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1. Viruses and Viral Diseases
2. General Structure of Viruses Size range
most <0.2 µm
requires electron microscope
Virion
fully formed virus able to establish an infection
4. General Structure of Viruses Capsids
All viruses possess
Constructed from identical subunits called capsomers
made of protein
nucleoscapsid
Capsid + nucleic acid
5. General Structure of Viruses Three main structural types:
helical
Continuous helix of capsomers forming a cylindrical nucleocapsid
icosahedral
20-sided with 12 corners
vary in the number of capsomers
Some are enveloped
Complex
7. General Structure of Viruses Viral envelope
mostly animal viruses
acquired when virus leaves host cell
Protects the nucleic acid when the virion is outside the host cell
spikes
exposed proteins on the outside of the envelope
essential for attachment of the virus to the host cell
Naked
composed only of a nucleocapsid
Enveloped
surrounded by an envelope
8. General Structure of Viruses Complex viruses: atypical viruses
Poxviruses
lack typical capsid
covered by dense layer of lipoproteins
Bacteriophages
Virus that infects and replicates within bacterial cells
9. Viral targets Viruses have host range and tissue specificity
Host range refers to what organisms the virus can infect
depends on capsid structure
Many viruses infect certain cell or tissue types within the host (tissue tropism)
10. Nucleic acids Viral genome
either DNA or RNA but never both
Carries genes necessary to invade host cell
then redirect cell’s activity to make new viruses
Number of genes varies for each type of virus
few to hundreds
11. Nucleic Acids DNA viruses
usually double stranded (ds)
may be single stranded (ss)
circular or linear
12. DNA Viruses DNA viruses causing human disease:
enveloped DNA viruses
nonenveloped DNA viruses
nonenveloped ssDNA viruses
13. Nucleic Acids RNA viruses
usually single stranded
may be double stranded
Segmented versus nonsegmented
positive-sense RNA
ssRNA genomes ready for immediate translation
negative-sense RNA
ssRNA genomes that must be converted into proper form
14. RNA Viruses Assigned families based on envelope, capsid, and nature of RNA genome
15. Viruses….a comparison Most DNA viruses are budded off the nucleus
Most RNA viruses multiply in & released from the cytoplasm
Most DNA & a few RNA viruses can become permanent resident of the host cell
Several viruses can cross the placenta & cause developmental disturbances
16. What about Viral classification?? Acellular
Completely different way of classifying
Will discuss in viral section….
17. Naming Viruses 3 Orders
Order name end in –virales
Herpesvirales
63 Families
Family name ends in -viridae
Herpesviridae
263 genera
Genus name ends in –virus
Simplexvirus, Herpes simplex virus I (HSV-I)
18. Family – Herpesviridae
Genus – Varicellovirus
Common name – chickenpox virus
Disease - chickenpox Naming Viruses
19. Modes of Viral Multiplication
20. Multiplication Cycle in Bacteriophages Bacteriophages – bacterial viruses (phages)
Most widely studied are those that infect Escherichia coli
Multiplication goes through similar stages as animal viruses
Only the nucleic acid enters the cytoplasm
uncoating not necessary
Two types of phages:
Virulent
Temperate
21. Animal virus replication has similarities to phage replication
Animal viruses attach to host plasma membrane via spikes on the capsid or envelope
22. Genome Replication DNA viruses
RNA viruses
ds
Two complementary paired nucleic acids
ss
Unpaired nucleic acids
Reverse transcribing viruses
23. 1. DNA Viruses Use host cell’s synthesizing machinery
ds DNA releases its DNA then:
Enters nucleus
Is transcribed
Viral mRNA translated and proteins enter nucleus
Viral DNA replicated in nucleus
Viral DNA and proteins assembled
CAN insert itself into host DNA
24. 2. RNA Viruses Genetic information encoded in RNA
Use own enzymes to copy their genomes
Can be:
(-) genome and must be converted before translation
(-) that can be converted to DNA or dsRNA
(+) genome ready to be translated into proteins
25. (+) genome ready to be translated into proteins Penetration and uncoating of viral RNA
Directly translated on host cell ribosomes into viral proteins
(-) genome synthesized to produce for final assembly
(-) template used to make (+) replicates
RNA strands assembled
26. 3. Reverse Transcribing Viruses Synthesize DNA using their ssRNA genome as a template
Reverse transcriptase
Packaged with each viral particle
Synthesizes ssDNA from their template
Directs formation of complementary strand of above
=dsDNA virus strand
Enters nucleus
integrated into host genome
We then make more ssRNA
