Term
what characterizes the herpes virus family? |
|
Definition
herpesviruses are *dsDNA, have the potential for *latency, *reactivation (may be asymptomatic - but virus still sheds), and *transformation. |
|
|
Term
what are the 2 types of herpes simplex virus (HSV)? |
|
Definition
HSV-1 and HSV-2. these are closely related and can induce cross-reactive antibodies to each other. |
|
|
Term
which virus are most genital and perirectal herpes outbreaks due to? |
|
Definition
HSV-2. only 10-20% of genital herpes are due to HSV-1 (more typically associated w/oral herpes). |
|
|
Term
what demographics have the highest seroprevalence of HSV-2? |
|
Definition
non-hispanic black women (81% of which have not recieved a dx) |
|
|
Term
how is the first clinical episode of HSV-2 classified? |
|
Definition
*primary infection: first infection ever w/either HSV, disease is more severe than recurrent and no antibody is present when symptoms appear. *non-primary infection: newly acquired HSV infection of either type in a pt previously exposed to the other type, symptoms are usually milder than primary infection and antibody is present when symptoms appear. |
|
|
Term
what characterizes a recurrent HSV symptomatic infection? |
|
Definition
disease is usually more short/mild and antibody is present when symptoms appear (preformed antibody). |
|
|
Term
what characterizes an asymptomatic HSV infection? |
|
Definition
serum antibody is present, but pt has no known hx of clinical outbreaks. |
|
|
Term
what is the general course of HSV infection? |
|
Definition
*primary* incubation of about 5 days, then symptoms - local: pain/itching/dysuria, systemic: malaise, fever, headache, and tender lymph nodes. lesions during this period go from being papules -> vesicles -> pustules -> ulcers -> crusts. then around day 15: healing, and the virus finally stops shedding (total duration - 3 wks). *reactivation* prodrome period: 12-24 hrs of initial nondescript tingling/itching. then some localized symptoms, hard to detect micro-lesions that *still shed, but nothing as severe as the primary infection (total duration 5-10 days). |
|
|
Term
which HSV is more likely to recur? shed asymptomatically? |
|
Definition
HSV-2 is more likely to recur AND shed asymptomatically (when most HSV-2 infections are transmitted, likely b/c microlesions are often undetectable). |
|
|
Term
when do most HSV reactivations occur? |
|
Definition
most reactivations occur in the 1st 3 months after the primary infection |
|
|
Term
how do HSV shedding/reactivation rates compare between the sexes? how many of these shedding episodes are thought to be subclinical? |
|
Definition
HSV infected women are thought to be shedding 20% of the time (can be as high as 80%) and HSV infected men are thought to be shedding 15% of the time (can be as high as 70%). 75% of these shedding episodes are thought to be subclinical (associated w/microscopic lesions). |
|
|
Term
what is the first clinical HSV infection treated with? f/u tx? |
|
Definition
acyclovir, famciclovir, or valacyclovir for the 1st primary infection. f/u tx: episodic tx can decrease the degree of shedding and/or continuous tx will decrease the likelihood of recurrences. |
|
|
Term
how does neonatal herpes occur? |
|
Definition
HSV transmission usually occurs to infants if the mother has either a primary or recurrent infection at birth - though nosocomial/nursing transmissions are also possible. if the mother has a primary infection at birth, the baby has a higher risk of severe disease (b/c mother will have preformed antibodies during recurrent infection). |
|
|
Term
what is the clinical presentation of neonatal herpes? |
|
Definition
lesions on the skin, eyes, and mouth. as long as dissemination doesn't occur, there is a low mortality risk. if dissemination does occur, encephalitis is a serious risk, along w/pneumonitis, hepatitis, cardiovascular involvement, and meningoencephalitis (95% will have neurological sequelae). if untreated, disseminated HSV has a 50% mortality rate. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
clinical dx: insensitive/nonspecific and needs to be confirmed by lab work such as virologic tests/type-specific serologic tests. |
|
|
Term
what is considered the gold standard for virologic testing? |
|
Definition
