02727nas a2200361 4500000000100000008004100001260001300042653001500055653001000070653002600080653002400106653001000130653001800140653003800158653001100196653001600207653001100223653001200234653000900246653001600255653002500271653002600296653001700322100001300339700001300352700001500365700001600380245014200396300001100538490000700549520179500556022001402351 1987 d c1987 Dec10aAdolescent10aAdult10aAntibodies, Bacterial10aAntigens, Bacterial10aChild10aDisaccharides10aEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay10aFemale10aGlycolipids10aHumans10aleprosy10aMale10aMiddle Aged10aMycobacterium leprae10aSerum Albumin, Bovine10aTime Factors1 aMenzel S1 aHarboe M1 aBergsvik H1 aBrennan P J00aAntibodies to a synthetic analog of phenolic glycolipid-I of Mycobacterium leprae in healthy household contacts of patients with leprosy. a617-250 v553 a

Fifty-four household contacts of lepromatous patients, 39 household contacts of tuberculoid patients, and 99 control persons were examined with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for their antibody responses to phenolic glycolipid-I (PGL-I) of Mycobacterium leprae using a synthetic analog (PGL-ISA) with the same terminal sugar epitope, namely, O-(3, 6-di-O-methyl-beta-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1----4)-O-(alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl )-(1----9)-oxynonanoyl-BSA. This study was conducted in the Gurage area of Ethiopia in 15 households with a leprosy patient and 15 matched control households. Household contacts with more than 1 year of exposure to a lepromatous patient had antibodies to PGL-ISA significantly more often (19 of 34 persons) than did household contacts with less than 1 year of exposure to a lepromatous patient (4 of 20 persons), household contacts of tuberculoid patients (8 of 39 persons), and persons without exposure to leprosy in the household (33 of 99 persons). No significant association was found between the prevalence of antibodies to PGL-ISA in the household contacts and disease activity in the lepromatous index patients at the time of examination; nor was there a significant association between antibody responses and age or sex of the contacts. The increased prevalence of antibodies to M. leprae antigen in healthy persons with more than 1 year of contact with a lepromatous patient provides further evidence that subclinical infection in leprosy is common, and is related to the type of leprosy in the index patient. The fact that antibodies to PGL-ISA were detected in one third of the persons without household exposure to leprosy emphasizes the necessity to always include comparable controls from the same endemic area in studies of leprosy contacts.

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