27. Some Animal Viruses Can Exist as Proviruses Some DNA viruses and retroviruses insert their genome into the host chromosome as a provirus
Retroviruses use reverse transcriptase to transcribe their RNA to DNA
It can then be inserted into the host chromosome
28. 6 Steps in Viral Replication adsorption
penetration
replication
assembly
maturation
release
29. 1. Adsorption and Host Range Virus coincidentally collides with a susceptible host cell
adsorbs specifically to receptor sites on the cell membrane
Attachment
host range
Spectrum of cells a virus can infect
hepatitis B – human liver cells
poliovirus – primate intestinal and nerve cells
Rabies – various cells of many mammals
30. 2. Penetration/Uncoating Flexible cell membrane penetrated by the whole virus (or its nucleic acid) by:
endocytosis
entire virus engulfed and enclosed in a vacuole or vesicle
fusion
envelope merges directly with membrane
Results in nucleocapsid’s entry into cytoplasm
31. 3. Replication Varies depending on whether the virus is a DNA or RNA virus
DNA viruses generally are replicated and assembled in the nucleus
RNA viruses generally are replicated and assembled in the cytoplasm
32. 4. & 5. Assembly and Maturation Mature viruses made from various parts
Capsid laid down first
Enveloped
Insert viral spikes
33. 6. Release Assembled viruses leave host cell in one of two ways:
budding
exocytosis
nucleocapsid binds to membrane which pinches off and sheds the viruses gradually
cell is not immediately destroyed
lysis
nonenveloped and complex viruses released when cell dies and ruptures
34. Damage to Host Cell Cytopathic effects - virus-induced damage to cells
Changes in size & shape
Cytoplasmic inclusion bodies
Nuclear inclusion bodies
Cells fuse to form multinucleated cells
Cell lysis
Alter DNA
Transform cells into cancerous cells
36. Transformation transformation of the cell
Some animal viruses enter host cell
Permanently alter its genetic material
resulting in cancer
Transformed cells have:
increased rate of growth
alterations in chromosomes
capacity to divide for indefinite time periods
resulting in tumors
oncoviruses
Mammalian viruses capable of initiating tumors
Papillomavirus – cervical cancer
Epstein-Barr virus – Burkitt’s lymphoma
37. Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal Viruses Obligate intracellular parasites require appropriate cells to replicate
In vitro
In vivo
Methods used:
cell (tissue) cultures
bird embryos
live animal inoculation
38. Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal Viruses Cell (tissue) cultures
cultured cells grow in sheets that support viral replication
permit observation for cytopathic effect
39. Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal Viruses Bird embryos
incubating egg is an ideal system
virus is injected through the shell
40. Techniques in Cultivating and Identifying Animal Viruses live animal inoculation
occasionally used when necessary
41. Pathogenic DNA Viruses
42. Poxviruses Produce eruptive skin pustules called pocks or pox
Largest and most complex animal viruses
largest genome of all viruses
dsDNA
variola – cause of smallpox
vaccinia – closely related virus used in vaccines
monkeypox
cowpox
44. Smallpox first disease to be eliminated by vaccination
exposure through inhalation or skin contact
infection associated with fever,
malaise, prostration, & a rash
Variola major
highly virulent, caused toxemia, shock, & intravascular coagulation
Variola minor
less virulent
routine vaccination ended in US in 1972
reintroduced in 2002
45. Molluscum Contagiosum caused by unclassified poxvirus
primarily an infection of children
transmitted by direct contact and
fomites
AIDS patients suffer atypical form
attacks the skin of the face
forms tumorlike growths
Treatment
freezing, electric cautery, chemical agents
46. The Herpesviruses All members show latency and cause recurrent infection
more severe with advancing age, cancer chemotherapy, or other conditions that compromise the immune defenses
Large enveloped icosahedral dsDNA
47. Herpesviridae large Family; 8 infect humans
HSV-1
HSV-2
VZV
EBV
CMV
HHV-6
HHV-7
HHV-8
48. Epidemiology of Herpes Simplex Viruses:HSV-1 & 2 Transmission
direct exposure to secretions containing the virus
active lesions most significant source
genital herpes can be transmitted in the absence of lesions
HSV multiplies in sensory neurons, moves to ganglia
HSV-1 enters 5th cranial nerve
HSV-2 enters lumbosacral spinal nerve trunk ganglia
49. Epidemiology of Herpes Simplex Viruses Recurrent infection triggered by various stimuli
fever, UV radiation, stress, mechanical injury
Newly formed viruses migrate to body surface
produce a local skin or membrane lesion
