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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Islet cell antibody seroconversion in children is temporally associated with enterovirus infections. Childhood Diabetes in Finland (DiMe) Study Group.

Exposure to Coxsackie B virus or other enteroviruses prenatally or in childhood increases the risk for later manifestation of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). The occurrence of enterovirus infections was analyzed in 23 initially nondiabetic and islet cell antibody (ICA)-negative siblings of IDDM patients who converted to ICA positivity during a prospective follow-up study. Increases in enterovirus antibody levels, documented by heavy chain-capture RIA and EIA techniques, were significantly more frequent in sample intervals in which ICA first appeared (18/23, 78%) than in other sample intervals in these siblings (30/92, 33%; P < .001) or all sample intervals in 97 ICA-negative control siblings (117/403, 29%; P < .001). The children who converted to ICA positivity during an enterovirus infection more often had the high-risk HLA-DQB1 genotype than did children who were constantly ICA-negative (P < .01). The results suggest that enteroviruses may be important in the induction of a beta cell damaging process long before the clinical manifestation of IDDM.[1]

References

  1. Islet cell antibody seroconversion in children is temporally associated with enterovirus infections. Childhood Diabetes in Finland (DiMe) Study Group. Hiltunen, M., Hyöty, H., Knip, M., Ilonen, J., Reijonen, H., Vähäsalo, P., Roivainen, M., Lonnrot, M., Leinikki, P., Hovi, T., Akerblom, H.K. J. Infect. Dis. (1997) [Pubmed]
 
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