viral cx: the preferred test for pts w/genital ulcers or other mucocutaneous lesions (however - hard to cx healing lesions/recurrent infections) |
|
|
Term
what virologic test is better for detecting HSV in healing lesions? |
|
Definition
antigen detection (DFA/EIA) |
|
|
Term
how reliable is cytology (tzanck) for diagnosing HSV? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what is the preferred virologic test for detection of HSV in spinal fluid? |
|
Definition
PCR (HSV1 is the leading cause of sporadic encephalitis ) |
|
|
Term
what characterizes the type-specific serologic tests used to dx HSV? |
|
Definition
antibodies will develop in a few weeks and will persist, so presences of HSV-1 and/or 2 antibodies can be detected. HSV-2: assumed genital infection. HSV-1: either oral/genital infection |
|
|
Term
what characterizes the epidemiology of CMV infections? |
|
Definition
CMV (betaherpes virus) has a high seroprevalance. 40-60% in upper socioeconomic groups are seropositive and ~85% in lower socioeconomic groups are seropositive. .5-2.5% of newborns are infected at birth. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
major mode: saliva/genital secretions. other routes: transplacental/birth canal, breast milk, blood transfusion, and organ transplantation. |
|
|
Term
how does CMV affect pts w/normal immunity? |
|
Definition
mostly pts w/normal immunity will become asymptomatic CMV carriers, but a mononucleosis (similar to EBV - but heterophile negative) is possible. |
|
|
Term
how does CMV affect babies of seronegative mothers (fetus is exposed and there is no maternal antibody to protect it)? |
|
Definition
cytomegalic inclusion disease |
|
|
Term
how does CMV affect immunosuppressed/AIDS pts? |
|
Definition
multisite symptomatic disease |
|
|
Term
what does cytomegalic inclusion disease refer to? |
|
Definition
cytomegalic inclusion disease = *symptomatic primary congenital infection*: either in utero (40% change of transmission to fetus) or during birth. 10-15% of infected infants are symptomatic at birth, who then have a 80-90% sequelae rate (brain damage/hearing loss) and a 36% mortality rate. conversely. asymptomatic newborns have a 5-10% sequelae rate (deafness). |
|
|
Term
how is cytomegalic inclusion disease diagnosed? how can in utero/at birth CMV infection be differntiated? |
|
Definition
CMV can be detected in urine w/in the 1st wk of life. if acquired at birth, shedding will start to occur 3-4 wks later and if acquired in utero, shedding will occur immediately after birth. |
|
|
Term
what is the implication of reactivation of CMV in the mother during pregnancy for the infant's health? |
|
Definition
the newborn will be healthy (usually asymptomatic) due to maternal antibody, but they may shed virus for a long period of time |
|
|
Term
what are clinical symptoms of cytomegalic inclusion disease? |
|
Definition
mostly involving the CNS/RES, symptoms consist of hearing loss, vision impairment, mental retardation, hepatosplenomegaly, and jaundice. |
|
|
Term
when is the risk of HSV/CMV transmission highest for a fetus/newborn? |
|
Definition
if the mother is undergoing a primary infection (recurrent infections include protective maternal antibodies) |
|
|
Term
what is the primary concern for CMV in newborns? |
|
Definition
congenital infection (in utero) |
|
|
Term
what is the primary concern for HSV/VZV in newborns? |
|
Definition
neonatal infection (most serious when mother has VZV lesions around time of birth) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
HPV is a naked icosahedral DNA virus which can cause latency, transformation, and reactivation (due to DNA). |
|
|
Term
what are the routes of transmission for HPV? |
|
Definition
through breaks in the skin (infects basal epithelial cells), sexual contact, and via the birth canal |
|
|
Term
what is one of the fasted growing sexually transmitted diseases in the US? |
|
Definition
HPV - w/highest incidence in women of the 20-24 age group |
|
|
Term
what % if cervical CA have HPV DNA detected w/in the tumor? |
|
Definition
99% (50-75% of infections are thought to be via subtypes w/a higher CA risk) |
|
|
Term
do HIV+ pts have a higher prevalence of HPV/pre-CA lesions? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what are the risk factors for genital HPV? |
|
Definition
women: younger age, multiple sex partners, and male partner sexual behavior. men: multiple sex partners and lack of circumscision |
