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Parvovirus B 19. A negatively stained preparation of parvovirus seen by transmission electron microscope. www.wadsworth.org. Parvovirus B19. Family: Parvoviridae Latin parvus means small ~20 nm in diameter (0.02 µm) Single-stranded DNA virus Icosahedral capsid No envelope
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Parvovirus B19 A negatively stained preparation of parvovirus seen by transmission electron microscope. www.wadsworth.org
Parvovirus B19 • Family: Parvoviridae • Latin parvus means small • ~20 nm in diameter • (0.02 µm) • Single-stranded DNA virus • Icosahedralcapsid • No envelope • Only known human parvovirus X-ray crystallographic image of parvovirus
Body source & Transmission • Replication in human cells restricted to erythroid progenitor cells • Adult bone marrow • Fetal liver • Transmission by close contact • Airborne droplets • 50% of a household may become infected • 10-60% of students in school outbreaks
Environmental Habitat • Wide distribution among warm-blooded animals • B19 is only known HUMAN parvovirus
Pathogenicity • Fifth disease • Erythema infectiosum • Aplastic crisis • Patients with hemoglobinopathies • Immunosuppressed, immunodeficient, immunocompromised • Congenital parvovirus • Hydrops fetalis
Pathogenicity • Associated with: • Encephalitis, neuropathies, myocarditis, nephritis, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP), and rheumatoid arthritis Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP)Note: this is usually caused by the measles
Fifth Disease • Six separate childhood exanthems were defined from what was once called the “measles” (Early 20th Century) • 1st Measles (rubeola) Morbillivirus • 2nd Scarlet fever (Streptococcus pyogenes ) • 3rd Rubella (German measles) • 4th Atypical scarlet fever Duke Filatow's disease staph • 5th Erythema infectiosum • 6th Roseola herpesviruses (HHV-6 and HHV-7) • Exanthem = rash • Fifth disease is the only one still called by this name
Symptoms – Fifth Disease • Incubation 7-10 days • Lasts 5-7 days • Three Phases • First phase –peak level of virus and RBC destruction • Fever • Malaise • Chills • Bright red, raised “slap cheek” rash
Symptoms – Fifth Disease • Second phase – rash and arthralgia • Virus has disappeared – no longer infectious • Caused by immune complexes in the capillaries of the skin • Appears at presence of parvovirus IgM • Erythematous maculopapular rash on arms and trunk • Fades into a lace-like reticular pattern • Third phase • Frequent clearing and recurrences for weeks • Due to stimuli such as exercise, irritation, or overheating of skin from bathing or sunlight.
Erythema infectiosum “Slap cheek” rash on the face, lacy rash on the extremities.
Symptoms – Aplastic Crisis • Anemic patients • Pallor, fatigue, drop in hemoglobin >1g/dL • Destroys infected red blood cells • No reticulocytes to replace aging or damaged erythrocytes • This normally happens in disease but is symptomatic in anemic patients • Thrombocytopenic patients • Bruising Typical giant proerythroblast (arrow) seen in parvovirus B19-associated pure red cell aplasia with highly uncondensed chromatin and pale purple intranuclear inclusions. Bone marrow aspirate.
Symptoms – Hydrops Fetalis • Pregnant women exposed to B19 should have IgG and IgM serology ASAP • Repeat serology tests in 3 weeks. Development of IgM indicates an acute infection. • Can be fatal to the fetus
Hydrops Fetalis The fetus weighing 1,010 g shows features of hydrops fetalis. Mild maceration is observed
Hydrops Fetalis In the internal organs, the markedly anemic (pale yellowish brown-colored) liver is quite characteristic (gross findings). The fetus with hepatic hematopoiesis (19-29 weeks of gestation) is susceptible to this single-stranded DNA virus.
Identification • Lab studies not normally done because it resolves in 5-7 days • Serology – IgM and IgG • ELISA • Radioimmunoassay (RIA) • Immunofluorescence • Difficult to interpret • Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) • Useful for clinical diagnosis • Detects viral DNA in serum • Cannot be cultured in cells
Treatment • Mainly supportive care • Acetaminophen or Ibuprofen for fever • Topical anesthetic or antihistamine for itching • Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIG) in chronic parvovirus • Aplastic crisis may require packed RBC transfusion • Vaccine is in trials
Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP) This picture is for Natalie