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Viral Infections

Viral Infections. Terry Kotrla, MS, MT(ASCP)BB. Herpes Virus Group. Produce a variety of diseases. May result in sub-clinical infections May be reactivated under appropriate conditions. Herpes Virus Group. We will discuss the following: Epstein-Barr virus Cytomegalovirus

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Viral Infections

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  1. Viral Infections Terry Kotrla, MS, MT(ASCP)BB

  2. Herpes Virus Group • Produce a variety of diseases. • May result in sub-clinical infections • May be reactivated under appropriate conditions.

  3. Herpes Virus Group • We will discuss the following: • Epstein-Barr virus • Cytomegalovirus • Herpes simplex virus type I and II • Varicella-zoster virus

  4. Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) • Spread through oral transmission • Cause of Infectious Mononucleosis. • Other Diseases include: • African or Burkitt’s lymphoma • Nasopharyngeal carcinoma • B cell lymphoma

  5. Epstein-Barr virus • African or Burkitt’s Lymphoma • malignant B-cell neoplasm • presents as a rapidly growing tumour of the jaw, face or eye • grows very quickly, and without treatment most children die within a few months • Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been strongly implicated

  6. African or Burkitt’s Lymphoma • Although BL is a very rapidly growing tumour it responds well to treatment. • Three pictures: before treatment, 3 days and 6 days after treatment

  7. Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma • Endemic in South China, Africa, Arctic Eskimos • This is a malignant tumour of the squamous epithelium of the nasopharynx. • 100% contain EBV DNA • Rates are less than 1 per 100,000 in most populations • Nasopharyngeal carcinomas are found in association with reactivation of latent Epstein-Barr Virus.  • The exact mechanisms of association are unknown

  8. B-Cell Lymphoma • In most individuals infected with EBV, the virus is present in the B-cells, which are normally controlled by T-lymphocytes • When T-cell deficiency exists, one clone of EBV-infected B-lymphocytes escapes immune surveillance to become autonomously proliferating. • EBV induced B cell lymphomas are most prevalent in immunocompromised patients.

  9. Oral Hairy Cell Leukoplakia • Viral infection of the oral cavity. • Indicator of HIV infection as well as of a person's lessening or weakening immunity

  10. Infectious Mononucleosis • 4 to 7 week incubation • Acute self-limiting infection of the RE system • Enlarged lymph nodes in the neck. • Sore throat, fever, rash • Malaise, lethargy, extreme tiredness • Liver and spleen involvement and enlargement • Hematology: High WBC, over 20% atypical reactive lymphocytes also known as Downey cells.

  11. Infectious Mononucleosis • Downey cells may be present

  12. Heterophile Antigens/Antibodies • Heterophile antigens are a group of similar antigens found in unrelated animals, IE, man, sheep, horse, dog cat, mouse. • Heterophile antibodies produced against heterophile antigens of one species will cross react with others.

  13. Heterophile Antigens/Antibodies • Forssman antigen is an example of a heterophile antigen and is found on the RBCs of many species (guinea pig, dog, cat, mouse, sheep, fowl, horse) • Forssman antibodies formed against Forssman antigens will agglutinate sheep RBCs.

  14. Paul Bunnell Test • The original Paul-Bunnell test was a simple titration of sheep cell agglutinins but this procedure was subsequently modified in order to distinguish between sheep cell agglutinins formed in IM and the Forssman-type antibodies found in normal serum, serum sickness and in certain other conditions. • Tissues rich in Forssman antigen (guinea pig kidney) absorb Forssman antibodies but do not affect the heterophil antibodies in IM. • Heterophil antibodies are absorbed by beef cells, • Forssman hapten is a glycolipid usually associated with a protein, the determinant being largely carbohydrate and therefore heat stable.

  15. Davidsohn Differential • The principle behind the Paul-Bunnell-Davidsohn test is that the two types of sheep agglutinins are distinguished by titrating them before and after absorption with guinea pig kidney and ox cells. • Patients serum containing antibodies due to IM is added to guinea pig kidney cells. These antibodies are not absorbed by the kidney cells. These antibodies then react with Beef (Ox) red blood cells which causes agglutination and is a positive test for IM. • Patients serum containing Forssman antibodies are added to guinea pig kidney cells. Antibodies are absorbed by the kidney cells. These antibodies are then allowed to react with Beef red blood cells which does not cause agglutination. This is a positive test for Forssman antigens.

  16. Davidsohn Differential* To be considered absorbed there must be greater than a three tube difference between the presumptive titer and the differential titer.

  17. Advantages When properly performed, this test is specific for Infectious Mononucleosis and false-positive results are rare. Disadvantages Davidsohn Differential test is very time consuming and burdensome. Davidsohn Differential

  18. Infectious Mono Slide Tests • It was discovered that horse RBCs possess antigens which react with the antibody associated with IM. • Patient serum mixed with horse RBCs, agglutination is positive. • Latex agglutination • Not diagnostic, must look at total clinical picture.

