Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
Seroconversion WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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through came when his fellow physician, Jakob Kolletschka
(1803–1847), died of blood poisoning after cutting his finger
while performing an autopsy. Semmelweis noticed that the
pathological features of the autopsy on Kolletschka’s body
matched those of the autopsies of the puerperal fever victims.
Semmelweis then only suspected, and did not prove, that the
fever was a septicemia, an intrusion of microorganismsfrom
a local infection into the bloodstream, but he instantly took
action. In May 1847, he ordered all personnel under his
authority to wash their hands between patients. This was a
novel, radical, and unpopular rule, but in just a month the
maternal death rate at the Vienna General Hospital dropped
from twelve to two percent.
Even though Semmelweis had solid results and statistics
on his side, many physicians simply refused to believe that
washing their hands, which they considered undignified, could
save lives. Resistance to his rule stiffened. Semmelweis made
many powerful enemies, and in March 1849, he was demoted
from his supervisory role. He served at St. Rochus Hospital in
Pest from 1851 to 1857, but never achieved his former profes-
sional status.
Holmes was facing a similar crisis in America. In 1843,
Holmes first claimed in print that puerperal fever was conta-
gious. Semmelweis first published his findings in 1848. Now
having heard of Semmelweis, Holmes in 1855, expanded his
original article into a small book that explicitly praised
Semmelweis. Likewise, having now heard of Holmes,
Semmelweis published Die Aetiologie, der Begriff, und die
Prophylaxis des Kindbettfiebers[The Etiology, Concept, and
Prophylaxis of Childbed Fever] in 1861. The book was not
well received. Semmelweis was a poor prose stylist, and his
lack of writing skill adversely affected his campaign. Holmes,
on the other hand, an accomplished essayist and poet as well
as a first-rate physician, proved more persuasive, although it
would still be thirty years before sanitary and hygienic meth-
ods became standard in American and European hospitals.
While no one ridiculed Holmes, who had enough charm
and grace to forestall such attacks, Semmelweis became sub-
ject of mockery in the central European medical community.
In 1863, the frustration he had long felt finally took its toll on
his spirit. He became chronically depressed, unpredictably
angry, socially withdrawn, and increasingly bitter. In July
1865, a coalition of colleagues, friends, and relatives commit-
ted him to the Niederösterreichische Heil-und Pflegeanstalt,
an insane asylum in Döbling, near Vienna. He died there a
month later, on August 13, 1865, from bacteremia due to an
infected cut on his finger, with symptoms markedly akin to
those of puerperal fever.

See alsoBacteria and bacterial infection; Contamination, bac-
terial and viral; Germ theory of disease; Hygiene; Infection
control; Streptococci and streptococcal infections;
Transmission of pathogens; Viruses and responses to viral
infection

SERILITY•seeREPRODUCTIVE IMMUNOLOGY

SSeroconversionEROCONVERSION

Seroconversion is a term that refers to the development in the
blood of antibodies to an infectious organism or agent.
Typically, seroconversion is associated with infections caused
by bacteria, viruses, and protozoans. But seroconversion also
occurs after the deliberate inoculation with an antigenin the
process of vaccination. In the case of infections, the develop-
ment of detectable levels of antibodies can occur quickly, in
the case of an active infection, or can be prolonged, in the case
of a latent infection. Seroconversion typically heralds the
development of the symptoms of the particular infection.
The phenomenon of seroconversion can be important in
diagnosing infections that are caused by latent viruses.
Examples of viruses include hepatitisB and C viruses, the
Epstein Barr virus, and the Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV). When these viruses first infect people, the viral nucleic
acid can become incorporated into the genome of the host. As
a result, there will not be an immune response mounted
against the virus. However, once viral replication has com-
menced antibodies to viral proteins can accumulate to
detectable levels in the serum.
Seroconversion is am important aspect of Acquired
ImmunodeficiencySyndrome (AIDS). Antibodies to HIV can
sometimes be detected shortly after infection with the virus,
and before the virus becomes latent. Symptoms of infection at
this stage are similar to the flu, and disappear quickly, so treat-
ment is often not sought. If, however, diagnosis is made at this
stage, based on presence of HIV antibodies, then treatment can
begin immediately. This can be important to the future outlook
of the patient, because often at this stage of the infection the
immune systemis relatively undamaged. If seroconversion
occurs following activation of the latent virus, then immune
destruction may already be advanced.
The presence of antibodies in the serum occurs much
earlier in the case of infections that occur very soon after the
introduction of the infectious microorganism. The type of anti-
bodypresent can be used in the diagnosis of the infection.
Additionally, seroconversion in the presence of symptoms but
in the absence of detectable microorganisms(particularly bac-
teria) can be a hallmark of a chronic infection caused by the
adherent bacterial populations known as biofilms. Again, the
nature of the antibodies can help alert a physician to the pres-
ence of a hitherto undetected bacterial infection, and treatment
can be started.

See alsoAntibiotic resistance, tests for; Antibody and antigen;
Antibody-antigen, biochemical and molecular reactions;
Antibody formation and kinetics; Immunity, active, passive
and delayed; Immunochemistry; Immunodeficiency disease
syndromes; Serology

SSerologyEROLOGY

Serology is the study of antigen-antibody reactions outside of
a living organism (i.e., in vitro, in a laboratory setting). The

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