Parvovirus Flashcards
Characteristics
Size, genome, envelope?
Simplest, smallest, naked (no envelope), single-stranded DNA animal virus
How does it replicate?
Replicate autnomously in rapidly dividing cells
What is the virus that infects only humans?
Parvovirus B19
How is it transmitted?
Mainly by body fluids, blood and vertically from mother to fetus
When do the symptoms usually appear?
Within 4 days to 2 weeks after exposure
What is the disease called?
Fifth disease - Ertyhema Infectiosum
What are the 2 phases of the disease it causes?
1st phase - viraemic phase
* Virus present in upper respiratory tract
* Symptoms occur at the end of 1st week: fever, malaise, myalgia, chills, itching
2nd phase - mediated by immune complexes
- Rash in 1/3 of patients
- “Slapped cheek” appearance
Fifth Disease - Erythema Infectiosum
Describe the pathogenesis of B19 infection
Targets human erythroid progenitor cells -> causes lysis of cells leading to anemia
Can also affect lymphocytes, granulocytes and platelets
Who is at risk of B19 infection? What does it cause?
- Chronic haemolytic anaemia: transient aplastic crisis
- Immunocompromised: severe aplastic anaemia
- Pregnant: severe anemia in fetus (1st trimester>2nd trimester)
How to diagnose B19 infection?
- PCR rapid and specific (virus difficult to grow)
- Serology (IgM appears 4-7 days, IgG appears 7-10 days and persist for years)
Pregnancy - Mother: serology for IgM and IgG, PCR to detect B19 DNA in maternal serum
- Fetus: ultrasound screening for non-immune hydrops, percutaneous umbilical blood sampling
How to treat?
- No known specific treatment
- Blood transfusion for transient aplastic crisis
- For fetal infection: watchful waiting, high-dose IgG therapy, intrauterine fetal transfusion