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My CV is that I have degrees in Microbiology and Cell Biology. I have been a TA in Medical Microbiology for 3 years and have two publications in Molecular genetics and two in Experimental Pathology. Seizures without a presentation of measles encephilitis is mutually exclusive. That is why the rt-PCR is useless as a diagnost test. Mitigating seizures would require ablation of the cortical tissue that is the focus. I have seen epilepsy after measles encephalitis and it is usually multifocal and severe. If there is residual "slow" paramyxovirus nothing can be done as in 7 to 10 years fatal Subacute Sclerosing Pan-Encephilitis will develop. Such a residual, slow virus, after measles symptoms resolve, passes from cell to cell junctions with no viremia, as with normal infection, and would be undetectable by a naso-pharyngeal swab. You are barking up the wrong tree.Thanks for your input, but I am still hoping there is a medical / microbiologist / virologist type person on this forum who explain to me, how I can get the RT-PCR test on a private basis as my local doctor refuses to help.
We report these findings as an initial communication but recognise the limitations in our work. Firstly, we have reported data on only 11 episodes of MeVV RNA detection. These specific cases were subjected to further analysis due to the extreme period between detection and last recorded vaccination. From these 11 cases it is not possible to determine if MeVV RNA may be intermittently detectable in some or most vaccinated individuals, or whether we are reporting a truly rare event. Also, due to small case numbers, it is unclear if these detections are specifically associated with concurrent presence of other respiratory viruses or the cases could have unidentified immunodeficiencies causing persistence of MeVV. Finally, detection of MeVV RNA alone does not allow for any assessment of whether infectious virus is present.
So right. The dynamic observed is consistent with the study published in the PNAS showing consistency with the dynamics of a primary infection. ". . . prolonged RNA presence is characteristic of primary infection. We found that viral RNA persisted in the blood, respiratory tract, or lymph nodes four to five times longer than the infectious virus and that the clearance of MeV RNA from blood happened in three phases: rapid decline coincident with clearance of infectious virus, a rebound phase with increases up to 10-fold, and a phase of slow decrease to undetectable levels."Medical doctor here. I second what @Gerald Wilgus and @Stuttermabolur have already said.
I’m so sorry to hear about your son’s epilepsy and I understand it must be very hard to deal with it. Your quest for a PCR test to determine the cause will prove to be a fruitless one though. You’re not going to get this test without a physician performing it for you, and a physician isn’t likely to perform this for you because it won’t answer your question re: the cause of the epilepsy.
I’ve read the article you quoted. The text I’m referring to is quoted below my response.
As the article states, the number of cases in which they’ve actually detected MeVV is extremely low and they’re not even sure whether this is something that can periodically be detected in all vaccinated people.
As you can also gather from the article, it’s quite the process to perform this analysis. You can’t have this done commercially.
And as you can read in the article too, even if, for the sake of argument, your son were to receive a PCR test for MeVV and it were to test positive, it still tells you nothing about whether or not it causes the epilepsy, since a positive MeVV test still doesn’t tell you whether or not there’s an active infection and it’s not even certain whether a positive MeVV test has any clinical significance whatsoever.
I know you’re not asking for advice on what to do, but since your quest for a test is a dead end you’re getting it anyway: work with your physician to get the best care for your son, rather than grasping at straws to look for extremely unlikely explanations in avenues that are not accessible to you.