Direct Detection - Seeing is Believing
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Microscopy:
- Light Microscopy: Identifies viral inclusion bodies.
- Intranuclear: Owl's eye (CMV), Cowdry type A (HSV, VZV).
- Intracytoplasmic: Negri bodies (Rabies), Guarnieri bodies (Poxvirus).
- Electron Microscopy (EM): Directly visualizes virions. Useful for viruses that cannot be cultured (e.g., Norwalk virus).
- Light Microscopy: Identifies viral inclusion bodies.
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Antigen Detection (ELISA, Immunofluorescence): Rapidly detects viral proteins using specific antibodies. Widely used for respiratory viruses (e.g., RSV, Influenza).
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Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests (NAATs):
- PCR: Gold standard for diagnosis and management (e.g., HIV viral load). Offers highest sensitivity & specificity.
⭐ Owl's eye inclusions are pathognomonic for Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection. They are large, eosinophilic, basophilic intranuclear inclusions surrounded by a clear halo.

Viral Culture - Growing the Enemy
- Gold standard for proving infectivity, but often slow & labor-intensive.
- Process: Live virus is grown in a monolayer of cultured cells.
- Detection: Observed for cytopathic effect (CPE) - visible structural changes in host cells.
- Examples: Cell rounding, lysis, syncytia (RSV, measles), inclusion bodies (CMV, HSV).
- Limitation: Many viruses are difficult or impossible to culture (e.g., HCV, HPV).
⭐ Shell Vial Culture: A rapid modification using centrifugation and immunofluorescence to detect viral antigens within 24-48 hours, long before CPE appears.

NAATs - Copy & Conquer
Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests (NAATs) are molecular assays that amplify viral genetic material (DNA or RNA) to detectable levels. They offer high sensitivity and specificity for diagnosis.
- Core Principle: Exponentially copy a specific genetic sequence.
- Common Types:
- PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction): Amplifies DNA targets.
- RT-PCR (Reverse Transcriptase PCR): For RNA viruses; first converts RNA to complementary DNA (cDNA).
- TMA (Transcription-Mediated Amplification): Isothermal RNA amplification.

⭐ NAATs are crucial for diagnosing early HIV (window period) and for quantifying viral load in HIV/HCV to monitor treatment response.
Serology - The Immune Footprint
- Detects host antibodies (IgM, IgG) against viral antigens, not the virus itself. It signals an immune response, not necessarily active infection.
- IgM: Appears first; indicates acute or recent infection. Its presence suggests a primary infection.
- IgG: Appears later and persists, often for life; indicates past infection or immunity.
- Seroconversion: A ≥4-fold increase in IgG titers between acute and convalescent-phase serum samples is the gold standard for diagnosing a primary infection.
- Window Period: Time from infection until antibodies are detectable. Serology is negative.
⭐ For HIV, serology is the standard screening test (ELISA), but it's negative during the window period. Nucleic Acid Testing (NAT) is required for diagnosis during this early phase.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- NAATs (PCR) are the most sensitive and specific method for viral diagnosis.
- Serology showing IgM or a ≥4-fold rise in IgG confirms acute infection.
- Antigen detection (ELISA) provides rapid results but is less sensitive than NAATs.
- Viral culture is the traditional gold standard but is slow; observe for cytopathic effect (CPE).
- Microscopy for inclusion bodies (e.g., Owl's eye in CMV, Negri bodies in Rabies).
- Tzanck smear for HSV/VZV reveals multinucleated giant cells.
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