ARTICLE
ejd.2012.1735
Auteur(s) : Emmanuella Guenova1, Martin Schaller2
1 Harvard Skin Disease Research Center,
Department of Dermatology,
Brigham and Women's Hospital,
Boston,
MA 02115,
USA
2 Department of Dermatology,
Eberhard Karls University Tübingen,
72076 Tübingen,
Germany
Electron microscopy is indispensable in the rapid diagnosis of
viral skin infections caused by Herpes viruses (Varicella
zoster, Herpes simplex I or II viruses).
Fluid rich in viral particles from the under surface of the roof
of a vesicle is embedded in an electron dense material to provide
higher contrast between the virus and the background, a technique
referred to as negative staining [1]. A search by electron
microscopy is undertaken for the presence of viral envelopes and
capsid shells, definitive signs of infection caused by a
Herpesvirus (figure
1).
This rapid technique provides in less than 30 minutes
information as to whether the clinically suspected skin eruption is
indeed herpetic or not. The clinical implication of this approach
is especially evident in the possibility of immediate adequate
therapeutic management of Herpes zoster manifestation in
immunosuppressed individuals.
References
1. Guenova E, Schaller M. CarpeDIEM – Dermatological
Indications for Electron Microscopy: Orf infection. Eur J
Dermatol 2012; 22(2): 293.
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