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VIRAL DISEASES AND EPIDEMIOLOGY. Claude MUVUNYI M.D., Ph.D. Viral diseases. The relative susceptibility of a person and the severity of the disease depend on factors such as: the nature of exposure; the immune status, age , and general health of the person; the viral dose and
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VIRAL DISEASES AND EPIDEMIOLOGY Claude MUVUNYI M.D., Ph.D.
Viral diseases • The relative susceptibility of a person and the severity of the disease depend on factors such as: • the nature of exposure; • the immune status, • age, and general health of the person; • the viral dose and • the genetics of the virus and the host
Therefore: • new variant or viral strain would cause a viral outbreak (new influenza virus strain). • acute A hepatitis is more symptomatic in adulthood than in childhood. • Infantsare especially prone to more serious presentation of Paramyxovirusrespiratory infections and gastroenteritis. • However, children generally do not mount as severe an immunopathologicalresponse as adults, and some infections (Varicella caused by VZV a Herpesvirus) are more benign in children. • The elderly are especially susceptible to new viral infections and reactivation of latent viruses.
Stages of the viral disease • The initial period before the characteristic symptoms of a disease is termed the incubation period. • During that period, the virus is replicating but has not reached the target tissue or induced sufficient damage to cause disease. • The incubation period is relatively short if the infection of primary site produces the characteristic symptoms of the disease; e.g., 1-2 days for influenza. • This incubation period is longer for viral systematic infections such as • poliomyelitis ( 5-20 days), • measles (9-12 days), • rubella (17-20 days), • hepatitis (15-40 days for hepatitis A and 50-150 days for hepatitis B), • rabies (30-100 days), • AIDS for Acquired Immunodeficience Syndrome cause by HIVs (1-13 years).
Types of viral infections • Viral infections are usually self-limiting. Sometimes, however, the virus persists for long periods of time in the host. • Long-term virus-host interaction may take several forms: • 1- Chronic infections. • 2- Latent infections. • 3- Inapparent or subclinical infections.
Transmission ways of viruses • Viruses are transmitted • by direct contact, • sexual intercourses, • injection with contamined fluids or blood, • use of contamined injection materials (syringues, catheters), or prosthetic devices, • and the transplantation of noncontrolledcontaminedorgan, • more often by respiratory and oral-fecal routes. • They may also be transmitted by a maternal-neonatal transmission during foetal live or the delivery.
Transmission ways of viruses • Animals can also act as vectors that spread viral infection to other animals and humans. • They can also be reservoir for the virus that maintain and amplify the virus in environment. • Viral infections that are shared by animals or insects and humans are called zoonosis. • Arthropods include mosquitos, ticks can act as vectors for Togavirus, Flavivirus, Bunyavirus and Reovirus. • These viruses are often referred to as arboviruses because they are arthropod borne viruses, such as Yellow fever virus, Dengue viruses, Rift Valley fever virus.
how viruses leave the body • Infectious agents leave body by many ways: • 1° with excreted products from epithelial cell mucous; with measles infection, conjunctival excretions; rhinopharyngeal excretions of flu infection; bronchal excretions of viral pneumonia. • 2° with glandular excretions for mumps and saliva for rabies • 3° with feces containing Enterovirusand other gastrointestinal viral infectious agents such as oral fecal transmitted hepatitis viruses A and E • 4° with fuids of cutaneous viral lesions such as vesicles or pustules that contain infectious agents(VZV). • All these excreted products are potential infectious; they are, also mainly used as specimens for biological diagnosis of viral infections and diseases
Viral infection epidemiological types • We account three epidemiological types: • sporadic, • epidemic, • pandemic
Sporadic • Concern one person or another with any relationship. • It cannot spread in all the population. • Those persons with sporadic infection act as reservoir if the infection may be persitent, latent or chronic: • Example is that HBV chronically people infected form a reservoir of the virus and establish the endemicity of that infection.