  19. EBV Specific Antibodies • EBV specific antibodies may be measured. • Pattern of appearance of EBV antigens. • Most valuable is IgM antibody to viral capsid antigen (VCA), indicates a current infection (best marker), lasts about 12 weeks. • Can also detect anti-early antigen (EA) (recent infection) and anti EB nuclear antigen (EBNA) (older infection). • ELISA and IFA most commonly used

  20. Cytomegalovirus • Transmission occurs from person to person. • Close intimate contact • Sexual contact • Pernatally • Breast milk • Organ transplant • Blood transfusion

  21. CMV Clinical course • Symptoms resemble IM • In babies may cause life threatening illness • Patients with deficient immune systems • AIDS patients • Transplant patients

  22. CMV Immunologic response • Test for CMV antibody using paired serum samples • IgM antibodies produced against early and intermediate-early (IE) CMV antigens, last for 3 to 4 months. • IgG appear shortly after and peak at 2 to 3 months.

  23. CMV Laboratory Diagnosis • Range from culture and cytologic techniques to DNA probes, PCR and serologic techniques. • Detection of antibodies indicator of recent or active infection. • Viral cultures

  24. Microscopic examination of biopsy specimens

  25. CMV Lab Diagnosis • Detection of CMV antigen in cells using IFA • ELISA to detect antibody to CMV • Other • fluorescence assays, • indirect hemagglutination, and • latex agglutination • False positives can occur due to RA and Epstein-Barr antibodies

  26. Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) • Most exposed in childhood • Possesses viral latency – hibernation • Two types: HSV-1 and HSV-2

  27. HSV-1 • Transmitted from person to person by saliva or direct contact. • Cold sores around the mouth most common. • Reactivation - may have several episodes of cold sores during a lifetime

  28. HSV-1 • Symptoms • tingling • Numbness • Itching • Blister forms, breaks, crusts over • Reactivation usually caused by stress. • Conjunctivitis, keratitis and herpetic whitlow may occur.

  29. HSV-2 • Results in Herpes genitalis - lesions BELOW the waist. • Transmitted intimate sexual contact or perinatally. • Symptoms • Pain • Tenderness • Itch • Fever • Headache • Lymphadenopathy • Malaise

  30. HSV-2 • Blisters appear • Males – penis • Females – vagina and cervix • Both – thighs buttocks • Painful, lasts 1-3 weeks • Virus lies dormant in nearby nerves and reactivated.

  31. HSV – 2 • Can be fatal in infants • Woman with active infection needs C-section. • Infants with localized infections have 70% mortality rate • Disseminated neonatal herpes most lethal form.

  32. Neonatal Herpes

  33. Laboratory Testing • Recovery of virus from culture • Direct examination of cells from lesion using IF or immunoperoxidase stain • DNA probes • ELISA • Latex agglutination • RIA • Indirect IF • Serology NOT very useful

  34. Varicella-Zoster Virus • Two different manifestations of the same virus. • Varicella is the primary infection, causes chicken pox • Herpes Zoster causes shingles and is due to reactivation of the latent virus

  35. Varicella • Fever and vesicular exanthema • Small, itchy blisters surrounded by inflamed skin. • Begins as one or two lesions and spreads. • Number of lesions vary greatly. • Blister dries out and forms a scab.

  36. Chicken Pox

  37. Chicken Pox • Secondary complications due to infection most common. • May also result in pneumonia, encephalitis and hepatitis. • Very serious for immunocompromised children • Vaccine now available

  38. Shingles • Chicken pox – virus goes latent • Reactivated later in life • Weakened immune system • Aging • Other factors

  39. Shingles • The typical rash of shingles begins as redness(erythema) followed by the appearance of blisters. • Eruptions follow the path of an infected nerve. • The trunk is the area affected in 50% to 60% of cases. • Skin may be extremely sensitive to touch

  40. Shingles

  41. Shingles

  42. Shingles

  43. Laboratory Testing • Important to distinguish VZV from other infections • PCR • Direct Fluorescent Antibody staining • Viral culture • IgG and IgM antibody test by ELISA

  44. Rubella Virus • RNA virus with 3 major structural proteins, E1, E2, and C. • Incubation 2- 3 weeks • Highly contagious, spread through respiratory tract. • Causes German measles • Rubella vaccine has resulted in 99% decline in infections.

  45. Rubella

  46. Congenital rubella • Congenital Rubella Syndrom most serious. • Fetus infected during first trimester. • result in miscarriage or stillbirth, • live-born serious birth defects or dying. • 20% of the children born after such an infection suffer the severe congenital abnormalities • 10-20% of these children die within the first year of life. • Rubella vaccine contraindicated during pregnancy.

  47. Rubella Syndrome

  48. Lab testing • IgG and IgM antibodies may form at same time • IgM antibodies persist for 4 to 5 weeks, IgG for life. • Performed primarily for diagnosis of acquired infections and to determine immune status of pregnant patients. • Some tests detect IgG antibodies, other IgM.

  49. Laboratory Testing - Rubella • Methods include: • hemagglutination inhibition, • passive hemagglutination, • neutralization, • hemolysis in gel, • complement fixation, • fluorescence immunoassay, • RIA, • ELISA and • latex agglutination.

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