50. Type 1 Herpes Simplex (HSV – 1) Herpes labialis
fever blisters, cold sores
most common recurrent HSV-1 infection
vesicles occur on mucocutaneous junction of lips or adjacent skin
itching and tingling prior to vesicle formation
lesion crusts over in 2-3 days and heals
Herpetic gingivostomatitis
infection of oropharynx in young children
fever, sore throat, swollen lymph nodes
Herpetic keratitis
ocular herpes
51. Type 2 Herpes Simplex (HSV – 2) Genital herpes
herpes genitalia
starts with malaise, anorexia, fever, and bilateral swelling and tenderness in the groin
clusters of sensitive vesicles on the genitalia, perineum, and buttocks
urethritis, painful urination
Recurrent bouts usually less severe
triggered by menstruation, stress, and concurrent bacterial infection
52. Herpes of the Newborn HSV-1 and HSV-2
Potentially fatal in the neonate and fetus
Infant contaminated by mother before or during birth
hand transmission by mother to infant
Infection of mouth, skin, eyes, CNS
Preventative screening of pregnant women
delivery by C-section if outbreak at the time of birth
53. Diagnosis, Treatment, and Control Vesicles and exudate are typical diagnostic symptoms
scrapings from base of lesions showing giant cells
culture and specific tests for diagnosing severe or disseminated HSV
54. Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV) HHV-3
chickenpox & shingles
transmitted by respiratory droplets & contact
primary infection
Chickenpox
55. Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV) virus enters neurons & remains latent
later reactivation of the virus results in shingles
vesicles localized to distinctive areas
dermatomes
treatment
acyclovir, famciclovir, interferon
live attenuated vaccine
Always effective?!
56. Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) HHV-4
infects lymphoid tissue & salivary glands
transmission
direct oral contact & contamination with saliva
by mid-life 90-95% of all people are infected
causes mononucleosis
sore throat, high fever, cervical lymphadenopathy
Complications include:
heart defects
facial paralysis
rupture of the spleen
jaundice (hepatitis)
57. Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) 30-50 day incubation
most cases asymptomatic
Burkitt’s lymphoma
associated with chronic co-infections with malaria
nasopharyngeal carcinoma in Chinese & African men
58. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) HHV-5
produce giant cells with nuclear & cytoplasmic inclusions
transmitted in saliva, respiratory mucus, milk, urine, semen, cervical secretions & feces
commonly latent in various tissues
most infections are asymptomatic
3 groups develop a more virulent form of disease
fetuses, newborns, immunodeficient adults
59. CMV perinatal CMV infection
mostly asymptomatic or a mononucleosis-like syndrome
newborns
may exhibit enlarged liver & spleen, jaundice, capillary bleeding, microcephaly, & ocular inflammation
may be fatal
transplant patients
pneumonitis, hepatitis, myocarditis, meningoencephalitis
Treatment
ganciclovir, valvcyclovir
60. Human Herpes Virus 6 HHV-6
T-lymphotropic virus
transmitted by close contact
very common
causes roseola
An acute febrile disease in babies 2-12 months
can cause encephalitis, cancer
61. Human Herpes Virus 6 begins with fever, followed by a faint maculopapular rash
usually self-limited
adults may get mono-like symptoms, lymphadenopathy, hepatitis
over 70% of MS patients show signs of infection
62. Diseases of the Skin Caused by Herpesviruses
63. Papillomavirus papilloma
benign, squamous epithelial growth, wart or verruca
caused by 100 different strains of HPV
common seed warts
Fingers
plantar warts
soles of feet
genital warts
prevalent STD
transmissible through direct contact or contaminated fomites
Incubation
2 weeks – more than a year
64. Genital Warts most common STD in US
over 6 M new cases each year
30 M carriers of one of the 5 types of HPV associated with genital warts
strong association with cervical & penile cancer
Treatment
cauterization, freezing, laser surgery, immunotherapy
66. Hepadnaviruses enveloped DNA viruses
never grown in tissue culture
unusual genome containing both double & single stranded DNA
67. The Viral Agents of Hepatitis Hepatitis
inflammatory disease of liver cells
may result from several viruses (RNA)
Interferes with liver’s excretion of bile pigments
bilirubin accumulates in blood and tissues causing jaundice
3 principal viruses involved in hepatitis:
hepatitis B
hepatitis A
hepatitis C
68. Hepatitis B Virus 107 virions/mL blood
minute amounts of blood can transmit infection
sexually transmitted
high incidence among homosexuals & drug addicts
can become a chronic infection
