banfield lecture 12 Flashcards

1
Q

what kind of virus is Polio virus?

A
  • part of the picornavirus family
  • is an enterovirus (infects GI tract)
  • as 3 serotypes
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2
Q

what is the genome and capsid of poliovirus?

A

it is a +RNA genome. It has no envelope.

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3
Q

t or f, polio has more than one host

A

false, humans are the only host for polio

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4
Q

what is the GALT

A

gust associated lymphoid tissue

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5
Q

explain the dissemination of polio in humans (starting from location of infection to shedding)

A
  1. it enters the mouth in fecal water
  2. gets into GALT where it reaches M cells.
  3. this transfers the virus into lymphoid cells which then permits the virus into the blood. Note: polio virus in the blood is cell-free (not bound to cells)
  4. from the blood polio invades motor neurons of the SC
  5. shed when you shit
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6
Q

t or f, 90% of ppl with polio have an inapparent infection. 4% have minor illness. 2% meningitis. 0.2% flaccid paralysis

A

true, only 0.2% of ppl have paralysis from motor function loss

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7
Q

how do you measure polio virus in a population?

A

you have to measure the number of ppl with flaccid paralysis and then work backwards

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8
Q

t or f, children are more susceptible to paralytic polio

A

false, as you get older the odds of developing it increase. Additionally children tend to get paralysis in one leg whereas adults may get it in more places.

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9
Q

what neurons are the cause of paralytic polio?

A

motor neurons of the dorsal horn ganglia in SC.

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10
Q

What is inactivated polio vaccine (IPV)?

A
  • this is an injected vaccine that gives you systemic immunity.
  • it places IgG into your bllod stream. Upon a polio viremia, IgG will attack immediately.
  • IPV will prevent flaccid paralysis
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11
Q

What are the cons of IPV?

A
  • it does not provide mucosal immunity
  • this means it does not prevent you from getting the virus, it just prevents you from getting disease.
  • this is b/c IgG is not in your gut.
  • another con is that this is expensive
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12
Q

what is one major pro to the IPV?

A
  • it has never been linked to vaccine associated disease.
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13
Q

What is the Oral poliovirus vaccine? (OPV)

A
  • ## this is a live attenuated poliovirus that you ingest orally.
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14
Q

what are the cons of OPV

A
  • since RNA dependent RNA polymerases do not have proofreading mechanisms , a mutation can sometimes revert the attenuated polio virus back into its wild type form!!
  • This is called VAPP–> Vaccine associated paralytic poliomyelitis.
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15
Q

what are the pros of OPV?

A
  • inexpensive
  • provides systemic AND mucosal immunity
  • easy administration
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16
Q

t or f, within 35 hours OPV can revert to wild type mixture within a person. Within 2 days its entirely reverted

A

true, viruses exist as their wild types for a reason. Therefore NS will select for them as much as possible.

17
Q

WHO wants to eradicate polio by widespreading OPV in countries with it. Will this work?

A

probably not since OPV gives wild type polio evert 250 million doses. (over 2 billion doses needed)

18
Q

t or f, india still has polio

A

false, its declared polio free

19
Q

what are some problems with WHO’s plans to eradicate polio?

A
  • OPV is a live vaccine which can revert (must use IPV)
  • OPV strains can be transmitted
  • Hypo/agamma globulinemic people can shed polio without having the disease.
  • upon stopping vaccination, infants will be at risk.
20
Q

what is one cause that makes eradicating polio seem impossible?

A

it can be sequenced and made given the correct. resources