Rubella reinfection during pregnancy. A case of mistaken diagnosis of congenital rubella
S. Biano, W. Cochran, K. L. Herrmann, A. D. Hall and T. W. Chang
A case of subclinical rubella reinfection during pregnancy with serologic
findings in the offspring initially led to an erroneous diagnosis of fetal
infection. Laboratory diagnosis of congenital rubella infection, based on
finding hemagglutination-inhibition (HI) activity in immunoglobulin M (IgM)
fractions of newborn's serum after sucrose gradient fractionation, was
questioned when apparent IgM-HI activity was to be probably due to
nonspecific inhibitors, which resulted from bacterial action on the
beta-lipoprotein in the serum. These findings emphasize some pitfalls
encountered in arriving at a diagnosis based soley on serologic data. This
case also illustrates the importance of keeping serum samples sterile when
performing serologic tests.