69. Pathogenesis of Hepatitis B Virus Enters through break in skin or mucous membrane or by injection into bloodstream
Reaches liver cells
multiplies and releases viruses into blood
average 7 week incubation
continuously seeds blood with viruses
increases risk of liver cancer
May develop liver disease with necrosis and cirrhosis
Some experience malaise, fever, chills, anorexia, abdominal discomfort and diarrhea
70. Parvoviruses nonenveloped icosahedral, ssDNA
small diameter & genome size
B19
cause of fifth disease
erythema infectiosum rash of childhood
Child may have fever & rash on cheeks
Severe fatal anemia can result if pregnant woman transmits virus to fetus
71. Pathogenic RNA Viruses Naked, positive ssRNA
Enveloped, positive ssRNA
Enveloped, positive ssRNA with Reverse transcriptase
Enveloped, unsegmented, negative ssRNA
Enveloped, segmented, negative ssRNA
Naked, segmente dsRNA
72. Human Rhinovirus (HRV) More than 110 serotypes (strains) associated with the common cold
Sensitive to acidic environments
optimum temperature is 33oC
Unique molecular surface makes development of a vaccine unlikely
Endemic with many strains circulating in the population at one time
acquired from contaminated hands and fomites
73. Diseases of the Enteroviruses Coxsackie A viruses
Infection occurs via the fecal-oral route
Produce lesion and fever
Herpangina
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease
74. Poliovirus and Poliomyelitis naked capsid
can survive stomach acids when ingested
Poliomyelitis (polio)
acute enteroviral infection of the spinal cord
can cause neuromuscular paralysis
Worldwide vaccination programs have reduced the number of cases
eradication is expected
75. Hepatitis A Virus and Infectious Hepatitis Not carried chronically
principal reservoirs are asymptomatic, short-term carriers or people with clinical disease
Fecal-oral transmission
Most infections subclinical or vague, flu-like symptoms occur
No specific treatment once the symptoms begin
Inactivated viral vaccine
Pooled immune serum globulin for those entering into endemic areas
76. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) belongs to the Flaviviridae family
transmitted by blood
Few symptoms are associated with primary infection
Most cases develop a symptomless chronic infection, involving cirrhosis and other complications
HCV damage is the primary reason for liver transplants in the United States
Damage is accelerated by alcoholism and drug use Hepatitis C Virus
77. Caliciviruses “Cruise ship virus”
Norwalk agent best known
believed to cause 1/3rd of all viral gastroenteritis cases
Transmitted by fecal-oral route
Infection in all ages at any time of year
Acute onset, nausea, vomiting, cramps, diarrhea, chills
Rapid and complete recovery
78. Rubella Caused by Rubivirus, a Togavirus
ssRNA with a loose envelope
German measles
Most cases reported are adolescents and young adults
Transmitted through contact with respiratory secretions
79. Rubella Two clinical forms:
Postnatal rubella
generally mild
malaise, fever, sore throat, lymphadenopathy, rash
lasting about 3 days
Congenital rubella
infection during 1st trimester most likely to induce miscarriage or multiple defects
Diagnosis based on serological testing
No specific treatment available
Attenuated viral vaccine MMR
80. Coronavirus common in domesticated animals
3 types of human coronaviruses have been characterized:
HCV
causes a cold
an enteric virus
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
81. SARS Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-Associated Coronavirus
Newly emerging disease – 2002
Transmitted through droplet or direct contact
Fever, body aches, and malaise
severe cases can result in respiratory distress and death
Diagnosis relies on exclusion of other likely agents
10% cases fatal
Treatment is supportive
82. Retroviruses enveloped, ssRNA viruses
encode reverse transcriptase enzyme which makes a DNA copy of their RNA genome
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
cause of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
HIV-1 & HIV-2
83. Retroviruses HIV normally infects the immune system cells, including T lymphocytes (CD4+ T cells)
Incapacitation of T lymphocytes allows opportunistic pathogens to infect the body
HIV also infects and paralyzes B lymphocytes
84. Epidemiology of HIV Infections Transmission
occurs by direct and specific routes
mainly through sexual intercourse and transfer of blood or blood products
babies can be infected before or during birth, and from breast feeding
HIV does not survive long outside of the body
85. Facts…. First recognized in 1981
“Patient 0”
6th most common cause of death among people aged 25-44 years in the U.S.
