Antiviral treatments Flashcards

1
Q

Name some common self-limiting viruses

A
  • Rhinovirus
  • Parainfluenza
  • Adenovirus
  • HSV
  • VZV
  • CMV
  • EBV
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2
Q

Name the viruses included under the herpesviradae umbrella

A

Herpesviradae 1: HSV 1

Herpesviradae 2: HSV 2

Herpesviradae 3: VZV

Herpesviradae 4: EBV

Herpesviradae 5: CMV

Herpesviradae 6: HHV6

Herpesviradae 7: HHV7

Herpesviradae 8: HHV8

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3
Q

What do HSV 1 and 2 most commonly cause?

A

Perioral and genital sores

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4
Q

What does VZV usually cause?

A

Chicken pox and shingles

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5
Q

Name some physical treatments for HPV/molluscum infections

A

Chemical, hot and cold treatments which expose the virus to the immune system (e.g cryotherapy)

Often used for localised HPV infections (warts and verrucas)

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6
Q

What is interferon alpha used for?

How does it work?

What are the side effects?

A

Viral hepatitis from chronic HBV and HCV infections by activation of antiviral intracellular and immune responses.

Side effects: flu-like symptoms, fever, loss of appetite, lethargy, depression (2° night fevers → sleep deprivation)

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7
Q

In what patient group is hepatitis C the most common in the UK?

A

Intravenous drug users

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8
Q

What can viral hepatitis lead to?

A

Liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma

Also acts as a reservoir of infection that can be transmitted on

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9
Q

How are chronic HBV and HCV treated?

A

PEG-IFN-alpha for 48 weeks +/- other drugs

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10
Q

What can be given to a newborn of a woman with chronic hepatisis B to prevent transmission?

A

Immunoglobulin & hep B vaccine

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11
Q

What are the symptoms of ramsay hunt syndrome?

How can you differentiate from Bell’s palsy?

A

Unilateral facial nerve palsy

Loss of taste sensation over anterior 2/3 of tongue (ipsilateral)

Vesicles in ear and mouth present in Ramsay Hunt but not in Bell’s palsy

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12
Q

Describe the mechanism of action of aciclovir

A

Aciclovir is converted to is triphosphate form (aciclovir triphosphate- ACV-TP) which competitively inhibits viral DNA polymerase, incorporates into and terminates the growing viral DNA chain and inactivates the viral DNA polymerase.

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13
Q

Which anti-viral drugs are used for influenza?

A

Oseltamivir (tamiflu)

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14
Q

Where does HCV replicate?

What are the implications for this?

A

In the cytoplasm- is therefore easier to treat

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15
Q

Which anti-viral drugs can be used for HIV infection?

(on the drugs list)

A

Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors:

  • Tenofivir

Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors:

  • Efavirenz

Viral protease inhbitors:

  • Lopinavir

Integrase inhibitors:

  • Dolutegravir

Viral fusion inhibitors:

  • Enfuvirtide

Chemokine receptor/CCR5 antagonists:

  • Maraviroc
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