HIV Flashcards
What type of virus is HIV?
Retrovirus (copies RNA to DNA to integrate into host genome)
Characteristic of retrovirus?
- enveloped
- 2 copies of ss RNA
What are the 2 genotypes of HIV viruses?
HIV-1 (rest of world) (jumped from chimps to humans)
HIV-2(Western Africa) (Close to mandrill virus
Key structural parts for HIV
Gp120 (outer envelope glycoprotein)
Gp41 (embedded in envelope)
P24 (capsid protein)
Reverse Transcriptase
Integrase
Protease
When can antibodies for HIV be found?
AIDS, Pre-AIDS, Risk Groups
When can HIV virus be isolated?
AIDS, Pre-AIDS, Risk Groups
What are the 4 Koch’s Postulates?
- The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms suffering from the disease but should not be found in healthy organisms.
- The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture.
- The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism.
- The microorganism must be re-isolated from the inoculated, diseased experimental host and identified as being identical to the original specific causative agent.
Briefly describe process of infection by HIV
- Attachment, Entry & Uncoating - GP120, CD4 Receptor Site
- Reverse Transcriptase & Integration
- Synthesis of Viral Parts
- Assembly and Release
- protease to cleave protein into functional parts
Draw a graph showing the levels of
a) GP120 antibody
b) p24 antigen (viral load)
c) CD4 T cells
Draw a graph showing the levels of
a) p24 antigen
b) IgM
c) p24 antibody
d) IgG
Describe the progression of HIV.
- Primary Infection (weeks)
- burst of viraemia
- transient decrease in CD4 - Latency (years)
- Immune System fights off virus
- chronic low level viraemia
- CD4 depleting slowly - Progression to AIDS
- CD4 cell loss outweighs production
- Below 200 cells/mm3
Detection of HIV?
- PCR
- Culture
*not rly used bc expensive and time consuming - ELISA (first line)
- Western Blot (confirmatory after +ve ELISA) – presence of bands at p24, p31, gp41, gp120, gp160
- Combination Assays
- Assays for HIV ab without invasive sampling (use saliva/urine samples) (oraquick rapid HIV)
Clinical PResentation of HIV
- Lab Evidence - <200cells/mm3 CD4
- condition indicative of immunodeficiency
- Kaposi Sarcoma
- P. jirovecii
- Mycobacterium avium
- lymphoma
- cervical cancer - Cachexia
How might Kaposi Sarcoma and P. Jirovecii present?
Pink flat indurated lesion, gradually becomes darker and more widespread
Oral lesions (oral candidiasis, oral thrush [can be scraped, white]
*common in diabetes, pt on steroids, cancer
Stopping Transmission of HIV
- few partners
- condom use
- advice to sero +ve women
- no sharing needles
- no IV drug use
rmb vaginal route > anal route