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Background: Dihydrorhodamine (DHR) flow cytometric analysis is used to evaluate granulocyte oxidative bursts and is the test of choice for the diagnosis of chronic granulomatous disease (CGD). We present the clinical and DHR test profiles of five subjects assessed during and after acute illness.
Methods: This was a retrospective report of the findings of five out of a total of one hundred and seventeen pa-tients, whose blood was sent to the laboratory for dihydrorhodamine-123 flow cytometry testing between January 2005 and December 2010. Using whole blood technique and stimulation using phorbol myristate acetate, the re-sults of DHR were expressed as stimulation index and coefficient of variation of histograms of stimulated cells and compared with healthy controls. DHR tests were repeated when the patients had recovered and were clinically well.
Results: These five patients showed abnormal DHR test results during their acute illness, with a stimulation index (SI) lower (p = 0.009) and coefficient of variation (CV) higher (p = 0.009) than controls. The DHR profiles repeat-ed when patients had recovered showed normalization of tests with no significant difference for SI (p = 0.602) and CV (p = 0.917) compared to controls. Wilcoxon Signed Rank tests showed a significant improvement in SI (p = 0.043) and CV (p = 0.043) upon recovery. On follow up, all five patients were well, with no further severe or atypi-cal infections.
Conclusions: DHR may be transiently abnormal during acute illness, and may therefore not be reliable when as-sessed during an acute illness. If these subjects had CGD, it would be of a hypomorphic variant that has not previ-ously been described.
DOI: 10.7754/Clin.Lab.2012.120501
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