Men account for 70% of new infections
IV drug abusers can be HIV carriers
significant factor in spread to heterosexual population
In 2006, the number of infected individuals worldwide is estimated to be 45 million
~1 million in the U.S.
86. Risk Categories homosexual or bisexual males – 45%
intravenous drug users – 30%
heterosexual partners of HIV carriers – 11%
blood transfusions & blood products – since testing, no longer a serious risk
inapparent or unknown risk – 9% - (due to denial, death, unavailability)
congenital or neonatal – can be reduced with antiviral drugs
87. Pathogenesis and Virulence Factors of HIV Enters through mucous membrane or skin
travels to dendritic phagocytes beneath the epithelium
multiplies and is shed
Virus taken up and amplified by macrophages in the skin, lymph organs, bone marrow, and blood
HIV attaches to CD4 and coreceptor
HIV fuses with cell membrane
Reverse transcriptase makes a DNA copy of RNA
Viral DNA is integrated into host chromosome (provirus)
Can produce a lytic infection or remain latent
89. Effects of HIV infection Primary effects
extreme leukopenia
lymphocytes in particular
formation of giant T cells and other syncytia
allows the virus to spread directly from cell to cell
Infected macrophages release the virus in central nervous system
toxic effect, inflammation
Secondary effects
Destruction on CD4 lymphocytes
allows for opportunistic infections and malignancies
90. Signs and Symptoms of HIV Infections and AIDS Initial infection
mononucleosis-like symptoms that soon disappear
Asymptomatic phase 2-15 years (avg. 10)
Antibodies are detectable 8-16 weeks after infection
When T4 cell levels fall below 200/mL AIDS symptoms appear
91. Diagnosis of HIV Infection Testing based on detection of antibodies specific to the virus in serum or other fluids
Initial screening
ELISA
rapid results but may result in false positives
Follow up with Western blot analysis to rule out false positives
False negatives can also occur
persons who may have been exposed should be tested a second time 3-6 months later
92. Diagnosis of AIDS Made when a person meets the criteria:
Positive for the virus, and
They fulfill one of the additional criteria:
They have a CD4 count of fewer than 200 cells/ml of blood
Their CD4 cells account for fewer than 14% of all lymphocytes
They experience one or more of a CDC-provided list of AIDS-defining illnesses
93. Azidotheymidine (AZT)
first drug used for treatment
interferes with reverse transcriptase activity
HIV can become resistant to some antivirals
requires a cocktail of drugs called highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
HAART reduces the risk of HIV transmission and can extend life of patients by about 8 years
A vaccine has not yet been developed
HIV continually mutates and recombines
makes vaccine development difficult HIV Treatment
94. Paramyxoviruses enveloped ssRNA
Paramyxoviruses
(parainfluenza, mumps virus)
Morbillivirus
(measles virus)
Pnuemonovirus
(respiratory syncytia virus)
respiratory transmission
virus causes infected cells to fuse with neighboring cells
syncytium or multinucleated giant cells form
95. Measles Morbillivirus
“red measles” & “rubeola”
very contagious
transmitted by respiratory aerosols
humans the only reservoir
sore throat, dry cough, headache, conjunctivitis, lymphadenitis, fever, Koplik spots
oral lesions
Rash
96. Measles most serious complication is subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE)
progressive neurological degeneration of the cerebral cortex, white matter & brain stem
1 case in a million infections
involves a defective virus spreading through the brain by cell fusion & destroys cells
leads to coma & death in months or years
attenuated viral vaccine MMR
97. Parainfluenza widespread as influenza
more benign
respiratory transmission
seen mostly in children
minor cold, bronchitis, bronchopneumonia, croup
no specific treatment available
98. Mumps epidemic parotitis
self-limited, associated with painful swelling of parotid salivary glands
humans are the only reservoir
incubation 2-3 weeks fever, muscle pain & malaise, classic swelling of both cheeks
in 20-30% of infected males, epididymis & testes become infected
sterilization is rare
live attenuated vaccine MMR
99. RSV also called Pneumonvirus
infects upper respiratory tract
produces giant multinucleate cells
most prevalent cause of respiratory infection in children 6 months or younger
epithelia of nose & eye portal of entry
rhinitis, wheezing, otitis, croup
100. Rabies Rhabdovirus family
bullet-shaped virions
enveloped
