toga Flashcards

1
Q

Which genus of togaviridae is significant for veterinarians? what additional genus is important to humans?

A

Alphavirus big for animal medicine. Arthropod-borne.for humans, genus Rubivirus, responsible for Rubella.

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2
Q

what kind of genome do alphaviruses have?

A

linear, positive sense, ssRNA

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3
Q

what are the three forms of equine encephalitis virus?

A

Western (WEEV)Eastern (EEEV)Venezuelan (VEEV)

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4
Q

Eastern equine encephalitis virus is caused by a member of the genus _______, and is transmitted by ________. It causes encephalitis in horses and _______.

A

Alphavirusmosquitoshumans

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5
Q

Among the viruses that cause EEEV, which group is the most virulent to humans and horses?

A

Group I - occurs in US, Canada, and the Caribbean.

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6
Q

Which lineages of EEEV are enzootic in central and south america?

A

II, III, IV

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7
Q

where in the US does EEEV primarily occur?

A

Southeast

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8
Q

The EEEV transmission cycle is maintained between _________ as reservoirs/amplification hosts. ________ is the main enzootic vector in swamp habitats.

A

passerine birds; Culiseta melanura(mosquito)

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9
Q

what are two other reservoirs for EEEV?

A

rodents and reptiles

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10
Q

Dead end hosts of EEEV? why are they dead end hosts?

A

humans and horses; don’t develop high enough levels of viremia to infect others

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11
Q

pathogenesis of EEEV?

A

inoculation of virus from mosquito bite –> virus enters CNS through the hematogenous route –> viral replication occurs in neurons, glial cells, vascular endothelial cells –> apoptosis of glial cells and neurons –> nonsuppurative encephalomyelitis

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12
Q

clinical signs of EEEV?

A

-fever, anorexia, depression-hypersensitive to sound-colic before onset of neurological disease-walk blindly into objects or in circles-tremors; facial and shoulder muscles especially-stage of paralysis follows-inability to hold up the head/head pressing or leaning back-incoordination, unnatural postures, complete paralysis

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13
Q

clinical signs of EEEV in humans?

A

usually no apparent illnessdepends on the form; two forms:systemic: arthralgia, myalgia, no CNS involvement.encephalitic: anorexia, vomiting, diarrhea, cyanosis, convulsions, coma

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14
Q

prognosis of EEEV in humans?

A

approximately a third of all infected die from diseaserecovered patients may suffer permanent brain damage

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15
Q

t/f - EEEV infections are asymptomatic in most birds.

A

true; they are reservoir hosts.

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16
Q

what signs might you see in a bird infected with EEEV?

A

tremors, leg paralysis, involuntary circular movements

17
Q

WEEV is believed to have emerged from ________ of an ancestral Eastern equine encephalitis virus-like virus and an ancestral ________

A

genetic recombination; Sindbis-like alphavirus

18
Q

______ strains of WEEV are more virulent than strains that are enzootic in ________

A

Epizootic North American; South America

19
Q

WEEV has a (low/high) fatality rate in humans compared to EEEV

20
Q

In horses, WEEV is (more/less) virulent than EEEV

21
Q

two primary amplifying hosts of WEEV?

A

House finches, and house sparrows

22
Q

WEEV main vector?

A

mosquito Culex tarsalisalso other mosquitoes

23
Q

what are two additional possible amplifying hosts for WEEV?

A

lagomorphs and rodents

24
Q

clinical signs of WEEV in horses?

A

most cases mild or asymptomaticsevere cases show signs similar to EEEV

25
clinical signs of WEEV in humans?
usually mild or asymptomatic in adultsinfants/children are highly susceptible -> severe encephalitis
26
overview of the subtypes of Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis virus?
subtype I-A, I-B, and I-C; epizootic/epidemic; highly virulent for horsessubtype I-D, I-E, I-F (II - VI); enzootic/endemic; virulence low or unknown
27
Describe the enzootic cycle of VEEV
Primary vector: Culex sppcycle between Culex and rodents, but culex can also bite and transmit to horses/humans (accidental host)Aedes or Posorophora mosquitos pick up virus from rodent, and bite humans/horses (accidental host)
28
Describe the epizootic cycle of VEEV
primary vector: mosquitoscycle between them and horsesother species affected, but not amplifiershumans infected, dead end host.
29
in VEEV... Epidemic ____ virus may arise from mutation of Endemic strains (types ______)
1AB;1D-F and II-vi
30
Clinical signs of VEEV in horses?
same signs as in EEEV
31
Clinical signs of VEEV in humans?
-normally acute, mild, systemic disease-symptoms of encephalitis-In pregnant women, may cause placental damage, fetal encephalitis, abortion/stillbirth, congenital disease.
32
what's key in reducing spread of EEV?
mosquito control:-source reduction-surveillance; trapping and testing mosquitos for virus, use of sentinel animals/birds to alert to presence of viruses, dead bird reporting and testing, sentinel chicken serology
33
describe chemical and biological control of mosquito populations for EEV
biological-use of natural enemies to manage populations, such as predatory fish that feed on mosquito larvae (Gambusia affinis, carps and minnows)chemical-larvicides and adulticides
34
what can you use for personal protection from mosquitos (and thus EEV?)
clothing, repellents, nets on doors and windows, mosquito nets