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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2001, p. 2856-2859, Vol. 39, No. 8
0095-1137/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.39.8.2856-2859.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Quantitation of Varicella-Zoster Virus DNA in
Patients with Ramsay Hunt Syndrome and Zoster Sine Herpete
Yasushi
Furuta,1,*
Fumio
Ohtani,1
Hirofumi
Sawa,2
Satoshi
Fukuda,1 and
Yukio
Inuyama1
Department of
Otolaryngology1 and Laboratory of
Molecular & Cellular Pathology, CREST, JST,2
Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan
Received 13 February 2001/Returned for modification 7 April
2001/Accepted 11 June 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) reactivation causes facial nerve palsy
in Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) and zoster sine herpete (ZSH) with and
without zoster rash, respectively. In the present study, we analyzed
the VZV DNA copy number in saliva samples from 25 patients with RHS and
31 patients with ZSH using a TaqMan PCR assay to determine differences
in the viral load between the two diseases. VZV copy number in saliva
peaked near the day of the appearance of zoster in patients with RHS.
Consequently, VZV DNA was less frequently detected in patients with RHS
who exhibited facial palsy several days after the appearance of zoster.
These findings suggest that the VZV load in saliva samples reflects the
kinetics of viral reactivation in patients with RHS. In addition, VZV
DNA was equally detected in saliva from patients with RHS and ZSH, and
there was no significant difference in the highest viral copy number
between patients with RHS and those with ZSH. The VZV load does not
appear to reflect a major difference between RHS and ZSH.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) is a
varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-associated neurological disease,
characterized by zoster around the ears or in the oropharynx and by
acute peripheral facial palsy. In addition, RHS is frequently
complicated by a disorder of the eighth cranial nerve. Facial palsy and
zoster do not always appear simultaneously, and some patients with RHS
exhibit facial palsy several days before or after the onset of zoster.
VZV also causes acute peripheral facial palsy with the absence of skin
lesions; such cases are termed zoster sine herpete (ZSH) and are
usually diagnosed using serological assays (11) or PCR
(3, 12, 13). Although VZV reactivation causes facial nerve
disorder in both RHS and ZSH, no study has analyzed the difference in
virological background between these two diseases. One hypothesis to
explain the presence or absence of mucocutaneous lesions (zoster) is
that the VZV load is higher in RHS than in ZSH.
Only a few studies have investigated the VZV load in patients with
varicella and zoster. Studies using a TaqMan-based PCR assay have
reported that the viral copy number of peripheral blood mononuclear
cells (PBMCs) in patients with varicella was higher than that in
patients with zoster (6, 10). However, in these studies,
VZV DNA was detected in PBMCs from only 20% of patients with zoster.
In addition, it has been demonstrated that VZV DNA was not detected in
PBMCs from patients with ZSH (3). Judging from these
reports, an analysis of PBMCs does not provide a useful measure of the
VZV load in facial palsy patients.
Since it has been reported that VZV DNA is detectable in saliva samples
from 58 to 59% of patients with RHS and ZSH (4), we
employed a TaqMan PCR assay of DNAs from saliva samples for quantitation of VZV DNA and initially analyzed whether the viral copy
number in saliva reflects the kinetics of VZV reactivation. We then
compared the viral load between RHS and ZSH.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Patient samples.
Twenty-five patients with RHS and 31 patients with ZSH were examined. These patients visited our hospital
within 7 days after the onset of the diseases. Acyclovir and
prednisolone were administered to 21 of 25 patients with RHS and 17 of
31 patients with ZSH, according to a previously described protocol
(5), while the remaining patients were treated with
prednisolone. Saliva (1 to 2 ml) was collected from patients at every
visit and stored at
80°C. Paired sera were taken from patients at
their initial visit and 2 to 3 weeks later (convalescent phase).
Anti-VZV antibody values were measured using enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay kits (Enzygnost Anti-VZV/IgG and IgM; Behringwerke,
Marburg, Germany) and an automatic enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
processor (Processor III; Behringwerke). Either significant changes
(greater than two fold) in immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody values or
the presence of IgM antibody was considered to indicate recent VZV
infection, according to the manufacturer's recommendations. The
diagnosis of ZSH was determined by PCR and/or serological assays as
described previously (4). RHS was diagnosed by the
clinical manifestation, including typical zoster lesions around the ear
or in the oral epithelium in addition to acute peripheral facial palsy.
