Found a relating article at Emerging diseases, at
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EVERYBODY REACTS POSITIVE ON THE ELISA TEST FOR HIV
Thu May 31 09:25:29 2001


EVERYBODY REACTS POSITIVE ON THE ELISA TEST FOR HIV
By Roberto Giraldo

Continuum Midwinter 1998/9

http://www.virusmyth.com/aids/data/rgelisa.htm

For the last 6 years I have been working at the laboratory of clinical 
immunology in one of the most prestigious University Hospitals in the City of 
New York. Here I have had the opportunity to personally run and get to know 
in detail the current tests used for the diagnosis of HIV status, namely, the 
ELISA, Western Blott and Viral Load tests. 

1. Diluting the serum for the ELISA test. 

The ELISA test is a test for antibodies against what is supposed to be the 
Human Immunodeficiency Virus or HIV. To run this test, an individual's serum 
has to be diluted to a ratio of 1:400 with a special specimen diluent. 
According to the test kit manufacturer this diluent contains 

0,1% triton X-100, Bovine and Goat Sera (minimum concentration of 5%) and 
Human T-Lymphocyte Lysate (minimum titer 1:7500). Preservative: 0.1% Sodium 
Azide (1).
This extraordinary high dilution of the person's serum [400 times] took me by 
surprise. Most serologic tests that look for the presence of antibodies 
against germs uses neat serum [undiluted]. For example, the tests that look 
for antibodies to hepatitis A and B viruses, rubella virus, syphillis, 
hystoplasma and cryptococus, to mention a few of them, use straight serum 
[undiluted]. However, to try to prevent false positive reactions some 
serologic tests use diluted serum; for example this is the case with tests 
that look for antibodies to measles, varicelia and mumps viruses which use a 
dilution of 1:16, to cytomegalovirus [CMV] 1:20 and to Epstein-Barr Virus 
[EBV] 1:10. 
The obvious questions are: What makes HIV so unique that the test serum nedds 
to be diluted 400 times?. And what would happen if the individual's serum is 
not diluted?. 

2. Testing the ELISA test without diluting the serum. 

To answer these questions I ran an experiment in a medical laboratory in 
Yorktown Heights, New York. I ran it using the same test kit reagents that 
are usually used to run the ELISA test in most clinical laboratories 
worldwide (1). 

I first took samples of blood that, at 1:400 dilution, tested negative for 
antibodies to HIV. I then ran the exact same serum samples through the test 
again, but this time without diluting them. Tested straight, they all came 
positive. 

Since that time I have run about 100 specimens and have always got the same 
result. I even ran my own blood which, at 1:400 reacts negative. At 1:1 
[undiluted] it reacted positive. I should mention that with the exception of 
my own blood, the patient samples all came from doctors who requested HIV 
tests. It is therefore likely that most of the blood samples that I tested 
belonged to individuals at risk for AIDS. 

According to Abbott Laboratories, the absorbency value [yellow colour 
intensity] 

develops in proportion to the amount of antibodies to HIV-1 which is bound to 
the bead (1).
What I noticed is that the absorbency values of the specimens that tested 
negative when diluted [1:400], but positive when undiluted [1:1], had lower 
values than the samples that, diluted, react positive on both the ELISA and 
Western Blott tests. This would probably mean that the blood that is negative 
when diluted but positive when undiluted has a lower level of antibodies than 
the diluted blood that is doubly positive and, therefore, may probably test 
negative on the Western Blott test. However, I have not had the opportunity 
to check this hypothesis. 
The graphic below illustrates how blood that reacts negative for HIV at 1:400 
ratio always turn positive when run at 1:1 [undiluted]. 


Run of ELISA test for HIV with two different concentrations of the person's 
serum. 
(a) Results at 1:400 (b) Results at 1:1 
9112324b G5 0.076 --- 9112324b G5 0.262 reactive 
9112325b H1 0.081 --- 9112325b H1 0.259 reactive 
9112326b H2 0.071 --- 9112326b H2 0.329 reactive 
9112327b H3 0.060 --- 9112327b H3 0.401 reactive 
9112328b H4 0.073 --- 9112328b H4 0.345 reactive 
9112329b H5 0.062 --- 9112329b H5 0.343 reactive 
9112330b J1 0.060 --- 9112330b J1 0.234 reactive 
9112331b J2 0.077 --- 9112331b J2 0.306 reactive 
9112332b J3 0.067 --- 9112332b J3 0.248 reactive 
9112333b J4 0.086 --- 9112333b J4 0.222 reactive 

Column (a) shows 10 specimens reacting negative at 1:400 dilution. 
Column (b) shows the same specimens reacting positive at 1:1 dilution.

It is important to note that the Western Blott antibody test for «HIV» also 
needs serum to diluted. Although it too has an usually high dilution, here 
the individual serum is only diluted at the ratio of 1:50 (2). I have not yet 
had the opportunity to run this test with undiluted [1:1] specimens. 

3. Discussion. 

The following are three possible explanations for why undiluted specimens of 
blood always react positive at the ELISA test: 

3.1. Everybody has HIV antibodies. 

It is accepted worldwide that the ELISA test for HIV detects antibodies 
against what is known as the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (3-4-5-6). And the 
pharmaceutical company that commercialises the ELISA kits states that 

Abbott HIVAB HIV-1 EIA is an vitro qualitative Enzyme Immunoassay for the 
Detection of Antibody to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) in Human 
Serum and Plasma (1).
Since all undiluted blood specimens react positive on the ELISA test, a test 
that supposedly tests for antibodies to HIV, the results presented here 
suggest that every single human being has HIV antibodies. And this suggests 
that everybody has been exposed to HIV antigens. 
This would mean that all of us have been exposed to the virus that is 
believed to be the cause of AIDS. The people that react positive even at a 
dilution of 1:400, would be the ones that have had the highest level of 
exposure to HIV antigens. The rest of the people -the ones that only react 
positive with undiluted serum [1:1]- would have had a lower level of exposure 
to HIV. 

