Research Article Open Access

Epidemiology of Human Herpesvirus Type 8 Infection in Cardiopathic Patients

Angela Ingianni1, Maria A. Madeddu1, Francesca Carta1, Anna Reina1, Carlo Lai1 and Raffaello Pompei1
  • 1 University of Cagliari, United States

Abstract

Problem statement: The possible contribution of viruses to vascular pathology is still a controversial issue. Human herpesvirus type 8 (HHV-8) has been suggested to participate to the pathogenetic events associated with atherosclerotic lesion establishment and progression. Recently, a high incidence of infection of HHV-8 (11%) has been verified in the island of Sardinia. The aim of this study was to evaluate a possible relationship between the HHV-8 infection and cardiovascular diseases in the South of Sardinia. Approach: The presence of HHV-8 genome was detected in DNA extracted from peripheral leucocytes, by nested-PCR and Southern blotting, in either acute or chronic cardiopathic patients (n = 180); healthy blood donors were examined as controls (n = 108). Results: The results demonstrated a significant increase (p = 0.035) in HHV-8 DNA isolation from cardiopathic patients (22.8%) in comparison to healthy controls (12.0%). Conclusion: HHV8 infection can be considered, among others, as an additional risk factor for cardiovascular disease development, although it was not necessarily the starting cause. More extensive studies were needed to define the exact role of HHV-8 infection in cardiopathic patients.

OnLine Journal of Biological Sciences
Volume 9 No. 2, 2009, 36-39

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3844/ojbsci.2009.36.39

Submitted On: 25 March 2009 Published On: 30 June 2009

How to Cite: Ingianni, A., Madeddu, M. A., Carta, F., Reina, A., Lai, C. & Pompei, R. (2009). Epidemiology of Human Herpesvirus Type 8 Infection in Cardiopathic Patients. OnLine Journal of Biological Sciences, 9(2), 36-39. https://doi.org/10.3844/ojbsci.2009.36.39

  • 3,913 Views
  • 2,954 Downloads
  • 5 Citations

Download

Keywords

  • Human herpesvirus type 8
  • epidemiology
  • ORF26
  • cardiovascular disease