VZV reactivation in patients with RHS was confirmed either by
serological assays or by PCR. Informed consent was obtained from all patients.
TaqMan PCR.
Saliva samples from patients were centrifuged at
2,200 × g for 5 min, and DNA was extracted from 50 µl of
the supernatant with a DNA extraction kit (SepaGene; Sanko Junyaku Co.,
Tokyo, Japan). Detection of VZV DNA was performed by a TaqMan PCR
method using a set of primers and a fluorogenic probe for the major DNA binding protein of VZV (1). The upstream and downstream
primer sequences were 5'-GTGCTGTTGAGACGACCGG-3' and
5'-GGCTTCCTTAAACAATGCCG-3', respectively. The sequence of
the fluorogenic probe was
5'-FAM-CTGAGATATGCACCCGCCTTGGATTAGA-TAMRA-3', which was labeled with 6-carboxy-fluorescein (FAM) reporter dye and 6-carboxy-tetramethyl-rhodamine (TAMRA) quencher dye. PCR amplification was performed using the TaqMan PCR kit (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.). Each 25-µl reaction mixture consisted of 5 µl of 10× TaqMan PCR buffer (PE Applied
Biosystems), 3 mM MgCl2, 200 µM dATP, dGTP, and dCTP, 400 µM dUTP, a 400 nM concentration of each primer, 150 nM of the
fluorogenic probe, 0.75 U of AmpliTaq Gold, 0.01 U of AmpErase uracil
N-glycosylase (UNG), and template DNA. PCR mixtures were
incubated for 2 min at 50°C for the reaction of AmpErase UNG,
followed by activation of AmpliTaq Gold for 10 min at 95°C. Reagents
were cycled 45 times on a DNA thermal cycler (GeneAmp 5700 sequence
detector; PE Applied Biosystems), each cycle consisting of denaturation
at 95°C for 15 sc, annealing, and extension at 62°C for 1 min.
Quantitation of VZV DNA.
The quantitation of VZV DNA in
saliva samples was performed using a fluorescence detector (GeneAmp
5700 sequence detector). A threshold cycle value for each sample was
determined by the cycle number at which the fluorescence exceeded a
threshold limit (20 times the standard deviation of the baseline). The
EcoRI B restriction fragment of VZV strain H-S1 (a gift from
R. Hondo) was used as a standard positive control in each reaction.
Saliva samples obtained from VZV-seronegative subjects were used as
negative controls. The sensitivity of the TaqMan PCR assay for
detection of VZV DNA was assessed by using a dilution series of the
EcoRI B restriction fragment, mixed with DNA extracted from
the saliva samples of a VZV-seronegative subject. The DNAs of herpes
simplex virus (HSV) type 1, HSV type 2, human cytomegalovirus,
Epstein-Barr virus, and human herpesvirus 6 were applied to the assay
to confirm the specificity of the primer sets and fluorogenic probe.
A standard curve was generated by the threshold cycle values obtained
from serial 10-fold dilutions of the positive control containing
101 to 105 copies of the target gene. After two
independent PCR assays for each sample, the average VZV copy number in
50 µl of saliva was calculated by comparison with the standard curve.
A sample containing more than 105 copies of VZV DNA was
diluted 10- or 100-fold and subjected to the assay again.
Statistical analysis.
Statistical analysis was performed
using StatView version 4.5 software (Abacus Concepts Inc., Berkeley,
Calif.). The chi-square test and Mann-Whitney U test were used to
calculate the significance of the correlation among the variables.
Differences with a P value less than 0.05 were considered significant.
 |
RESULTS |
Sensitivity and specificity of the assay.
The TaqMan PCR assay
identified four of four samples containing 10 copies of the VZV DNA
standard, while none of four samples containing 5 copies were positive
by the assay. Based on these results, the minimum level of VZV DNA
detectable by the TaqMan PCR was 10 copies. No cross-reactivity of the
primer sets and fluorogenic probe was observed when the DNAs of HSV
type 1, HSV type 2, human cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, and
human herpesvirus 6 were applied to this assay.
Quantitation of VZV DNA.
In every assay, the standard curve
showed linearity from 10 to 105 copies of VZV DNA with
correlation coefficients of >0.96. In a control study, the amount of
total DNA extracted from 50 µl of saliva was measured in 10 samples
obtained from 10 control patients. The amounts of DNA ranged from 32 to
114 ng, probably due to contamination of epithelial cells. In order to
evaluate the reliability of the quantitative PCR, a series of the VZV
DNA standard (102, 103, and 104
copies) was amplified together with different amounts (from 30 to 240 ng) of genomic DNA extracted from PBMCs of a VZV-seronegative subject
in five repetitions. The amplification efficiency of VZV DNA was not
altered in the presence of different amounts of genomic DNA (data not shown).
