PARAINFLUENZA
VIRUSES
|
Structure
& Property |
Transmission |
Pathogenesis |
Clinical
findings |
Laboratory
diagnosis |
Treatment |
|
Family: paramyxovirus Size: 100-200nm Genome: one piece of single-stranded RNA, negative polarity Nucleocapsid: helical Lipoprotein envelope: - spikes consist of hemagglutinin, neuraminidase, and fusion proteins which mediate formation of multinucleated giant cells. |
Transmitted via respiratory droplets Caused disease worldwide, primarily in winter months. |
Cause upper and lower respiratory tract disease without viremia. Large proportion of infections are subclinical. Four serotypes: Type 1: Croup in infants Type 2: epidemics (winter) Type 3: bronchiolitis and bronchopneumonia in young infants Type 4: mild respiratory infection |
Febrile common cold: - sore throat - cough - hoarseness Croup: - acute laryngotracheobronchitis - cough, hoarseness, - severe: dyspnea, stridor, cyanosis, may require tracheotomy - differential diagnosis: diphteria, haemophilus influenzae Bronchiolitis Bronchopneumonia |
Tissue culture: monkey kidney cells: - CPE by type 2 - guinea pig RBC hemagglutination Antigenic detection: IF of infected respiratory epithelial cells Isolation: - mouth washings - throat swabs Serology: detect antibodies to: - S (soluble) antigen: nucleocapsid – early - V (viral) antigen – haemagglutinin & neuraminidase – late |
Ventilatory support Antibiotics for secondary bacterial infection Sedation and hydration No vaccine in routine use Immunity is not long-lasting and reinfections are common. |