slow, progressive zoonotic disease
Highest mortality rate of any human disease
101. Rabies virus enters through bite, grows at trauma site for a week
enters nerve endings & advances toward the ganglia, spinal cord & brain
dumb form of rabies
paralyzed, stuporous
furious form of rabies
agitation, disorientation, seizures, twitching, hydrophobia
102. Rabies often diagnosed at autopsy
intracellular inclusions (Negri bodies) in nervous tissue
treatment
passive & active postexposure immunization
Days 1, 3, 7, 14, 28, 60
103. Influenza ssRNA
Belongs to the Orthomyxoviridae family
3 distinct influenza virus types: A, B, C
Virus attaches to, and multiplies in, the cells of the respiratory tract
finished viruses are assembled and budded off
104. Influenza It contains two types of spikes
Hemagglutin (H)
helps the virion attach and penetrate host cells
Neuraminidase (N)
helps release virions from the host cell after replication and assembly
105. Influenza Type A acute, highly contagious respiratory illness
causes rapid shedding of cells, stripping the respiratory epithelium, severe inflammation
fever, headache, myalgia, pharyngeal pain, shortness of breath, coughing
annual trivalent vaccine
New flu strain evolves every year
requires development of a new vaccine
106. Influenza Type B
strikes every year
less common than type A
Type C
causes a mild respiratory illness
not epidemic
107. Influenza Complications such as pneumonia or secondary infections occur in:
Infants
Elderly
Immunocompromised people
Guillain-Barré syndrome
occurs when the body damages its own peripheral nerve cells
Reye syndrome
often occurs in children who take aspirin to treat pain and fever
108. Arboviruses viruses that spread by arthropod vectors
mosquitoes, ticks, flies, & gnats
400 viruses
109. The Influence of the Vector Vectors and viruses tend to be clustered in the tropics and subtropics
many temperate zones have periodic epidemics
life cycles are closely tied to the ecology of the vectors
peak incidence when the arthropod is actively feeding and reproducing
Humans can serve as dead-end, accidental hosts or they can be a maintenance reservoir
Controlling the vector controls the disease
110. Characteristics of Arbovirus Infections Viral encephalitis
brain, meninges, and spinal cord are involved
convulsions, tremor, paralysis, loss of coordination, memory deficits, changes in speech and personality, coma
survivors may experience permanent brain damage
Treatment is supportive
111. N.A.Viruses Colorado tick fever (CTF)
most common tick-borne viral fever in U.S.
Rocky Mountain states
Western equine encephalitis (WEE)
western U.S. and Canada
extremely dangerous to infants and small children
Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE)
eastern U.S. and Canada
112. N.A. Viruses California encephalitis; 2 different strains:
California strain
western states
little human impact
LaCrosse strain
eastern U.S. and Canada
prevalent cause of viral encephalitis
St. Louis encephalitis (SLE)
most common of all in America
epidemics in midwestern and southern states
inapparent infections are very common
113. N.A. Viruses West Nile encephalitis
1999
2000
2001
114. Hemorrhagic Fevers Yellow fever
eliminated in U.S.
Two patterns of transmission:
urban cycle
humans and mosquitoes
sylvan cycle
forest monkeys and mosquitoes
South America
Acute fever, headache, muscle pain
may progress to oral hemorrhage, nosebleed, vomiting, jaundice, and liver and kidney damage
significant mortality rate
115. Hemorrhagic Fevers Dengue fever
flavivirus carried by Aedes mosquito
not in U.S.
usually mild infection
dengue hemorrhagic shock syndrome, breakbone fever
extreme muscle and joint pain
can be fatal
116. Unconventional
117. Unconventional Viruslike Agents cause spongioform encephalopathies
transmissable, fatal, chronic infections of the nervous system
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
New variant CJD
Kuru
caused by prions
infectious proteins
119. Prions proteinaceous infectious particles
misfolded proteins
contain no nucleic acid
Result in amyloid plaques
Extremely resistant to usual sterilization techniques
Cause transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) in humans and animals
Neurodegenerative diseases with long incubation periods
120. Variant CJD became apparent in the late 1990’s
after eating meat from cattle afflicted with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)
Difficult to diagnose
requires examination of biopsied brain or nervous tissue
Prevention relies on avoidance of contaminated tissue
Treatment focuses on easing symptoms
Prions