CA2 MicroB Flashcards

1
Q

Complications in Influenza?

A
  • Pneumonia (though rare to get pneumonia from a viral infection, mortality is high such as in bird flu). May also come about from a secondary bacterial infection because the bronchial mucosa is damaged - Beware of a secondary bacterial LRTI!
    ○ Strep pneumo, H inf, Staph aureus
    ○ Common in extremes of age, immunocomps, pts with existing chronic cardiorespiratory diseases
    ○ Suspected in chest pain, persistent productive cough
    • Myocarditis
    • Myositis
    • Reye’s Syndrome - A/w giving aspirin to kids with influenza B. Causes cerebral oedema, fatty liver degeneration; High mortality
      Some severe variants, like H5N1, have a 60% mortality
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2
Q

Clinical presentation of influenza?

A
  • Epidemic disease, occasional pandemics (swine flu 2009)
    • 1-4 day incubation followed by abrupt onset fever, myalgia, malaise, headache, rhinorrhea, sneezing, sore throat, dry cough
    • The virus multiplies in the respiratory epithelium, causing damage to the ciliary escalator and resulting in desquamation (death of squamous epithelium and sloughing of cells that causes the sore throat)
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3
Q

What are the antigens of influenza

A
  • Hemagglutinin (spikes for viral attachment to host; causes agglutination of RBC of different animals. This is inhibited by haemagglutinin inhibition (HI), and HI is a test that can be done)
    • Neuraminidase (cleaves neuraminic acid // sialic acid receptors so as to allow virus release)
      Soluble // “S” antigen shared by all influenza viruses of the same type
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4
Q

Antigenic drift vs shift?

A
  • Antigenic shift occurs from recombination of RNA segments of two different virions infecting the same cell (i.e. 16 possible segments to PnC into a new virion)
    ○ Major antigenic change of both surface proteins (H and N)
    ○ Common in pigs as they can be infected by birds and humans; “Mixing vessel”, though the largest reservoir for viruses is wild birds
  • Antigenic drift because spontaneous mutations occur more readily because of RNA polymerase (tends to make more mistakes than DNA polymerase).
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5
Q

Curative influenza tx?

A
  • Curative treatment:
    ○ Neuraminidase inhibitors (Oseltamivir, Zanamivir)
    ○ Polymerase inhibitors (Baloxavir)
    ○ Amantadine is used to prevent viral replication, but resistance is common!
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6
Q

Outline prophylactic influenza immunization

A

Quadrivalent vaccine, only 15% coverage (annual vaccines available)

○ The immunity doesn’t last very long
	○ Guillain-Barre syndrome in rare cases 
	○ Coverage in SG is very low, but still encouraged!
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7
Q

What family is parainfluenza in?

A

Paramyxovirus

Recall that influena is orthomyxovirus

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8
Q

Outline clinical presentation of influenza

A

We get infected by age 5. Types 1, 2, 3, 4 exist and have considerable overlap, but key features are as follows:
- Croup in infants
○ Acute laryngo-tracheo-bronchitis / coughing and hoarsness / stridor, dyspnoea, cyanosis. May require tracheostomy!
○ Ddx is diphtheria, Epiglottitis from Hinf if any
- Epidemics in winter
- Bronchiolitis and bronchopneumonia in infants / Croup in older infants
Minor respiratory infection

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9
Q

Any vax for parainfluenza?

A

No vaccine

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10
Q

Management of parainfluenza?

A
  • No vaccine
    • Ventilatory support may be required
    • Abx in case of a secondary bacterial infection
    • Keep them hydrated! Sedation may be required too
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11
Q

Outline clinical RSV

A

Clinically:
- The commonest cause of bronchiolitis in young children (PEAKS AT 3 MONTHS OLD! As always, more serious in extremes of age and immunocomps)
- Fever, cough, dyspnoea / tachypnoea, wheezing (LRT expiratory sound!), cyanosis; Immune mediated or mechanically- induced inflammatory bronchiole obstruction
○ Severe pneumonia may occur if there is interaction between the virus and maternal Ab. Bronchiolitis too! Up to 5% mortality in bronchiolitis
○ Secondary bacterial infection
○ Otitis media
○ HF
○ Apnoea
- CNS malformations / Congenital heart and lung diseases = High mortality!
In older children / adults, just causes a URTI because the bronchioles are bigger

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12
Q

Management of RSV?

A
  • Ribavirin aerosol (antiviral straight to the lungs; given only if severe) / Ventilatory support
    • Isolate infected children
    • Vaccines:
      ○ RSV monoclonal Ab injections before / during RSV seasons (prophylactic immunoglobulin)
      ○ Actual RSV vaccine approved in 2023 for >60y/o
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13
Q

How many RSV serotypes are there

A

ONE

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14
Q

What genus newly found has similar symptoms to RSV?

A

Metapneumovirus

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15
Q

Clinical presentation of adenovirus?

A

Think mucosal tissues and conjunctiva! Called adenovirus because they were isolated from the adenoids (lymphoid tissue in pharynx); Certain human strains actually cause malignant cancer in baby hamsters but not in us.
Clinically:
- Pharyngoconjunctival fever (think swimming pools / occasional epidemics)
- Just a URTI and fever
- Pneumonia
- Acute follicular conjunctivitis, Epidemic keratoconjunctivitis aka Shipyard eye
- Haemorrhagic cystitis (urinary bladder haemorrhage!)
- Enteritis too! Think of mesenteric adenitis (lymph nodes of the mesentery) and intussusception
Chronic infection of tonsils, adenoids

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16
Q

How many serotypes of Rhinovirus?

A

> 100! Causative agent in common coldC

17
Q

Clinical presentation of rhinovirus?

A
  • 2-4 day incubation with infection lasting 1-2w
    • Coryza symptoms - Rhinorrhoea, sneezing, sore throat, cough, mild fever, hoarseness of voice and headache
    • Complications of sinusitis, otitis media (through the Eustachian), pneumonia.
    • Precipitates asthma attacks, aggravates chronic bronchitis
    • Spreads a lot in rains/ close contacts / aerosolized droplets and respiratory secretions
18
Q

What does the vaccine for rhinovirus contain?

A

Trick question
There is no rhinovirus vax!

19
Q

Optimum rhinovirus growth?

A

In the nose! Because 33C temp
Below pH6, the virus becomes unstable

20
Q

Mortality rate of MERS?