1 / 33

Viremia

Viremia. Presence of viruses in the blood stream – biphasic Primary (prodromal phase of infection) Secondary replication in target organs. Cell free viremia. Free virus particles in plasma Accessible to antibodies and immune cells Parvoviruses Enteroviruses Togaviruses Flaviviruses.

Télécharger la présentation

Viremia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Viremia Presence of viruses in the blood stream – biphasic • Primary (prodromal phase of infection) • Secondary replication in target organs

  2. Cell free viremia • Free virus particles in plasma • Accessible to antibodies and immune cells • Parvoviruses • Enteroviruses • Togaviruses • Flaviviruses

  3. Cell associatedviremia • Virus ishidden in bloodcells • Protectedagainstantibodies • Slow virus clearing • Monocytes • Herpesviruses • Retroviruses • Distemper

  4. Lymphocytes • Marek´s disease virus • EB virus • HIV • Erythrocytes • Bluetongue virus (erythroblasts) • Rift Valley fever virus • African swine fever virus • Neutrophils • Short half-life • Anti-microbial mechanisms • May contain phagocyted viruses

  5. Monocytes - macrophages • Prevent access of viruses in the blood and tissues by ingestion of viruses • Antigen presenting cells • Virus replications in macrophages = Trojan horse mechanism • Virulence factor

  6. Virusesreplicating in macrophages • Retroviruses • Circoviruses • Flaviviruses • Coronaviruses • Arenaviruses • Togaviruses • Reoviruses

  7. Samples • Serum samples • Whole blood (EDTA, heparin…) • Intermittent virus shedding

  8. Respiratorytract • Primaryreplication • Tonsil (Aujeszky) • Epithelialcells (Influenza virus) • Alveolarmacrophages (PRRS) • Secondaryreplication • Epithelialcells • Alveolarmacrophages

  9. Respiratorytract - samples • Nasal swabs (samples from upper resp. tract are often sufficient) • Conjunctival swabs • Serum (virus + antibodies) • Transport medium • Rapid transport

  10. Enterictract • Primaryreplication • Tonsil (enteroviruses) • Enterocytes (parvoviruses, coronaviruses) • Secondaryreplication • Matureenterocytes • Usuallyshort term shedding • Somevirusesreplicate in the ET withoutcausingdisease(enteroviruses, FeCOv)

  11. Enterictract - samples • Rectal swabs • Feces

  12. Genitaltract • Transplacental infection • Cell associated viremia • Endothelial tropism • Infertility (porcine enteroviruses, BVDv) • Abortion (EHV-1, EVA, PRRS, PPV, CHV)

  13. Genitaltract - samples • Aborted fetuses (EHV-1, EVA, PPV, PRRS, BVDv) • Placenta (EHV-1) • Serum (virus or antibodies)

  14. Infectionof skin • Protection of skin surface • Keratinisation • Low pH • Permanent renewing • Infection through skin • abrasions, wounds • microtraumatisation • blood sucking insect • Langerhans cells (epidermis) • Lymphatic system, nerve endings

  15. Primary skin infections • Papillomaviruses • Ovine Poxviruses • Vesicular swine disease

  16. Secondary skin infections • generalised infections, hematogenous spread (poxviruses, FMDV, distemper…) • nerves (herpes simplex, herpes zooster) • Marek´s disease virus –virus dissemination by infected keratinised cells

  17. Passive role of skin in virus infections • Entry for viruses transmitted by blood sucking insect • Equine infectious anemia • Myxoma virus • African swine fever virus • Equine encephalitis • Ski lesions due to immunopathologic reactions • PDNS (porcine circovirus)

  18. Skin infection - samples • Tissue for histology (papillomaviruses) • Vesicles, vesicular fluid (FMDv) • Serum samples

  19. CNS infections • Crossing hematoencephal barrier • By neuronal axons • Infection of endothelial cells • Through capillaries • Infected leukocytes (rare)

  20. Somevirusescausingencephalitis • Rabies • Distemper (old dog encephalitis) • Tick borne encepalitis • Herpesviral encephalitis • EHV-1 • Aujeszky disease virus • Maedi-Visna • Teschoviruses • Borna virus disease

  21. CNS infections - samples • Serum (antibodies) • Cerebrospinal fluid (antibodies or virus) Occasional samples • Saliva (rabies) • Section samples are usually necessary

  22. Eyeinfection • Conjunctiva • Distemper, herpesviruses, EVA • Virus replication in the eye • EHV-1, EHV-2 • Immunocomplex • CAV-1, La piedad, EIA Samples: swabs, serum

  23. When to takesamples? NK cell killing Viremia

  24. When to takesamples? IgG IgM Viremia

  25. Diagnostic virology How do we diagnose viral diseases? This can be achieved : Directly – detecting the virus or viral products (proteins, nucleic acids) Indirectly – detecting an immunological response to the virus (antibodies)

  26. Directmethods • Virus isolation • Virus visualisation (EM) • Direct antigen detection • DNA/RNA detection

  27. Indirectmethods • Antibody detection (serology) • Lymphocyte activation • Cytokine release

  28. Virus isolation • Virus has to remain alive • Transport medium • Rapid transport • Keep the sample at 4oC or freeze it at low temperature (at least -50oC)

  29. Virus visualisation - EM • Suitable for viruses with characteristic morphological features • Highly concentrated virus (rota, corona, astroviruses…)

  30. Direct antigen detection

  31. DNA/RNA detection

  32. Antibodydetection

More Related