Ziegler- Viral, Fungal and Parasite Pathogenesis Flashcards
What are the clinical symptoms of virus replication?
- Infection does not always result in disease; SUBCLINICAL INFECTION is the rule for some viruses (only way to tell is through antibody study)
- The immune system can play an active role in the development of some symptoms, e.g., rashes (clinical sign of some diseases, maculopathic have no virus, vesicles in chicken pox have active virus that can be transferred to someone else)
What are localized infections?
Virus replication at the site of virus entry (incubation time shorter)
What are systemic or disseminated infections?
Virus traveling from the site of entry to a target organ (incubation time longer)
What is acute viral disease?
Appearance of symptoms relatively shortly following viral infection (Rabies–target organ is brain, exception)
What is persistent or chronic viral disease?
Symptoms appear months to years following infections (AIDS)
What are general aspects of viral pathogenicity?
- No lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) or exotoxins
- Disease results from direct or indirect effects of virus replication in host cells
- Viruses do not need to kill cells, but may merely alter cellular physiology ex. viroporins to cause problems
- Inflammation, tissue damage, and delayed hypersensitivity reactions due to host’s immune system play a significant role in disease
- Latency in host cells is a common property of some viruses (Herpes, latent in triseminyl ganglia)
What is the first step in viral pathogenesis?
- Entry and primary replication
- Routes are specific for viruses–most enter through the mucosa of respiratory or GI tract, some inoculated directly into blood stream by needles (HBV and HIV) or insect vectors (arboviruses)
- Most replicate at the site of entry, some produce disease there (flu and rotaviruses) and don’t spread further (localized infections)
How do viruses spread?
- Free in plasma
Poliovirus, HBV and togaviruses - Mononuclear peripheral WBC
Measles virus, EBV, CMV, HSV and HIV, Cause transient immunosuppression (CMB multiplies and travels throughout the body in white blood cells, alter normal properties of cells that are supposed to suppress infections, those pts are more susceptible to other infections) - RBC–
Colorado tick fever virus - Nerve fibers
Rabies virus, HSV, VZV, Virus shielded from immune system, get to neurons and can go latent and survive until stimulus makes them come out (VZV is shingles, immune system as you get older gets weaker, virus travels down nerve fibers, disease manifests along dermatome) - Direct spread
Within respiratory tract (influenza virus), respiratory to GI (adenovirus–cause respiratory and GI infections) **all viruses that cause GI infections are naked
**Shingles shot, cuts down on virus replication in skin
**structure of virus determines what disease you see
What is tissue trophism and what are target organs?
- Viruses spread from the site of infection to other areas of the body
- Viruses replicate only in tissues with cells having necessary receptors and host factors
- Target organ–shows most prominent clinical symptoms (Hep B-liver, Chicken pox-Rash, Herpes1-coldsores, Mono–WBC)
What is cell injury (cytopathogenesis)?
*Occurs when virus gets to cells
- Cytolysis by cytolytic viruses or immune response
- Physiological alterations–due to take over of biosynthetic machinery (naked–kills cell)
- Mechanisms of viral cytopathogenesis:
a. Inhibition of cellular protein synthesis
b. inhibition and degradation of cell DNA
c. alteration of cell membrane structure
d. Inclusion bodies–help with diagnosis, accumulations of viral specific proteins (Rabies, cytomegalovirus, herpes)
3. toxicity of virion components–adenovirus fibers and rotavirus proteins
What does disease indicate in viral pathogenesis?
- An insensitive indicator of virus infection since inapparent or subclinical infections are extremely common with some viruses, e.g., EBV and HPV (EBV mono–can get from someone without sympt)
- Results from a complex series of circumstances and events: Inoculum size, Competence of immune system, Immune and health status of host, Genetic constitution of host, Age and nutritional condition of host
- *Common cold, short incubation, moderate subclinical infections, spring/autumn
- *Diarrhea
- *Hepatitis A/B–high incidence of subclinical infections
What is transmission in viral pathogenesis?
- Horizontal: Respiratory, DROPLETS – influenza
- Intestinal: FECAL/ORAL – hepatitis A
- Urogenital (STD): Most not spread by urine, most spread by mucosal contact with susceptible individuals, e.g., HSV
- Oropharynx: SALIVA – HSV, mumps virus and CMV
- Skin and skin glands: PHYSICAL CONTACT – HSV, VZV and HPV
- BLOOD: Needles and arthropod bites – HIV, HBV and Dengue, tattooing needles
What is vertical transmission?
- Transplacental: rubella virus, CMV, HIV and HBV
- Perinatal (infected birth canal): HSV
- Postnatal (milk or direct contact): CMV and HBV
- Germline: Many retroviruses
How does transmission occur through animals?
- Arthropod-borne: Togaviruses and bunyaviruses
2. Vertebrates: Arenaviruses, poxviruses and rhabdoviruses
What are the steps in viral pathogenesis?
- Entry and primary replication
- Viral spread
- Tissue trophism and target organs
- Cell injury (cytopathogenesis)
- Disease
- Transmission
What are the types of infection?
- Acute
- Persistent
- Transforming
What is acute infection?
- Clinical signs of infection which last a short period of time (days to weeks) followed by the disappearance of the virus
- Localized:
-Occurs at the initial site of infection
-Little or no viral spread
-Clinical signs due to replication there
-Short incubation time
Example - influenza - Systemic or disseminated
-Virus must spread to target organ before clinical signs
-Primary and secondary viremia possible
-Longer incubation times
Examples - mumps and measles
What is persistent infection?
Types of persistent infection:
1. Persistent: Virus persist in infectious form with continuous or intermittent shedding
Examples – HBV and EBV
2. Slow:Long incubation time with no symptoms for months or years following infection, May follow acute disease – SSPE, HIV and HTLV-1, May not follow acute disease – Creutzfeld-Jakob disease
3. Latent: Virus persists in latent, non-infectious form
Examples – HSV and VZV
4. Reactivation of persistent infections:
Old age, pregnancy, leukemias and lymphomas, post-transplant immunosuppression and HIV infection (cytomegalo virus often kills HIV patients, likes to replicate in WBC)