Influenza Flashcards

1
Q

What is influenza?

A

It is an acute recurring respiratory disease spread by droplet, aerosol, and contact.
Negative sense RNA virus of the family Orthomyxovirdae.

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2
Q

What are negative strand RNA viruses?

A

-Important causative agents of numerous diseases.
-Have genomic RNAs that are the opposite of the coding “sense” mRNA which is why they are referred to as negative sense or negative strand RNA viruses.
- Only found as enveloped iron particles.
-Major negative strand RNA virus families include:
Paramyxoviruses (measles, virus, respiratory syncytial virus).
Rhabdoviruses (rabies, virus)
Filoviruses (Ebola virus)
Bunyaivurses (Hantavirus)
Arenavirus (Lassa Virus)
Orthomyxoviruses (Influenza virus)

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3
Q

Describe influenza Pandemics through the ages

A

1580- first described pandemic reported by Hippocrates.
21 have been documented since then
1918: worst pandemic (killed 20-40 million people worldwide).
1918- Spanish flu (originated in Kansas)
1957- Asian flu
1968- Hong Kong flu
1977- Russian flu
2009- H1N1 swine flu
All influenzas are believed to have originated in Asia

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4
Q

What are the symptoms of influenza?

A

Body or muscle aches
Chills
Cough
Fever
Headache
Sore throat
5-20% of people in the US get flu every year
Can be serious for elderly, newborns, and chronically ill

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5
Q

Influenza genome and particle size

A

Small genome and just 13 genes!

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6
Q

What is the incubation period of influenza?

A

Short incubation period of 1-2 days

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7
Q

Describe the flu virus

A

First isolated in 1930s
First visualized with electron microscope in 1943
Spikes H and N coat the surface of the virus

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8
Q

Describe the HA and NA proteins

A

HA= Hemagglutinin which is the attachment protein for entry
NA = Neuraminidase which is the cutting protein for exit

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9
Q

Influenza is famous for?

A

Attacking salicylic acid

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10
Q

How is a cold different from the flu?

A

Cold is caused by rhinovirus or coronavirus both + strand RNA viruses with a life cycle similar to polio 20-30% of colds are caused by unkown viruses.
Flu caused by influenza the 8 segment strand RNA virus.

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11
Q

Provide a more in depth comparison of cold vs flu

A

Cold Symptoms
Fever = very rare
Headache = very rare
General aches Pains = slight
Fatigue & Weakness = rare and quite mild
Sneezing, Runny/Stuffy Nose and Sore Throat =almost always
Chest discomfort and coughing = mild to moderate hacking cough

Flu Symptoms:
Fever = 100-102 degrees F comes on quick and lasts 3-4 days
Headache = prominent
General aches and pains = common can be severe
Fatigue and weakness = common, can be severe comes on quick and can last a few weeks
Sneezing Runny/Stuffy Nose and Sore throat = sometimes
Chest discomfort and coughing = common can become severe

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12
Q

Describe severity of influenza in various types of patients.

A

Fever = worse in children
Symptoms not the same for every age group. Fevers are worse in children.

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13
Q

Explain the classification of Influenza Subtypes

A

Classified into subtypes based on hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) membrane surface glycoproteins.
16 HA and 9 NA antigenic forms are known; they recombine to produce influenza subtypes (designated H/N).

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14
Q

What are HA functions?

A

Functions in viral attachment to host cells.
-attaches to galactose-sialic acid receptors on the host cell.
-defines viral tropism (which tissues virus attacks).
-major surface epitope seen by the immune system.

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15
Q

What are NA functions?

A

functions by cleaving viral particles from host cells
-allows for virion release (continued spread of virus particles).

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16
Q

What do antivirals do?

A

inhibitors of neuraminidase

17
Q

If you developed a drug that bound to and cleaved HA what do you think its direct effect would be on influenza pathogenesis?

A

Virus would be unable to infect cells.

18
Q

Describe the genome plasticity of flu viruses

A

Important feature is its high frequency of genetic changes

19
Q

What is antigenic drift?

A

-Due to accumulation of mutations in a strain within an area.
-Often the result of point mutations that lead to amino acid substitutions.

20
Q

What is antigenic shift?

A

due to reassortment of genomes when two different strains of flu viruses (from humans and animals) infect the same cell and are incorporated into a single new capsid.

21
Q

If an avian influenza develops a series of point mutations that now allows the virus to infect human cells this is called?

A

Antigenic drift

22
Q

What are type A flu strains?

A

Found in humans, ducks, chickens, pigs, whales, horses, seals.
Can cause yearly pandemics (can lead to more antigenic shift).

23
Q

What are type B flu strains?

A

Found typically only in humans
Can cause yearly epidemics

24
Q

What are type C flu strains?

A

Causes mild respiratory illness (does not lead to epidemics).

25
Q

What are current flu A subtypes found in the US?

A

H1N1
H3N2

26
Q

What happens if a pig is infected with 2 different subtyepes of flu virus simultaneously?

A

If virus winds up in the same host cell they should exchange genetic material (RNA) resulting in a new variant.

27
Q

Why was the 1918 influenza pandemic unique?

A

More death in young healthy people
Provoked health immune system.

28
Q

Describe the “flu shot”

A

an inactivated vaccine (containing killed virus) that is given with a needle usually in the arm.
-Flu shot is approved for use in people older than 6 months including healthy people and people with chronic flu.

28
Q

Describe the “flu shot”

A

an inactivated vaccine (containing killed virus) that is given with a needle usually in the arm.
-Flu shot is approved for use in people older than 6 months including healthy people and people with chronic medical conditions.

29
Q

Describe the nasal spray flu vaccine

A

a vaccine made with live weakened flu viruses that do not cause the flu.
-sometimes called LAIV for live attenuated influenza vaccine or FluMist.
-approved for use in healthy people 2-49 years of age who are not pregnant.
-grows well in cold but not at body temperature.

30
Q

What was a bad flu season and how effective is the flu shot at fighting off H3N2 strain of the virus?

A

More people were hospitalized with the flu in 2018 than experts recorded.
The flu shot is about 10-20% effective at fighting off the H3N2 virus.