Hep Viruses Flashcards

1
Q

Hep A

Transmission, Vaccine, Type of injury, Incubation Period, Diagnosis, Risk groups

A

Fecal-Oral
- contaminated food, water, Oysters, Cockles

1 Serotype

  • Vaccine available, Lifelong immunity
  • Acute, Hep B people immunize w Hep A;

Incubation Period: 4-6 weeks

Diagnosis

  • IgM
  • found in feces before symptoms;

Risk Groups:

  • Food handlers, Sewage workers
  • Travelers
  • HBV, HCV infected
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2
Q

Hep E

Transmission, Vaccine, Diagnosis, Pregnancy severity

A

Fecal-Oral

No vaccine, AB dont last

Diagnosis
- IgM, IgG, PCR

Severe in pregnant women
- later trimesters more dangerous

VS Rubella, TORCH - earlier more dangerous

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3
Q

Hep B

Transmission, Period, Characteristics, Genome
Diagnosis, Time frame, Vaccine, Infectivity, HCC risk

A

Blood, Sex

  • 4-6 months
  • only dsDNA, Reverse transcriptase
  • Coat C antigen, Coat-associated E antigen
  • Surface S antigen

Diagnosis
- HBVsAg, IgM-HBVc !!!
= S antigen and IgM C

  • IgM c does not protect but is a marker for natural infection as Ag C not found in blood;

Time frame goes from
S, IgM C, IgG C, IgM S (note C not found in blood, only liver)
- IgM C useless but means natural infection, vaccine no C, vaccine uses A epitope
- Note IgM S is fucking late

IgM S confers protection, not IgM C
Dane Particles - Virions,
S particles alone “Subviral particles” USELESS

Vaccine against S, w a common ‘a’ epitope
- if infant post-infect alr give passive AB too;

  • Infectivity - levels of E, otherwise DNA levels
  • E not found in “pre-core” mutants

HCC risk by HBx protein

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4
Q

Hep B carrier numbers;

A

Carrier definition

  • S antigen > 6 months
  • E antigen +/- for infectivity

Infections lead to 90% recover, 10% carrier
1/3 of carrier goes to chronic

Pregnant wahmen WITH ANTIGEN EEEEEEEE+;
- 90% infants carrier, 10% recover
1/3 of carrier goes to Cx

If Pregnant wahmen WO ANTIGEN EEE but antigen S
(where S = Carrier)
- 10% infant, 90% ok

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5
Q

Hep B IgM-c

  • positive/negative meaning
A

Positive - acute
Negative - chronic/carrier/past infection

Note acute and chronic may not have Anti-S present in tests

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6
Q

Hep C

A

Carrier rate 80% vs 10% B
Chronic rate 80% vs 1/3 B
Incubation period 2wks to 6 mths vs 4-6 mths B

Diagnosis:

  • RNA PCR vs S + IgMc vs IgM (HAV, HEV)
  • note IgM not detectable

Vaccine
- IgG useless - Genomically unstable

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7
Q

Hep D

A

Satellite Virus - needs HbsAg to coat

  • Superinfection - on HBV
  • Co-infection - on healthy person;

Vaccinate HBV

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8
Q

Hep B chronic timeline

A

Immune tolerance

  • Low AST, ALT
  • Virus replicating, no immune action

Immune clearance

  • High AST, ALT,
  • Seroconversion, Anti E AB positive, E decreases

Note liver injury is due to immune response

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9
Q

Management

A

Acute + Chronic

  • electrolyte balance
  • good nutrition
  • Bowel Movement - lactulose - clear gut toxins; decrease risk of hepatic encephalopathy; Lactulose helps trap the ammonia (NH3) in the colon and bind to it
  • Bile acid - Ursodiol; IV vit K - for cholestasis

Chronic

  • Diuretics
  • Beta-blockers for decreasing venous pressure, for portal hypertension and varices bleeding - they block vasoconstriction on Alpha receptors; slow heart rate w Beta

Recall Alpha - vasoconstriction of organs, skin
Beta - vasodilation of muscles

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10
Q

Give overall vaccine comparisons between ABCDE

A
A: yes, 1 serotype, give on HBV+, HCV+
B: yes, 4 serotype, 1 common 'a' epitope
C: no, unstable genome, note IgM undetectable
D: no, give HBV Vaccine
E: no, AB useless
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11
Q

Compare Incubation of ABC

A

4-6 Weeks
4-6 Months
2wks-6 Months

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12
Q

Compare Diagnosis of ABC

A

A: IgM
B: S + IgM C
C: PCR RNA

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13
Q

Compare carrier stats of B vs D and chronic stats of B vs D

A

10% vs 80% (high carrier of Hep C)

1/3 vs 80% (high chronicity of Hep C)

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14
Q

Compare and contrast Hep A and Hep E

  • Type of infection, genome
  • key property
  • vaccine status + when to give
A

ssRNA, enveloped (hep A is weird for envelop)
FECAL-ORAL; sex also

  • Filter feeding fishes - cockles, oysters
  • vs Pregnancy

Vaccine

  • Hep A yes = killed virus
    • Hep A vaccine given for Hep B infected
  • Hep E no, AB do not lasts
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15
Q

Note chronic hepatitis cases

Hep B 70% then Hep C 20%

Liver cancer
Hep B 70% then Hep C 20%

But infected to carrier
Hep B 10%; Hep C 70%

But carrier to chronicity
Hep B 10%; Hep C 60-80%

A

okay

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16
Q

Hep B vs Hep C

  • Diagnosis
  • Vaccine
A

HBVs + IgM-C

vs

HCV RNA!!! - cannot use IgM, low sensitivity

  • Yes subunit vaccine B vs NO for Hep C
17
Q

Whats the deal w Hep D?

A

ssRNA, eveloped
- Satellite virus

  • needs HBsAg to infect cells;
    SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
18
Q

Spread of Hep ABCDE

A

Blood - BCD

Fecal Oral - ‘food’ - AE
Acute AE too

note >50% of Hep D goes to chronic