|
|
Term
what is a risk factor for developing cervical CA? |
|
Definition
*persistent HPV infection |
|
|
Term
what does HPV replication depend on? |
|
Definition
epithelial cell differentiation. transmission occurs through breaks in the skin down to the basal epithelial cells, where latency or transformation occurs. shedding is then dependent on differentiation of the epithelial cells (virus shed by differentiated cells) |
|
|
Term
how does release of productive virus present clinically? |
|
Definition
as a wart. infection is often subclinical, which when this is the case - tx is not recommended. |
|
|
Term
can HPV infections self-resolve? |
|
Definition
yes ~70% of HPV-infected pts become HPV DNA negative w/in 1 year and that rises to 90% in 2 yrs. |
|
|
Term
what characterizes a latent HPV infection? |
|
Definition
viral DNA is not integrated and tx will not clear latently infected cells |
|
|
Term
what characterizes a transforming HPV infection? |
|
Definition
viral DNA is integrated, basal cells replace more differentiated epithelial cells and the clinical outcome includes dysplasia/CA. during integration, some HPV early genes are inactivated (*no viral replication), but there is continued expression of HPV E6 (binds p53, targets it for degradation) and E7 (binds and inactivates Rb) genes |
|
|
Term
what are the HPV subtypes associated with genital warts (condylomas)? |
|
Definition
6, 11 (same as laryngeal papillomas) |
|
|
Term
what are the HPV subtypes associated with cervical dysplasia/CA? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what characterizes the cutaneous warts due to HPV? |
|
Definition
these are benign and may spontaneously disappear/be removed. they may recur after removal b/c of latently infected basal cells and are more common in immunosuppressed pts. |
|
|
Term
what characterizes the laryngeal papillomas due to HPV? |
|
Definition
these are due to HPV subtypes 6, 11 (same as genital warts) and are benign tumors growing in the respiratory tract that may cause obstruction and may need to be excised/re-excised. there is juvenile onset (children <5 infected congenitally) and adult onset ( >20 infected either from oral/genital contact or latent from birth) |
|
|
Term
what characterizes the genital warts due to HPV? |
|
Definition
most genital warts are associated with low risk HPV (subtypes: 6, 11) and are seen on the vagina, vulva, penis and around the penis. 70% of these infection clear w/in a yr, 90% clear w/in 2 yrs. however, HPV 16 is the high risk subtype (more likely to persist). recurrence rates after tx: 20-50% |
|
|
Term
what is the purpose of a pap smear? |
|
Definition
screening for evidence of CPE (cytopathic effects) associated w/HPV infection of certain cells. |
|
|
Term
what are the high risk HPV subtypes? |
|
Definition
16, 18 - associated w/the majority of invasive CA. a vaccine is available for these subtypes, however other subtypes can less commonly still cause CA. |
|
|
Term
can HSV-2 and chlamydia trachomatis aid in cervical CA development? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what are other possible outcomes for high risk HPV infected pts besides CA? |
|
Definition
low-grade/high-grade cellular abnormalities. high grade is more likely to eventually progress to CA. |
|
|
Term
what is epidermodysplasia verruciformis? |
|
Definition
a rare defect in cell mediated immunity/NK activity due to HPV (esp subtypes 5,8) usually seen in immunocompromised pts. in pts with epidermodysplasia verruciformis, flat/reddish skin lesions on the trunk and upper extremities appear and exposure to UV light can lead to malignant transformation. |
|
|
Term
what are the 2 HPV vaccines? how are they produced? who are they recommended for? |
|
Definition
gardasil (immunity to HPV subtypes: 6,11,16,18) and cervarix (16, 18). both are made from non-infectious HPV-like particles (not attenuated or killed - more like a subunit vaccine). these are recommended for 11-12 yr old girls w/a catch-up vaccination at 13-26. males 9-26 can also get vaccinated. |
|
|
Term
should women vaccinated against high risk HPV still get pap tests performed? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
*clinical dx of genital warts*, pap test (dx abnormal cells due to infection, cx (not easily available), serology (not reliable) |
|
|