DPC Bierman GmbH) was used in the investigation. In view of species differences, rabbit anti-horse IgG (whole molecule) alkaline phosphatase conjugate, no A6063 SIGMA-ALDRICH was used interchangeably. Also the control sera were substituted with the horse control sera. It was demonstrated that the Western blot test is the most reliable in the serological diagnosis of B. burgdorferi infection in horses. The commercial ELISA and standardized ELISA tests represent a lower diagnostic value than the Western blot test, although similar to each other, while the value of the IFA is minimal. In the Western blot test antigens were established against which the immunological response in horses in mostly directed. In the sera evaluated in this test as positive the presence of antibodies, mainly against antigens with the following molecular weights: 41 kDa, 62/60 kDa, 93 kDa, 72 kDa, 34 kDa (OspB), 66 kDa was noted. At the same time, antibodies contained in the sera accepted as negative, in 55.5% cases also reacted with the antigen of 41 kDa. It points to its minimal specificity. On the basis of the results obtained it is recommended that serological examination of horses should be with the ELISA and that positive or dubious results should be verified with the Western blot test.
Publication Date: 2002-08-23 PubMed ID: 12189953
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- Evaluation Study
- Journal Article
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Summary
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The research article investigates the efficacy of Western blot test as a method to verify the results of other serological tests (IFA, ELISA) in diagnosing Lyme disease in horses. The study suggests that the Western blot test is most reliable, while the value of the IFA is minimal.
Research Methodology
- The researchers carried out verifications on 82 serum samples using the Western blot test method. These samples had previously been tested using commercial ELISA and were positive in 36 instances, dubious in 31, and negative in 15.
- They further tested 5 serum samples from horses infected with Leptospira spp., which had dubious results in the ELISA commercial test, making a total of 87 serum samples used in the research.
- Aimed at establishing the antigens to which the immunological response in horses was primarily directed, they utilized the Milenia–Blot–Borrelia IgG test. Due to species differences, rabbit anti-horse IgG conjugate was used interchangeably. Horse control sera were also substituted for the control sera.
Research Findings
- The study found that the Western blot test showed superior reliability in the serological diagnosis of B. burgdorferi infection in horses.
- Comparatively, the commercial ELISA and standardized ELISA tests showed lower diagnostic value, while the value of the IFA was deemed minimal.
- In the positive sera evaluated with the Western blot test, the presence of antibodies was mainly noted against antigens with molecular weights of: 41 kDa, 62/60 kDa, 93 kDa, 72 kDa, 34 kDa (OspB), 66 kDa.
- Surprisingly, antibodies found in the sera accepted as negative also reacted with the antigen of 41 kDa in 55.5% of the cases, indicating minimal specificity for that antigen.
Conclusion
- The research concludes with a recommendation for the use of ELISA for serological examination of horses, and the verification of positive or dubious results with the Western blot test.
Cite This Article
APA
Dzierzecka M, Kita J.
(2002).
The use of chosen serological diagnostic methods in Lyme disease in horses. Part II. Western blot.
Pol J Vet Sci, 5(2), 79-84.
Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Warsaw Agricultural University-SGGW, Grochowska 272, 03-849 Warsaw, Poland.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Antibodies, Bacterial / blood
- Blotting, Western / standards
- Blotting, Western / veterinary
- Borrelia burgdorferi / immunology
- Borrelia burgdorferi / isolation & purification
- Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay / veterinary
- Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Direct / veterinary
- Horse Diseases / blood
- Horse Diseases / diagnosis
- Horse Diseases / epidemiology
- Horses
- Lyme Disease / diagnosis
- Lyme Disease / epidemiology
- Lyme Disease / veterinary
- Poland / epidemiology
- Predictive Value of Tests
- Sensitivity and Specificity
Citations
This article has been cited 1 times.- Divers TJ, Gardner RB, Madigan JE, Witonsky SG, Bertone JJ, Swinebroad EL, Schutzer SE, Johnson AL. Borrelia burgdorferi Infection and Lyme Disease in North American Horses: A Consensus Statement. J Vet Intern Med 2018 Mar;32(2):617-632.
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