4.56 Flashcards

1
Q

Prion diseases are

A

rare, fatal, rapidly progressive neurodegenerative

diseases that occur in humans and other animal species

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2
Q

Prion diseases

Presence of small — within the neuropil, which produces a — appearance

A

vacuoles

spongiform

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3
Q

Neuropil:

A
The complex net of
axonal, dendritic, and glial
branchings that forms the bulk
of the central nervous system
gray matter of the brain and in
which the nerve cell bodies are
embedded
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4
Q

Disease: Bovine spongiform encephalopathy

Animals affected:

A

cattle

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5
Q

Disease: Scrapie

Animals affected:

A

sheep and goats

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6
Q

Human Prion Diseases (5)

A

Kuru
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)
Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (Variant CJD)
Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome (GSS)
Fatal familial insomnia (FFI)

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7
Q

Scrapie -

A

fatal neurodegenerative disease of sheep

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8
Q

Scrapie

demonstrated to be a — disorder

A

transmissible

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9
Q

CJD -

A

fatal neurodegenerative disease of humans recognized since the 1920s
demonstrated to be transmissible in the 1960s (humans to chimpanzees)

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10
Q

CJD

Early symptoms:

A

memory problems, behavioral changes, poor coordination, and visual
disturbances

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11
Q

CJD
Later symptoms: (5)
—% of people die within 1 year of diagnosis

A

dementia, involuntary movements, blindness, weakness, and coma
70

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12
Q

Search for slow viruses that were expected to be the infectious agents of scrapie and CJD
infectious agents were “—” meaning

A

filterable

not cellular (filters used could trap bacteria)
therefore, possibly a virus
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13
Q

Search for slow viruses that were expected to be the infectious agents of scrapie and CJD
Researchers treated the infectious material to determine what it was composed of (3)

A

ionizing radiation, which destroys DNA and RNA, did not affect transmission of scrapie and CJD

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14
Q

Hypothesis (1960s): scrapie and CJD are caused by infectious agents consisting solely of

A

proteins

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15
Q

The term “Prion” (2)

A

coined in 1982 (Stanley Prusiner; 1997 Nobel prize)

Proteinaceous, infectious

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16
Q

PrPSc

A

(=PrP folded into the prion form) recruits PrP (the non-prion form of PrP) to adopt the prion shape.

17
Q

The non-prion form (“normal” form) is called

A

PrP or PrPC.

18
Q

PRNP gene on chromosome 20 encodes

A

PrP protein

19
Q

PrP polymorphism:

A

Met or Val at codon 129 of PRNP gene
60% Met codon; 40% Val codon
homozygote for either = increased risk of disease

20
Q

PrPSc is resistant to — and

accumulates in —

A

degradation

amyloid fibrils

21
Q

PrPC is strongly expressed in both (2) of the CNS and appears to regulate

A

neurons and glial cells

ion channels and neurotransmitter receptors at the pre- and postsynaptic levels.

22
Q

Characteristic: Median age at death
CJD:
Variant CJD:

A

68 years

28 years

23
Q

Characteristic: Median duration of illness
CJD:
Variant CJD:

A

4-5 months

13-14 months

24
Q

Characteristic: Clinical signs and symptoms
CJD:
Variant CJD:

A

Dementia; early neurologic signs
Promionent psychiatric/behavioral symptoms;
painful dysthesias; delayed neurologic signs

25
Q

Characteristic: Accumulation of PrPSC in brain tissue
CJD:
Variant CJD:

A

Variable accumulation

marked accumulation

26
Q

Prions may not be inactivated by means of

A

routine surgical instrument sterilization

procedures.

27
Q

The World health Organization and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
recommend that instrumentation used in such cases be

A

immediately destroyed after use.

28
Q

Secondary to destruction, it is recommended that (2) decontamination be
used in combination to process instruments that come in contact with high-infectivity
tissues.

A

heat and chemical

29
Q

No cases of iatrogenic transmission of CJD have been reported subsequent to the

A

adoption

of current sterilization procedures, or since 1976.