L 81 Mono, CMV, Mumps Flashcards

1
Q

What are some of the diseases that come from Epstein-Barr Virus?

A

Infection known as “glandular fever”
Causes infectious mononucleosis (IM)
Burkitt’s lymphoma in some regions

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2
Q

Clinical menifestations of IM

A

Polyclonal B cell expansion that is checked by T cells. The B cells are producing lots of cytokines and need to be stopped by T cells
Incubation of 1-2 months
Lymphadenopathy in cervical chains
Splenomegaly
Looks like strep throat–headache, fever, malaise, fatigue, sore throat, LAD
Sometimes liver enzymes elevated and jaundice present
Atypical lymphocytes, especially T cells or “Downey cells”
B cells multiply first, but the T cell response creates symptoms
Establishes latency in throat and lymph tissue

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3
Q

EBV epidemiology

A

Humans only
Kissing disease
Gamma herpesvirus
IM is significant if infection is delayed until the teen years when the more mature immune system reacts more strongly
Latency: genome may continue be expressed in cells for long-term

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4
Q

EBV diagnosis

A

Downey cells
Heterophile antibodies: using monospot test, these are present transiently whereas antibody to EBV is permanent
Younger patients may not show positive monospot test, need to screen for IgM against viral capsid antigen

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5
Q

IM treatment

A

Symptomatic relief

Steroids are controversial

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6
Q

IM complications

A

Will develop rash after treatment with ampicillin
Splenic rupture possible
Chronic infections can lead to blood abnormalities and cancers

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7
Q

EBV and malignancy

A

Burkitt’s Lymphoma most common malignancy in Africa causing a translocation dysregulation of C-MYC. This is not causatory, but contributory.
NHL in HIV patients and transplant patients receiving cyclosporin A
Hodgkin’s disease
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma

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8
Q

CMV overview

A

Most common infection of fetus when the mother gets infected

Major morbidity in HIV and transplant patients (this is the troll of transplantation)

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9
Q

Classic cellular sign for CMV

A

Owl’s Eye

The virus replicates in epithelial cells and others?

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10
Q

CMV Epidemiology

A

Worldwide, Endemic
Person to Person
Virus in blood, saliva, semen, urine, donor organs

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11
Q

What is a common CMV manifestation associated with HIV?

A

CMV retinitis

Lesions on the retina caused by CMV

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12
Q

CMV manifestations

A

Immunocompromised patients and Congenital!!!!
Most infections are thought to be subclinical
Problems usually only arise in immature immune systems or immunocompromised

Mono-like illness but Heterophile-negative, but have atypical lymphocytes. Adult infection presents much later than typical IM patient.
CMV establishes latent infections

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13
Q

CMV complications

A

90% of cases are asymptomatic or mild, but up to 10% can cause permanent brain damage to patient

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14
Q

CMV and transfusions and transplants

A

Many transplant patients DIE of CMV
Blood transfusion–2% risk
Kidney, Heart, Liver–70-90% risk

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15
Q

What it the TORCH series used for?

A

Series used for newborns
Toxoplasmosis, Rubella, CMV, Herpes Simplex
CMV is most common in this group

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16
Q

CMV diagnosis

A

TORCH series
Giant cells in any organ or in urine
Serology
Viral culture showing Owl Eye cells

17
Q

CMV treatment

A

Ganciclovir for transplant patient as prophylaxis

Immunoglobulin (CytoGam) for transplant patients and those with sever disease during pregnancy

18
Q

Mumps agent

A

Paramyxovirus

19
Q

Mumps manifestations

A

Acute infection of salivary glands with painful swelling and fever
High fever, vomiting, headache
Permanent sequelae rare for peds patients, but more possible in older patients

20
Q

Mumps diagnosis

A

Febrile child with bilateral parotitis

Many asymptomatic

21
Q

Mumps epidemiology

A

Humans only hosts

Transmitted by aerosols

22
Q

Mumps Complications

A

Orchitis in men, usually inilateral (why best to get this before sexual maturity)
May appear in absence of other Sx
Can also replicate in kidneys

23
Q

Mumps treatment and prevention

A

Sx relief
Controlled by vaccination
However, vaccine does not give life-long immunity