PARAINFLUENZA VIRUSES

Downloadable Word Format

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.

 

 

Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1