1Shereen F Hafez, 1Iman H Shehata, 2Ghada A Abdel Aziz and 3Mahmoud M Kamal
Departments of 1Microbiology
and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, Ain Shams University, 2Dermatology and Venereology, Faculty of Medicine for Girls, Al Azhar
University and 3Pediatrics, Ahmad Maher Teaching
Hospital.
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a complex
immunologic skin disorder that is expressed when genetically predisposed
individuals are exposed to certain environmental stimuli. Inspite of the high
prevalence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and its potent immunomodulatory
activities, the relation of CMV to AD is still poorly understood and is still
to be clarified. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the frequency of
active CMV infection in patients with AD and its possible etiologic role in the
pathogenesis of the disease. Also, we
tried to find if a relation between active CMV
infection and disease severity exists. The present study was carried on 31 patients
with AD with various degrees of disease severity. Ten apparently healthy subjects were enrolled
in the study as a control group. Anti CMV IgG antibodies were estimated by
quantitative enzyme immunoassay to discriminate between recent CMV infection and
CMV reactivation. Active CMV infection was diagnosed by using nested PCR to
detect CMV DNA in the sera of the studied subjects. The detection rate of CMV
genome was higher in patients with AD in comparison to the control group.
Cytomegalovirus genome was detected in the sera of 52% (16/31) of patients with
AD (87.5% of them were seropositive for anti-CMV IgG antibodies). On the other
hand no CMV DNA was detected in any of the serum samples of the control
subjects. The difference was statistically significant. No significant relation
was found between active CMV infection and disease severity. Also, no
significant statistical difference was found between the two studied groups as
regards the prevalence of latent CMV infection. In addition, no significant difference was detected between anti-
CMV IgG antibody levels in all seropositive subjects. Our results denote that
active subclinical CMV infection is more frequent in patients with AD and may
have possible immunomodulatory role in the etiopathogenesis of AD but it is not
related to disease severity.