Viral infections of the Upper Respiratory Tract Flashcards
features of viral respiratory infections
transmission by fomites or aerosol. epithelial cells are the first site of virus/host interaction. infected cells release cytokines leading to fever, aches. Temperature differential in respiratory tract has consequences for pathogenesis (rhinoviruses replicate preferentially in URT). Infants and elderly have more severe respiratory infections
what viruses show as acute infection with replication confined to respiratory mucosal surface?
picornavirus (rhinovirus), coronavirus, paramyxovirus (parainfluenza and respiratory syncytial virus), orthomyxovirus (influenza)
what viruses present as persistent replication on respiratory mucosal surface?
EBV, adenovirus, papillomavirus
what viruses present as systemic replication after primary replication in the respiratory tract?
paramyxocirus (mumps, measles)
herpesvirus
rubella
picornavirus (polio)
coronaviruses
named for crown of spikes. (+) ssRNA virus. most strains cause cold-like symptoms. Rare new strains cause lethal respiratory diseases. (SARS, MERS)
myxoviruses
myxo is greek for mucus. These viruses bind to mucin protein on RBCs
orthomyxoviruses
straight/right/proper. this is the flu. the researchers were looking for this virus so they named it ortho, or “right”
paramyxoviruses
besides, resembling. measles virus is similar to the orthomyxoviruses, but not the same so they called it para
orthomyxoviridae representatives, replication, genome, and structure
influenzavirus. 3 types, A, B, C. nuclear replication. Segmented (-) ssRNA. enveloped.
paramyxoviridae representatives, replication, genome, and structure
mumps, measles, respiratory syncytial virus. Cytoplasmic replication. non-segmented (-) ssRNA. enveloped structure.
how influenza virus causes disease
- aerosol inoculation of virus.
- replication in respiratory tract
- desquamation of mucus secreting and ciliated cells
- T cell responses and interferon induction
- influenza syndrome (symptoms)
flu treatments and prevention
tamiflu and relenza work on influenza A and B. fluzone and flumist are vaccines. Trivalent vaccines used yearly, quadrivalent vaccines sometimes too.
croup
parainfluenza virus and RSV. peak incidence in winter. starts like cold in adults and kids. infants may develop a distinctive barking cough, called croup. commonly treated at home with steam and humidifiers. complications include pneumonia and respiratory distress
adenovirus respiratory infections
widespread in nature, infecting birds, many mammals, and humans. isolated from adenoidal tissue. 47 serotypes can infect humans. post people haev been infected by 1 by the age of 15. common, usually asymptomatic. most involve the respiratory or GI tracts or the eye.
adenovirus pathogenesis
transmitted by aerosol, close contact, fecal oral, fingers/ophthalmologic instruments. infects mucoepithelial cells of respiratory and GI tract, conjunctiva, cornea. virus persists in lymphoid tissue. antibody is essential for recover from infection