Hepatitis I & II Flashcards
Which hepatitis viruses do not have vaccines?
HCV and HEV
How many HCV infections are there in the U.S.? How many annual deaths?
- 3.2 million
- 20,000 (more yearly deaths than HIV)
Note: both incidence and mortality are on the rise for HCV.
The HAV vaccine was introduced around ____________.
2000; as such, cases of acute HAV have precipitously dropped since then
Both HBV and HCV have been declining since roughly _________.
1990, around which time blood donations started to be screened
Give Dr. Barton’s rundown on HAV.
- Picornavirus
- Positive-sense, ssRNA
- Naked
- Causes acute infections
- Most often asymptomatic infection
- Vaccine is killed
- Passive immunity can be given (IV Ig), but this is not commonly used
- Diagnosed by anti-HAV IgM (for acute… anti-HAV IgG is for past exposure/immunization)
- Can only get once due to lifelong immunity
HAV causes jaundice more commonly in ______________.
those older than 14
The incubation period for HAV is _________.
one month
Anti-HAV IgM is ____________ with illness.
concurrent, because the hepatic damage is immune-mediated
Fulminant hepatitis occurs ___________ in HAV infections.
rarely (about 0.5% of cases)
How common is HAV infection?
Extremely common
Almost all people in the U.S. will be exposed at some point in their lives.
A new strain of __________ has been recently discovered that has an envelope.
HAV
Give Dr. Barton’s rundown on HEV.
- Naked
- Icosahedral
- Positive-sense ssRNA
- Fecal-oral transmission
- Reservoir in pigs ** (Dr. Barton emphasized this) **
- Acute, self-limiting (though 10x higher mortality than HAV)
- Causes fulminant hepatitis in pregnant women
- Diagnosed by anti-HEV IgM and/or PCR
Give Dr. Barton’s rundown on HBV.
- Hepadnavirus
- DNA virus
- Circular genome
- Partially ds
- Enveloped
- Acute and chronic infections
- Vaccine is to surface antigen (like the needle on the hippie van next to the blue S)
- Diagnosed by anti-HbSAg IgM, anti-HbCAg IgM
- Transmitted by blood contact (needles, birth, sex)
HBV has _____________ in its genome.
overlapping open reading frames
What happens to the HBV genome once it’s in the cell?
The host cell machinery “fixes” the partial dsDNA by filling in the gaps.