Ebola laboratory tests
Ebola Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
---|
Treatment |
Postmortem Care |
Case Studies |
Ebola laboratory tests On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Ebola laboratory tests |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Ebola laboratory tests |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Michael Maddaleni, B.S.
Overview
Ebola would be categorized as a viral hemorrhagic fever. There are multiple tests available to test for and confirm the diagnosis of ebola (as well as other VHFs}
Laboratory Findings
Diagnostic test | Samples required | Preparation & Storage | Shipping | Viruses to be confirmed |
---|---|---|---|---|
ELISA (serology) detects:
|
Whole blood serum or plasma†
Acute and convalescent†† |
Freeze or refrigerate
(as cold as possible) |
Frozen on dry ice or ice packs or both†††† | Ebola Lassa CCHF Rift Valley Marburg Yellow fever |
PCR detects: | Whole blood or clot†††
Tissues (fresh frozen) Serum/plasma |
Refrigerate or freeze
Freeze |
Frozen on dry ice or ice packs or both†††† | Ebola Lassa CCHF Rift Valley Marburg Yellow fever |
Immunohisto-chemestry (liver) detects:
Viral antigen in cells |
Liver biopsy from fatal cases | Fix formalin (can be stored up to 6 weeks) | Room temperature (do not freeze) | Ebola Lassa CCHF Rift Valley Marburg Yellow fever |
Immunohisto-chemestry (skin) detects:
Viral antigen in cells |
Skin biopsy from fatal cases (any site) | Fix in formalin (can be stored up to 6 weeks) | Room temperature (do not freeze) | Ebola Lassa |
Immunohisto-chemestry (other tissues) detects:
Viral antigen in cells |
Tissue biopsy from fatal cases
(other tissues, spleen, lung, heart, kidney) |
Fix in formalin (can be stored up to 6 weeks) | Room temperature (do not freeze) | Ebola Lassa CCHF Rift Valley Marburg Yellow fever |
† Whole blood can be used for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and may be frozen. Do not centrifuge suspected VHF specimens because this increases risk to the lab worker. If serum specimens have already been prepared these can be used. Place specimens in plastic tubes for shipping and storage and be sure that the tubes are sealed and properly labeled.
†† Collect acute-phase specimen when patient is admitted to hospital or diagnosed as suspected case and collect convalescent-phase specimen at death or when discharged from the hospital.
††† whole blood or tissue is preferred, although serum or plasma may provide results.
†††† Use both ice packs and dry ice to provide best results. If dry ice or ice packs are not available, sample may be shipped at room temperature and still provide valid results in most cases.
Ebola virus can be detected in fatal cases from a skin specimen using immunohistochemistry or RT-PCR tests developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The skin specimen is fixed in formalin or chaotrope which kills the virus. The specimen is no longer infectious once it is placed in formalin or chaotrope and the outside of the vial has been decontaminated. This vial can be shipped by mail or hand carried to the lab without risk. Results are available within a week after the specimen arrives at the CDC.