III - A. Virology | 12. Papilloma and Parvoviruses Flashcards

1
Q

I. Parvoviruses
1. What are the genetic material and morphology of parvoviruses?

A
  1. Genetic material
    - ssDNA genome!!! (either + or - ssDNA)
  2. Morphology:
    - icosahedral capsid
    - replicate inside host cell’s nucleus
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2
Q

I. Parvoviruses
2. What are the 3 human pathogens?

A

3 human pathogenes: parvovirus B19, a human bocavirus and adenoassociated viruses

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3
Q

I. Parvoviruses - Parvovirus B19
3. What is the source of infection of Parvovirus B19?

A

infected individual

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4
Q

I. Parvoviruses - Parvovirus B19
4. What is the route of transmission of Parvovirus B19?

A
  • through respiratory droplets
  • blood transfusion
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5
Q

I. Parvoviruses - Parvovirus B19
5. What is the pathomechanism of Parvovirus B19?

A

Infects RBC progenitors (proerythroblasts)

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6
Q

I. Parvoviruses - Parvovirus B19
6. What are the diseases & symptoms Parvovirus B19?

A
  1. Erythema infectiosum (5th disease)
    - bone marrow destruction, anaemia, aplastic crisis
    - immunocomplex production (slapped face), joint
    pain
  2. Hydrops foetalis (if infection occures during pregnancy)
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7
Q

I. Parvoviruses - Parvovirus B19
7. What is the diagnosis for disease caused by Parvovirus B19?

A
  • based on symptoms
  • antigen or genetic material (PCR) detection from blood
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8
Q

I. Parvoviruses - Parvovirus B19
8. What is the therapy for disease caused by Parvovirus B19?

A
  • supportive treatment
  • transfusion
  • anti-parvovirus B19 immunoglobulin
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9
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
1. What are the genetic material and morphology of Human papillomaviruses?

A
  • dsDNA genome
  • icosahedral capsid
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10
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
2. What is the main feature of Human papillomaviruses?

A

many different genotypes, with different outcomes

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11
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
3. What is the source of infection of Human papillomaviruses?

A

infected individual (even asymptomatic ones!)

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12
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
4. What is the route of transmission of Human papillomaviruses?

A
  • through direct contact
  • sexually transmitted
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13
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
5. What is the pathomechanism of Human papillomaviruses?

A
  • Infect the basal cells of stratified epithelium
  • Early proteins activate the host’s cell cycle through inhibition of the retinoblastoma (E7 protein) and switch off apoptosis (E6 protein)
  • Needed for their replication (DNA polymerase is only present in replicating cells!)
  • Induce cell proliferation ➡ warts
  • Due to the slow proliferation and the skin localisation the immune response is mild and develops slowly
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14
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
6A. What are the diseases caused by Human papillomaviruses?

A

mucosotropic and cutaneous genotypes

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15
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
6B. What are the symptoms of cutaneous genotypes ?

A

cutaneous genotypes (for e.g. HPV1) may stay asymptomatic, or they can cause warts (verruca vulgaris, verruca plana)

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16
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
6C. What are the symptoms of mucosotropic genotypes ?

A

Mucosotropic genotypes can be subdivided into low risk and high risk viruses
1. Low risk: HPV6, HPV11
- LSIL, or condyloma acuminatum (genital wart)
2. High risk: HPV16, HPV18
- HSIL, cervix- and anorectalis cancer, or squamous cell cancer (skin, tongue, larynx)

17
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
7. What is the diagnosis for Human papillomaviruses?

A
  • aided visual inspection with acetic acid
  • sampling with Citobrush of the infected area
  • ## meaning of a positive result from a sampling without symptoms is controversial
  • PCR
  • based on the examination of a cervical smear we can estimate the level of transformation (Bethesda classification)
18
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
8. What is the therapy for Human papillomaviruses?

A
19
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
9A. What is the prevention for Human papillomaviruses

A
20
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
9B. What are the feature of vaccines for Human papillomaviruses?

A
  • The HPV vaccines can prevent the most common types of infection.
  • recommended before the start of sexual activity, for both sexes!
  • 2, 4 and 9-valent formulas
21
Q

II. Human papillomaviruses
9C. Why is screening Human papillomaviruses important ?

A
  • screening is important, so we can detect the disease in the pre- cancerous stage (cervical screening: recommended on a yearly basis!)
  • it takes 10 to 20 years to develop a cancer due to a HPV infection!