Outbreaks or epidemies • often occurs from the introduction of a virus in a new location. • The outbreak comes from a common source (e.g.,food preparation) or a new strain in a immunological naïve population, (new influenza virus strain). • Epidemy concern a wide population during the same time and in a location (e.g., influenza school outbreak)
Pandemic • are world-wide epidemics such as HIV 1 pandemy and Influenza A virus pandemy. • These epidemies spread from one continent to an other and may concern in a short time population of all the world • Pandemies of Influenza virus A have occurred approximately each 10 years as result of the introduction of a new strain .
Current viral infections and diseases • Congenital Viral Infections. • Foetaland neonatal viral infections • Childhood viral infections and diseases • Acute Viral Respiratory Infections. • Viral Infections of the Gastrointestinal Tract. • Viral skin Infections • Viral Infections of the CNS
Main foetal and neonatal viral infections • Rubella virus causes in utero infections • Cytomégaloviruswith in utero and peri natal infections →Those two foetal infections would be transferred through placenta from infected mothers; they are referred main severe congenital infections • Herpès simples 2, with perinatal infections, • Varicella andzoster virus that causein utero and perinatal infections • B 19Parvovirus cause in utero infections. • HIVs can cause in utero and peri-natal infections, • HBV may cause peri-natal infections
Main Childhood viral infections diseases During childhood, viral infections are dominated by exanthemous and other cutaneous manifestations. We can mention: • Measles caused by measles virus, a RNA virus, belonging to genus Morbillivirus of Paramyxoviridaefamily, • Rubella caused by a RNA virus, belonging to genus Rubivirusof Togaviridaefamily, • Varicella which is essential a benign disease with very rare complications in immunodeficienty children. It is caused by Varicella and Zoster virus or VZV ou HHV 3, DNA virus belonging to Varicellovirusgenera of Alphaherpesvirinae sub-family from Herpesviridaefamily. This virus may cause meningitis by immunodeprissive children • Mumps virus is responsible of parotiditis, a childhood benign disease. That’s a RNA virus of Paramyxoviridae family. It can sometimes cause neurologic disorders such as meningitis or meningo- encephalitis.
Respiratorytract viral infections • Those called respiratory virus share an exclusive tropism for respiratory epithelial ciliated cells. We account with: • flu Influenza A and B • Para-influenza1, 2, 3 and 4 • Respiratory syncytial virus or R.S.V • respiratory Adenoviruses • Rhinovirus, • Coronavirus. • Human Metapneumovirus • Each group of virus may cause different respiratory syndroms such as cold, laryngitis, tracheitis, bronchitis, bronchiolitis, pneumonia or flu. • Each clinical syndrome may be characteristict of a specific group of viruses. Such as • cold caused by Rhinovirus, • laryngitisby Parainfluenzavirus, • bronchiolitis by Syncitial respiratory virus • flu by influenza virus. • But also different viruses can cause a same clinical syndrom
Main gastro-intestinal tract viral infections • We deal with hepatitis and gastroenteritis • Hepatitis causative agents may be A, B, C, D and E virus with « new hepatitis virus »GB-A, GB-B, GB-C/VH-G et TTV. • All these viruses belong to different families
Gastroenteritis causative agents • Those viruses are: • Rotavirus • Astrovirus • enteric Adenovirus serotypes 39, 40 • Norwackagent • Coronavirus • All these gastroenteritis associated viruses are not detected at same frequency. • Rotavirusand new enteric Adenovirus are the more frequently detected from newborn gastroenteritis. Others interest childrenand adults are rarely isolated. • A new vaccine is available against Rotavirus
Central nervous system viral infections • These acute clinical syndromes may be: • Aseptic meningitis or AAP for Acute anterior poliomyelitis that is caused by Poliovirus; • human or animal rabies caused by Rabies viruses • Four CNS chronic and degenerative diseases are associated with conventional agents. These diseases include: • Sclerotic sub-acute pan-encephalitis which may be caused by Measles virus • Progressive multiform leucoencephalitis due to J.C. virus a Papovirus • Tropical spastic paralysis (T.S.P) due to human T leukemia virus type1 (HTLV1) an Oncornavirusbelonging to Retroviridayfamily • AIDS dementia associated to Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 or 2, HIV 1 and 2, species of genera Lentivirusand Retroviridaefamily