Microbiology 11 - Viral infections in pregnancy Flashcards

1
Q

most common manifestation of congenital rubella

A

SNHL

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2
Q

Classic triad of rubella seen at birth

A

Microcephaly
Cataracts
PDA

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3
Q

When is the most dangerous time for pregnant women to get rubella infection?

A

In the first trimester, >20 weeks the risk of congenital infection is negligible

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4
Q

Symptoms of rubella infection in adults?

A

Fine maculopapular rash
Lymphadenopathy
Prodrome

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5
Q

treatment of rubella

A

no antiviral treatment available

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6
Q

HHV5 - what is it also known as?

A

cytomegalovirus

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7
Q

what is the most common congenital viral infection?

A

CMV

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8
Q

CMV type of virus and mode of transmission?

A

DNA, vertically in utero/delivery/breast feeding or horizontally via saliva

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9
Q

when can you diagnose congenital CMV infection?

A

CMV DNA <3 weeks life

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10
Q

what is the leading cause of SNHL?

A

CMV

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11
Q

CMV - clinical features?

How long does infection last?

A

Usually ASYMPTOMATIC

infection is lifelong, it is transmitted when it is reactivated

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12
Q

what % of those infected with CMV are asymptomatic at birth?

A

90%

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13
Q

Effects of congenital CMV infection on the child?

A

Most are asymptomatic But neonates may have IUGR/jaundice/hepatosplenomegaly/encephalitis/microcephaly BUT

Later, risk of hearing defects + impaired intellectual performance (affects the CNS)

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14
Q

Dx of CMV in neonates?

A

PCR blood/urine/saliva

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15
Q

management of CMV

A

if have significant organ disease –> valganciclovir (PO)/galnciclovir (IV) for 6 months
audiology follow up until 6 months age
Ophthalmology review

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16
Q

acquisition of HSV at what time poses the greatest risk to foetus?

A

near delivery/ <6weeks of EDD (Recommend CS)

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17
Q

when does most HSV transmission to foetus occur?

A

Peripartum

18
Q

Neonatal herpes - signs and symptoms

A

SEM = skin, eye and mouth disease: scarring, active lesions, hyper/hypopigmentation, microphthalmia, chorioretinits

CNS disease: seizures, irritability, lethargy etc

Disseminated infection involving many organs e.g. DIC, hepatitis, pneumonitis , encephalitis (HIGH mortality)

19
Q

management of HSv in neonate

A

if SEM; 14 days IV aciclovir

21 days IV acyclovir disseminated or CNS disease

20
Q

diagnosis of HSV

A

HSV PCR - neonatal swabs

21
Q

WHEN IS risk of VZV infection highest in pregnant woman?

A

13-20 weeks (2nd trimester)

22
Q

what are the risks of shingles during pregnancy?

A

Does NOT pose a risk

23
Q

Features of congenital varicella syndrome

A
Skin scarring
limb hypoplasia
chorioretinitis, cataracts
IUGR
Microcephaly
24
Q

Maternal complications of VZV infection during pregnancy

A

pneumonia, encephalitis, sepsis

25
Q

How to manage a pregnant woman who is confirmed to have no immunity against VZV and have been exposed to it?

A

If exposure was <10 days ago and <20/40: give VZIG

Advise to stay away from other pregnant women for 4 weeks

26
Q

Management of pregnant woman who presents with VZV like rash

A

ORAL acyclovir if <24 hours since onset

  • Isolate from other pregnant women + neonates until lesions have crusted over
27
Q

how is parvovirus b19 transmitted?

A

respiratory droplets and blood

28
Q

clinical presentation of parvovirus B19

A

Erythema infectiosum (fifth disease), arthralgia, transient aplastic crisis, non-immune hydrops fetalis

29
Q

pathophysiology of parvovirus B19

A

It has a tropism for rapidly dividing erythrocyte precursors and it suppresses erythrogenesis

30
Q

the outcome of congenital parvovirus b19 infection

A

virus crosses placenta and destroys foetal RBCs –> foetal anaemia –> high output cardiac failure –> hydrops fetalis

31
Q

when is the worst gestation to get parvovirus infection

A

<20 BAD (50% mortality if untreated)

>20/40 risk negligible

32
Q

diagnosis of parvovirus B19

A

PCR and serology

foetus: blood and amniotic fluid samples for PCR virus

33
Q

treatment of foetal parvovirus B19 infection

A

referral to foetal medicine unit
intrauterine blood transfusion
If child survives hydrops stage, survival quite good

34
Q

Rash distribution in measles?

A

rash starts behind the ears and then spreads to forehead and rest of body

35
Q

Rash distribution in rubella?

A

starts on face and spreads downwards

36
Q

Measles: symptoms?

A

Prodrome: fever, coryza, cojunctivitis, Koplik spots

Rash - starts behind ears/hairline, then spreads

37
Q

Complications of measles

A

Otitis media, pneumonia, hepatitis, encephalitis, SSPE (6-15 years later)

38
Q

What are manifestations of measles infection of a pregnant woman?

A

the risk of measles in pregnancy is mainly to the MOTHER
Mother: increased maternal morbidity
Foetus: PTL, foetal loss, NO congenital abnormality

39
Q

treatment of measles

A

measles IVIG if <6 days of exposure, doesn’t reduce risk of PTL or foetal loss

40
Q

Zika virus - how does it affect normal healthy individuals?

A

80% ASYMPTOMATIC

Otherwise general: fever, myalgia, rash, headache, red eyes

41
Q

5 features of congenital Zika syndrome

A
  1. Microcephaly + skull deformities
  2. Seizures
  3. Retinopathy, deafness
  4. Club foot
  5. Hypertonia
42
Q

Current advice to women

A

Men do not conceive until 6 months after return from Zika area e.g. South America, Central America, Carribbean. Women do not until 2 months after.
Abnormalities usually detected 2nd or 3rd trimester