Enteroviruses Flashcards
1
Q
Features of enteroviruses
A
- Picornavirus - small, non-enveloped, ssRNA (+)
- Stable - insensitive to detergents, survive for months at 4C, survive exposure to 60C
- Replicate in GIT
- Prefers warm, moist environment - common in tropics, epidemic in summer months
2
Q
Examples of enteroviruses
A
- Poliovirus
- Coxsackie virus A & B
- Echovirus - Enteric Cytopathic Human Orphan
3
Q
Classification of enteroviruses
A
- recently reclassified based on molecular properties
- Enterovirus A-D
- newly discovered viruses - enterovirus xx
- > 60 different serotypes
- important new enteroviruses: EV70 - Acute Haemorrhagic Conjunctivitis; EV71 - Encephalitis, HFMD; EV72 - Hep A virus - reclassified as hepatovirus
4
Q
Features of HFMD
A
- common, mild childhood infection
- caused by several different serotypes of enteroviruses - CA16, CA24, EV71
5
Q
Features of EV71
A
- infection manifests as childhood exanthem (rash); HFMD indistinguishable from CA16
- small proportion results in CNS infection
- common, highest seroconversion rate in children aged 2-5, slows down after
- neutralising Ab titre reduces with age - low reinfection rate
- vaccination in early phase clinical trials
6
Q
Incubation period of poliovirus
A
7-14 days
7
Q
Pathophysiology of poliovirus
A
- Primary site of infection: lymphoid tissue assoc w oropharynx & gut (GALT)
- Virus production - transient viraemia, may infect CNS
- Replication in grey matter - esp motor neurones in anterior horns of spinal cord & brainstem - produces distinctive ‘plaques’ due to lytic replication of the virus & probably inflamm caused by an over-enthusiastic immune response
8
Q
Symptoms of poliovirus
A
- 90-95% subclinical/asymptomatic
- 4-8% abortive/mild infection - minor influenza-like illness, recovery within a few days, may have aseptic meningitis
- 1-2% major illness - when it gets into CNS
- commonly aseptic meningitis
- involvement of ant horn cells - LMN - flaccid paralysis - causes muscle atrophy, releasing muscle tension on bone (bone growth depends on muscle tone) - affected limb will be shorter
- involvement of medulla - resp paralysis & death (bulbar poliomyelitis)
9
Q
Treatment of poliovirus
A
Vaccination
- IM poliovirus vaccine (IPV)
- consists of formalin inactivated virus of all 3 poliovirus serotypes - Oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV)
- consists of live attenuated virus of all 3 serotypes, serial passage in pri monkey kidney cells
can be eradicated!!
- cheap vaccine
- cannot survive long out of the body
10
Q
Comparison of poliovirus vaccines
A
- IPV is IM, req trained personnel vs OPV - PO
- IPV confers immunity but still acts as carrier vs OPV lifelong immunity, prevents carriage
- IPV no risk of vaccine associated paralysis vs OPV small risk of VAP (regain virulence, reversion to wild type)
- IPV vaccinates patients only
11
Q
Features of coxsackie & echoviruses
A
- Coxsackie A: mainly epithelial infections - herpangina, HFMD (CA16), conjunctivitis, encephalitis
- Coxsackie B: mainly muscular infections - Bornholm’s disease, myocarditis, encephalitis
- Echovirus: 30 serotypes, wide range of disease spectrum
12
Q
Diagnosis of coxsackie & echoviruses (3)
A
- Virus isolation - cell culture from throat swabs, faeces, rectal swabs, CSF
- Serology - rarely used due to cross reactivity, useful for sero-epidemiological studies
- Molecular - RT-PCR, genetic seq for typing
13
Q
Treatment of coxsackie & echoviruses
A
- No specific vaccine, some use IVIG to treat neonatal infections/severe infections in immunocompromised but efficacy is uncertain
- Some susceptible agains Pleconaril