3.2. Everybody has different levels of HIV infection. 

It is also believed worldwide that a person that reacts positive for 
antibodies against HIV has not only been exposed to but is infected with a 
deadly virus that causes immunodeficiency (3-4-5-6). Therefore, the positive 
reactions of all undiluted sera would mean that everybody, or at least all 
the blood samples that I have tested, including my own, infected with this 
«deadly» virus. The ones that react positive at a ratio of 1:400 would simply 
have a higher level of «deadly» infection than the «deadly» infection has by 
the ones that reacts positive only with undiluted serum. 

3.3. The test is not specific for HIV. 

The results presented here could also mean that the tests used for detecting 
antibodies to HIV are not specific for HIV, as has been explained previously 
(7-8-9-10-11-12-13-14). In this case, there would be reasons other than HIV 
infection, past or present, to explain why a person reacts positive to it. 
The test also reacts positive in the absence of HIV (7-8-9-10-11-12-13-14). 

The scientific literature has documented more than 70 different reasons for 
getting a positive reaction other than past or present infection with HIV 
(7,10,11,14,15). All these conditions have in common a history of 
polyantigenic stimulations (15,16). 

Even Abbott Laboratories is well aware of the specificity problems with the 
ELISA test. This is why they state: 

ELISA testing alone cannot be used to diagnose AIDS, even if the recommended 
investigation of the reactive specimens suggests a high probability that the 
antibody to HIV-1 is present
and 
Although for all clinical and public health applications of the ELISA both 
the degree of risk for HIV-1 infection of the person studied and the degree 
of reactivity of the serum may be of value in interpreting the test, these 
correlations are imperfect. Therefore, in most settings it is appropriate to 
investigate repeatably reactive specimens by additional more specific or 
supplemental tests (1).
Interestingly, there are countries like Great Britain where the diagnosis of 
HIV status is based on the ELISA test alone. No Western Blott or any other 
test is needed there. 
The only proper way for establishing the sensitivity and specificity of a 
given test is with a gold standard. However, since HIV has never been 
isolated as an independent purified viral entity (17-18-19), there cannot be 
a gold standard for HIV. The sensitivity and specificity of the antibody 
tests for HIV have instead been defined based on the assumption that HIV is 
the cause of AIDS. In this way, 

The Abbot studies show that: Sensitivity based on an assumed 100% prevalence 
of HIV-1 antibody in AIDS patients is estimated to be 100% (144 patients 
tested).
and 
Specificity based on the assumed zero prevalence of HIV-1 in random donors is 
estimated to be 99.9/o (4.777 random donors tested (1)).
At present there is no recognised standard for establishing the presence and 
absence of HIV-1 antibody in human blood. Therefore sensitivity was computed 
based on the clinical diagnosis of AIDS and specificity based on random 
donors (1). 
[Emphasis is mine].
Since there is no scientific evidence that the ELISA test is specific for HIV 
antibodies, a reactive ELISA test at any concentration of the serum would 
mean presence of nonspecific or polyspecific antibodies (20). These 
antibodies could be present in all blood samples. They are most likely a 
result of the stress response, having no relation to any retrovirus, let 
alone HIV (21,22). In this case, a reactive test could be a measure of the 
degree of one's exposure to stressor or oxidising agents (15,16). 
The inevitable conclusion is that all positive reactions for antibodies to 
HIV are simply false positives. If nobody is positive for HIV, then people 
who react positive on the ELISA test do so due to something other than HIV. 

4. Proposal to find out the real meaning of the «HIV antibody» tests. 

To uncover the meaning of these tests I propose a simple experiment: Take 
blood from three groups of a people and run the tests highly diluted, 
undiluted and at a wide spectrum of dilutions in between. The first group 
would be a group of healthy people of many age groups; the second group would 
be a group of people from the conventional AIDS «risk groups»; the third 
group would be a group of people with clinical conditions both related and 
unrelated to AIDS. All groups would be subjected to both the ELISA and 
Western Blott tests. 

Additionally, all blood samples could be subjected to «the viral load test 
for HIV». 

The results of such an experiment could determine whether these test 
measurements bear any relationship to an individual's level of exposure to 
stressor or oxidizing agents. If so, the tests could be salvaged as a measure 
of an individual's level of intoxication. 

Let us find the economic support necessary to run this experiment. In the 
mean time, since people are reacting positive on tests that are not specific 
for HIV, let's please stop labelling them as «HIV positive». 

Acknowledgments. 

I want to thank Mr. Albert Padovani, Director of Yorktown Medical Laboratory 
for permitting me to run the experiments reported here in his laboratory and 
for providing the reagents for the tests. Also I thank Tom Di Ferdinando 
Executive Director of Health Education AIDS Liaison (HEAL) in New York City 
for editing the manuscript for this article and for his valuable suggestions. 

Roberto A. Giraldo, MD. Physician, specialist in internal medicine, 
infectious and tropical diseases. Member of the Boards od Directors of The 
Group for the Scientific Reappraisal of the HIV-AIDS Hypothesis and Health 
Education AIDS Liaison (HEAL). Independent AIDS Researcher. Author of the 
book AIDS and Stressors, New York City. E-mail: [email protected]. 

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