CYTOMEGALOVIRUS
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Structure
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Transmission |
Pathogenesis |
Clinical
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Laboratory
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Treatment |
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Family: herpevirus Genome: linear double-strand DNA. Size: 100m Icosahedral nucleoapsid Lipoprotein envelope Single serotype Structurally and morphologically identical to other herpesviruses, but is antigenically different. |
Early in life, it is transmitted across placenta, within birth canal and mother’s milk. Saliva in young children. Sexual contact: virus is present in both semen and cervical secretions. Transmitted during blood transfusions and organ transplants. CMV infection occurs worldwide. |
Infection of fetus cause cytomegalic inclusion disease: - giant multinucleated cells with intracellular inclusions. - affect many organs with widespread abnormalities. Infections of children and adults are usually asymptomatic. Enters a latent state in leukocytes and kidneys, reactivated when cell-mediated immunity is decreased. |
CMV causes congenital and postnatal disease. Congenital disease is problematic: - maternal infection is symptomless. - fetus can be damaged by infection in any of the three trimesters. - fetal infection follow reactivation. Clinical features show manifestations of cytomegalic inclusion disease: - microcephaly, seizures, deafness. - jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly. - thrombocytopenia, hemolytic anemia. - affected organs show enlarged cells with large intranuclear ‘owl’s eye’ inclusions. Postnatal
disease: Hepatitis: - in young children, can cause liver enlargement. - jaundice may or may not be present. Infectious mononucleosis syndrome: - fever, lethargy, hepatitis, lymphocytosis. - abnormal lymphocytes. - no pharyngitis or lymphadenopathy. - negative Paul-Bunnel reaction. Infection in immunocompromised: - widespread lesions in lungs, adrenals, liver, GI tract. - complication of transplantation surgery. - may be due to reactivation or infection acquired from donor organ. - pneumonia. - cause intractable diarrhea in AIDS patients and retinitis which can lead to blindness. |
Diagnosis: - immunofluorescence - histogic staining of inclusion bodies of giant cells in urine and in tissue - ELISA for IgM or IgG. - 4-fold rise in antibody titer. Isolation: - urine - throat gargle - blood Grow slowly in human embryo cell cultures. Direct early fluorescent foci test is a rapid method of detecting early virus growth in cell culture at 24 or 48h. |
Ganciclovir: - can prevent retinitis in AIDS patients. - effective against pneumonia. - widely used prophylactic for treatment in immunosuppressed patients. - neutropenia is a common complication. Foscarnet: - useful in treatment of CMV retinitis. - more side effects. Largely resistant to acyclovir. Prevention: - isolate infants with cytomegalic inclusion disease from others. - screen for CMV antibodies in transfusions and transplants. |