Detection of VZV DNA in saliva samples.
VZV DNA was detected
in saliva from 13 of 25 (52%) patients with RHS and from 17 of 31 (55%) patients with ZSH (Table 1). The
difference in the frequency was not significant (P > 0.05, chi-square test).
Kinetics of the VZV load in RHS.
We analyzed the correlation
between the changes in the VZV copy number and the day of appearance of
zoster in patients with RHS (Table 1). Seven patients exhibited facial
palsy 2 or more days after the rash appeared; VZV DNA was detected in
only one of the seven patients (14%). Zoster and facial palsy
developed simultaneously in 12 patients; VZV DNA was detected in 8 of
the 12 patients (67%). The VZV copy number gradually decreased after the first visit in six of the eight PCR-positive patients (Fig. 1A), while an increase in the viral copy
number after the first visit was observed in the remaining two
patients. In six patients, a rash developed 2 or more days after the
onset of palsy, and the initial diagnosis for these patients was
Bell's palsy. VZV DNA was detected in four of these six patients
(67%), and the viral copy number increased after the onset of palsy
and peaked near the day of the appearance of zoster in all four
patients (Fig. 1B). VZV DNA was detected in 11 of 21 patients with RHS who received acyclovir; the viral copy number showed a decrease in all
except 1 patient within 2 days after initiation of the antiviral
treatment (Fig. 1A and B).

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FIG. 1.
Transition of VZV DNA load in patients with RHS and ZSH.
, VZV DNA copies, expressed as the copy number/50 µl of saliva
(logarithmic scales). Dotted lines indicate the minimum detection level
of VZV DNA. (A) Patient with RHS in whom zoster and facial palsy
appeared simultaneously (day 0). This patient was treated with
acyclovir by infusion at 750 mg per day for 7 days. The VZV DNA levels
gradually decreased and became undetectable on day 8. (B) Patient with
RHS who exhibited zoster 6 days after the onset of facial palsy.
Acyclovir treatment (4,000 mg in tablets daily for 7 days) started on
day 5 before the appearance of zoster because VZV DNA was detected in
saliva obtained on day 4. The VZV DNA levels peaked 1 day before the
appearance of skin lesions. (C) A patient with ZSH treated with
acyclovir by infusion at 750 mg per day for 5 days. The VZV copy number
gradually decreased and became undetectable on day 6. (D) A patient
with ZSH who did not receive antiviral therapy. The VZV copy number
peaked on day 5.
|
|
Four patients had zoster in the oropharyngeal epithelium, and VZV DNA
was detected in saliva samples from all four patients, while VZV DNA
was detected in 9 of 21 patients who had zoster around the ear. The
viral copy number in patients who had zoster in the oropharyngeal
epithelium was significantly higher than that in patients who had
zoster around the ear (P = 0.0019, Mann-Whitney U test)
(Fig. 2).

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FIG. 2.
Quantitation of VZV DNA in saliva samples from patients
with RHS and ZSH. The highest copy number in each patient was plotted
(logarithmic scales). Samples below the dotted line were negative for
VZV DNA. Open circles indicate patients who had zoster in the
oropharyngeal epithelium. N.S., not significant.
|
|
Kinetics of the VZV load in ZSH.
In 10 of the 17 PCR-positive
patients with ZSH, the viral copy number gradually decreased after the
first visit (Fig. 1C), while an increase in the viral DNA was observed
in the remaining 7 patients (Table 1; Fig. 1D). Acyclovir was
administered to 10 PCR-positive and 7 PCR-negative patients with ZSH.
The viral copy number showed a decrease in 8 PCR-positive patients
within 2 days after initiation of the antiviral treatment, as shown in Fig. 1C.
Difference in VZV copy number between RHS and ZSH.
