1 / 24

Hepatitis B Virus

Hepatitis B Virus. INTRODUCTION. High incidence rate Do not grow in the laboratory Discovered in 1964. The Hepatitis Viruses. Viral Hepatitis - Overview. PROPERTIES. Classification Hepadnaviridae Infect only human Morphology Icosahedral (Dane + Filaments & Sphere particles) Enveloped

mason
Télécharger la présentation

Hepatitis B Virus

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. Hepatitis B Virus

  2. INTRODUCTION • High incidence rate • Do not grow in the laboratory • Discovered in 1964

  3. The Hepatitis Viruses

  4. Viral Hepatitis - Overview

  5. PROPERTIES Classification • Hepadnaviridae • Infect only human Morphology • Icosahedral (Dane + Filaments & Sphere particles) • Enveloped *Dane particle:DNA + Polymerase + HBcAg + HBeAg) Filaments + Spheres particles:HBsAg

  6. Hepatitis B Virus

  7. Hepatitis B virus particles

  8. ANTIGENS & ANTIBODIES HBsAg  HBeAg  Anti-HBcAnti-HBeAnti-HBs Symptoms, InfectionLittle infection / Complete recovery Start of recovery (Convalescence)

  9. Serological markers of hepatitis B infection

  10. Postnatal infection: • Acute hepatitis:Rash  Jaundice  - 90% recovery - 10 % chronic or death • Chronic antigenaemia: - Dealy Anti-HBe - No Anti-HBs

  11. Chronic aggressive (Active) hepatitis:- No Anti-HBe - No Anti-HBs • Hepatocellular carcinoma: Integration of viral genome in the DNA of hepatocytes  Death

  12. Perinatal infections • Infected mother  Baby: - Uterus - During delivery - Close contact * Cirrhosis or liver cancer  Death

  13. EPIDEMIOLOGY Mode of transmission: • Blood • Body fluid (Cervical secretion, semen, milk) • High – risk group

  14. Concentration of Hepatitis B Virus in Various Body Fluids Low/Not High Moderate Detectable blood semen urine serum vaginal fluid feces wound exudates saliva sweat tears Breast milk

  15. Acute Viral Hepatitis Died of Hepatoma

  16. IMMUNE RESPONSE • Anti-HBs :(Complete recovery) • Cytotoxic T cells: (Much of liver damage is due to it)

  17. Acute Hepatitis B Virus Infection with Recovery Typical Serologic Course Symptoms anti-HBe HBeAg Total anti-HBc Titer anti-HBs IgM anti-HBc HBsAg 0 4 8 12 16 24 28 32 52 100 20 36 Weeks after Exposure

  18. Progression to Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection Typical Serologic Course Acute (6 months) Chronic (Years) HBeAg anti-HBe HBsAg Total anti-HBc Titer IgM anti-HBc Years 0 4 8 16 20 24 28 36 12 32 52 Weeks after Exposure

  19. LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS • Non-specific tests:Test for liver enzymes • Specific tests: - Serology: . ELISA: HBsAg, HBeAg, Anti-HBc, Anti-HBeAg, Anti-HBsAg

  20. HBsAg -ve +ve No disease Confirmation test -ve +ve Profile tests: . Anti-HBc (IgG,IgM.Total) . HBeAg . Anti-HBe . Anti-HBs

  21. . Reverse passive hemagglutination . Latex test • EM • DNA polymerase

  22. Control • Specific treatment: - IFN-Alpha for 6 months (For HBeAg +ve, acute case, no need for treatment) * Do not work in infancy infection - DNA polymerase inhibitors Immunization • Recombinant vaccine (HBsAg) • IgG

  23. Current Treatment Options for HBV • Interferon alpha 2b (Intron A): General • Lamivudine (Epivir HBV): RT inhibitor • Hepsera (Adefovir dipivoxil): RT inhibitor

More Related