Virology Laboratory

Parechovirus PCR - blood serum specimen

  • LIS Mnemonic: PAREPCR

    Collect

    Gold (SST - Clot activator & gel)

    Volume Required

    4-7 ml; for infants a volume of 2-4 ml is acceptable

    Minimum Required

    4 ml; for infants a volume of 2 ml is acceptable

    Transport

    Keep specimen at 4C

    Stability

    Labile

    Processing

    Specimens should be transported to the laboratory as quickly as possible after collection. When immediate transport is not possible, refrigerate the specimens or keep them on wet ice. For delays of more than 24-48 hours (e.g., when shipping specimens from an outside facility), specimens should be processed as needed and rapidly frozen to -70C and then transported to the laboratory on dry ice.

    Unacceptable conditions

    Specimens for molecular testing should not be stored at room temperature or frozen at -20C. This is critical to ensure the stability and amplification of nucleic acids, particularly for the detection of RNA viruses since RNA is unstable and easily degraded by RNAses from the surrounding environment.

Days Performed

Daily

Reported

Same day

Reflex Testing

N/A

CPT

87798

Methodology

Amplification and detection of parechovirus RNA from the highly conserved 5'-untranslated region of the genome using TaqMan real-time PCR technology. This test is performed pursuant to an agreement with Roche Molecular Systems, Inc.

Interpretation

If positive, results are reported as parechovirus RNA detected.

Reference Values

Negative or no parechovirus RNA detected

Remarks

Human parechoviruses are small, RNA viruses related to, but genetically distinct from, the enteroviruses commonly seen in our pediatric population. Similar to enteroviruses, infections with parechoviruses are frequent and significant in infants and young children. The spectrum of clinical diseases is comparable to that of the enteroviruses and includes acute respiratory and gastrointestinal illnesses, neonatal sepsis, aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, myocarditis, acute flaccid paralysis, and necrotizing enterocolitis. Detection of parechovirus by PCR may be enhanced by collecting specimens from multiple body sites. These may include CSF, urine, blood, respiratory, stool, tissue (e.g., colon, myocardium), and sterile body fluids (e.g., pericardial fluid). For diagnosis of neonatal sepsis, send both blood and urine as primary sources; also send CSF, respiratory, and stool samples if symptoms of central nervous system (CNS), respiratory and/or gastrointestinal involvement. Send CSF as the primary specimen in patients with aseptic meningitis or other CNS diseases; also send blood and urine on all patients with CNS disease to increase the likelihood of finding the virus. In addition, respiratory and stool samples may be sent on patients with respiratory and/or gastrointestinal symptoms. Please Note: Despite studies showing respiratory and gastrointestinal symptoms in association with parechovirus infections, the role of this virus in causing respiratory or enteric disease has not been fully established and positive results from only respiratory and stool specimens may not always correlate with disease because of prolonged viral shedding.

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