Sorry, I have lost touch with this thread.
No, A high antibody titre is just a sign of good immunity. The myth that high titres indicate ongoing infection needs to wash out of the system. What indicates an active infection is a change in titre over a period of about two weeks. Repeated high titres do not mean active infection. I suspect that the lab interpretation instructions assume that the test is being done in the context of a new illness consistent with viral infection. In that context a high titre might provide circumstantial evidence but as soon as you have a history of two episodes you have no idea which if either gave rise to the high titre. And in the days when I did viral titres I never took notice of a single measure as an indication of recent infection - it was always done by comparing paired samples two weeks apart.
So, I have had several infectious disease doctors/researchers tell me the above is actually not true, even though that is the received wisdom. I don't know on the basis of what research they said this. I've had many different viruses in the past, as have all of us. If I have good immunity to CVB4, then why don't I have good immunity to herpesviruses as well? As in, why are my titers to everything I've been infected with in the past low (indicative of past infection) while CVB4 is high?
I do wonder what the purpose of these tests are if they are meaningless. Even if I get a new infection, it will be impossible to tell if I had it in the past unless by coincidence I had a recent, negative test. Unless the idea is that you always test twice, once during the acute phase and once several weeks later.
I suppose my question is the same as the above: if antibody tests are useless to measure recurrent or chronic infection, then how do you then measure that (clinically or in a research setting).
I'm having all of my old onset symptoms from 2012 (right sided numbness, right arm flaccid, walking crooked, stabbing pain in head/chest, feeling flu-ish w/o temp). The worst of it is what I now gather is central apnea. Last night for about 45 minutes, I was almost constantly unable to breathe. I would completely stop breathing automatically, try hard to focus on taking a breath, only when it had been dangerously long would my brain then kick in and I'd gasp for air. And then I'd stop breathing again. Over and over, almost continuously. WTF?
I am trying to get re-tested today/tomorrow for both antibodies and PCR. If high titers are meaningless and PCR unreliable, then I don't know where that leaves me (and all of us). This is not post-exertional malaise. This is not dauer. I am not crashed. Yes, when at baseline I have all of these symptoms, too, but none of the more popular recent understandings of this condition can explain what I experience during acute flares.
Not asking for medical advice. Just saying WTF as it is highly unlikely even if I sought help that I would be able to find it.
EDIT: Sorry, I missed this in your earlier post
@Jonathan Edwards. I see that the general application of antibody tests is testing two weeks apart.