We then
compared the VZV load in saliva from patients with RHS and from those
with ZSH. Because the amount of VZV DNA in saliva varied on each
sampling day, the highest copy number of VZV DNA in each patient was
compared between the two groups. As shown in Fig. 2, the viral copy
number ranged from 38 to 1,365,800 copies/50 µl of saliva in RHS and
from 10 to 79,650 copies/50 µl of saliva in ZSH. The difference in
viral copy number between patients with RHS and those with ZSH was not
significant (P > 0.05, Mann-Whitney U test).
 |
DISCUSSION |
The facial nerve consists of two roots: the motor division and the
nervus intermedius, which contains parasympathetic fibers and sensory
fibers. The cell bodies of the sensory fibers are in the geniculate
ganglion, and some afferent fibers supply the mucous membranes of the
oropharynx and the skin of the external auditory meatus and around the
ear. VZV reactivation in the geniculate ganglia and subsequent
inflammation of the facial nerve in the temporal bone are suspected to
cause facial palsy (2, 8), while VZV migrates from the
geniculate ganglia into the skin around the ear or into the oropharynx
via the sensory fibers, where it replicates and produces zoster in RHS.
In the present study, VZV DNA tended to be detectable in saliva from
RHS patients who had zoster in the oropharyngeal epithelium, and the
saliva from these patients contained a high copy number of the viral
DNA. These results demonstrate the reliability of the TaqMan PCR assay
because VZV replicates at the oropharyngeal lesions and is shed into
the saliva. We have also shown that VZV DNA is detectable in saliva from patients with RHS who have zoster around the ear and from those
with ZSH, suggesting that reactivated VZV in the geniculate ganglia may
migrate into the oropharyngeal epithelium without producing zoster at
the site.
Using the TaqMan PCR assay, the present study shows that the VZV copy
number in saliva increases after the onset of facial palsy and peaks
near the day of the appearance of zoster in RHS patients who exhibit
facial palsy followed by zoster. In patients who exhibit zoster and
facial palsy simultaneously, the VZV load gradually decreases after the
onset or peaks several days later. Judging from these results, the
viral load in saliva from patients with RHS may peak in accordance with
the appearance of zoster. These results are consistent with those from
a previous study that found a decrease in the amount of VZV DNA after
the onset of varicella (10). In patients who exhibit
facial palsy several days after the appearance of zoster, viral
replication may already have decreased at the onset of the palsy.
Therefore, VZV DNA is less frequently detected in such patients. These
findings suggest that the VZV load in saliva reflects the kinetics of
viral reactivation.
Two patterns of the VZV load were also observed in PCR-positive
patients with ZSH: a decrease after the first visit and a peak after
it. These results indicate that the correlation between the kinetics of
VZV reactivation and the onset of facial palsy in patients with ZSH is
similar to that in patients with RHS. Based on the findings that VZV
DNA is less frequently detected in RHS patients who exhibit facial
palsy several days after the appearance of zoster, the VZV load may
have decreased at the onset in some PCR-negative patients with ZSH.
We also found that the amounts of VZV DNA in saliva were not
significantly different between RHS and ZSH. The data suggest that VZV
reactivation in ZSH does occur at levels similar to those in RHS and
that the VZV load does not play a major role in causing the different
manifestations of RHS and ZSH. It has been reported that a VZV-specific
T-cell response is correlated with the risk of herpes zoster
(7). In addition, depression of cellular immunity against
VZV has been demonstrated in RHS and ZSH (9). Therefore, different cellular immunoreactions to VZV at the mucocutaneous site may
correlate with the appearance of zoster in facial palsy patients with
VZV reactivation. Further studies on cellular immunity to VZV are
needed to confirm this hypothesis.
Our results suggest the clinical utility of the TaqMan PCR assay for
analysis of VZV replication during antiviral therapy. Acyclovir therapy
has resulted in marked suppression of viremia in varicella
(10). In the present study, acyclovir reduced the VZV copy
number in most cases of RHS and ZSH. These findings suggest that the
TaqMan PCR assay may be useful in assessing the efficacy of acyclovir therapy.
In conclusion, the present study shows that the VZV load in saliva
reflects the kinetics of viral reactivation in patients with RHS and
ZSH. In addition, our findings suggest that the VZV load is not the
major cause of differences between RHS and ZSH.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Erina Katoh, Keiko Miyazawa, and Shigeru Yoshida for
their excellent technical assistance.
This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research,
Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture, and by The Akiyama Foundation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Department of Otolaryngology,
Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Kita 15, Nishi 7, Kita-Ku,
Sapporo 060-8638, Japan. Phone: 81-11-707-3387. Fax: 81-11-717-7566. E-mail: yfuruta{at}med.hokudai.ac.jp.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2001, p. 2856-2859, Vol. 39, No. 8
0095-1137/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.39.8.2856-2859.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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