B type inclusion

Summary

B-type inclusions, formerly known as Guarnieri bodies /ɡwɑːrnˈjɛəri/ are cellular features found upon microscopic inspection of epithelial cells of individuals suspected of having poxvirus[1] (e.g. smallpox[2] or vaccinia). In cells stained with eosin, they appear as pink blobs in the cytoplasm of affected epithelial cells. The absence of Guarnieri bodies cannot be used as to rule out smallpox, however, as more sensitive test need to be performed.

B-type inclusions are the sites of viral replication and are found in all poxvirus-infected cells, unlike A-type inclusions which are more strongly eosinophilic and only found in infections with certain poxviruses.[3]

They are named after the Italian physician Giuseppe Guarnieri.

References edit

  1. ^ "Variola Virus". Archived from the original on 23 January 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  2. ^ Esiri, Margaret M.; Booss, John (2003). Viral Encephalitis in Humans. Washington, D.C: ASM Press. pp. 117. ISBN 1-55581-240-6.
  3. ^ Binns, Matthew M.; Smith, Geoffrey L.; Andrew, Marion E.; Artois, Marc; Aubert, Michel; Blancou, Jean; Boursnell, Michael E. G.; Boyle, David B.; Brochier, Bernard; et al. (1992). Recombinant Poxviruses. Boca Raton, Florida, United States: CRC Press. pp. 1–343. ISBN 0-8493-6179-6.

Further reading edit

  • GOODPASTURE EW (1959). "Cytoplasmic inclusions resembling Guarnieri bodies, and other phenomena induced by mutants of the virus of fowlpox". Am. J. Pathol. 35 (2): 213–31. PMC 1934859. PMID 13627123.