Infectious mononucleosis (glandular fever) is an acute infectious disease caused by the Epstein-Barr virus and primarily affects lymphoid tissue. It is characterized by the appearance of enlarged and often tender lymph nodes, enlarged spleen, and abnormal lymphocytes in the blood. Patients usually, but not always, develop a transient heterophile antibody response. The detection of heterophile antibodies of Infectious Mononucleosis by the agglutination of sheep red cells was first reported by Paul and Bunnel. Subsequent work identified the need for differential absorption of sera to remove non-infectious mononucleosis heterophile antibodies. Fetcher and Woolfolk showed that antigens obtained from bovine erythrocytes were more effective than those antigens obtained from either sheep or horse erythrocytes.
Preparation of patients: There is no physical preparation for the infectious mononucleosis test.
Precautions: IgG and IgM values obtained with different manufacturers' assay methods may not be used interchangeably. The magnitude of the reported IgG or IgM level cannot be correlated to an endpoint titre.