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VIRAL INFECTIONS ON SKIN,
RESPIRATORY,
GASTROINTESTINAL, OTHERS.
Viral infections of the skin:
1= Herpes simplex virus 1 and 2
• Herpes simplex viruses (HSVs) cause recurrent
mucocutaneous infection.
• HSV-1 typically involves the mucocutaneous surfaces of the
head and neck.
• HSV-2 predominantly involves the genital mucosa.
• Clinical features:
 Initally: Fever and regional lymphadenopathy.
 Gingivostomatitis, pharyngitis.
 Recurrent HSV genital disease is a common cause of
recurrent painful ulceration.
• Recurrent attacks occur throughout life.
• Oral lesion “herpes labialis”.
• lesion on the finger “Herpetic whitlow”.
• Complications:
A. Skin: eczema (eczema herpeticum).
B. Eye: Herpes keratitis (pain and blurring of vision, corneal
scarring and permanent visual impairment).
C. Nervous: meningitis or transverse myelitis, encephalitis,
temporal lobe epilepsy and altered consciousness/coma.
D. Neonatal: cutaneous lesions, hepatitis, pneumonitis and
frequently encephalitis.
E. Immunocompromised hosts: oesophagitis, hepatitis,
pneumonitis, encephalitis or retinitis.
• Diagnosis:
• Vesicular fluids - Direct immunofluorescence or PCR.
• CSF - HSV encephalitis by a positive PCR.
• Management:
• Oral lesions - topical aciclovir.
• HSV encephalopathy - Aciclovir if resistance [foscarnet].
2= Human herpesvirus 8
• Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) causes Kaposi’s sarcoma in
both AIDS-related and non-AIDS-related forms.
• HHV-8 is spread via saliva, and men – men intercourse.
• Highest in sub-Saharan Africa.
• HHV-8 also causes two rare haematological malignancies:
1. Primary effusion lymphoma.
2. Multicentric Castleman’s disease (a condition resembling
lymphoma but without recognizable malignant cells
usually seen in abdominal or mediastinal).
• Current antivirals are not effective.
3= Enterovirus infections
• Systemic infection is caused by Coxsackie viruses
usually, or occasionally by Echoviruses.
• It affects children and occasionally adults, resulting in
local or household outbreaks.
• Incubation period of 10 days.
• Clinical features:
• Fever and lymphadenopathy during incubation
period.
• 2–3 days later:
• Painful papular or vesicular rash appears on
palmoplantar surfaces of hands and feet.
• Oral lesions on the buccal mucosa and tongue that
ulcerate rapidly.
• A papular erythematous rash on buttocks and
thighs.
• Management:
• Symptom relief with analgesics.
4= Poxviruses:
• These DNA viruses are rare but potentially
important pathogens.
• Smallpox (variola).
• Monkeypox.
• Cowpox.
• Others: orf and molluscum contagiosum.
A) Smallpox (variola):
• High mortality, was eradicated worldwide
• Spread by the respiratory route or contact with
lesions, and is highly infectious.
• The incubation period is 7–17 days.
• Clinical feature:
• A prodrome with fever, headache.
• Rash on the face and distal extremities (macules and
papules to vesicles and pustules).
• National public health authorities must be
contacted.
• Electron micrography and DNA detection tests (PCR).
B) Monkeypox:
• Caused by small squirrels and rodents.
• Central Africa.
• Vesicular rash + lymphadenopathy.
• Little person-to-person transmission occurs.
• Diagnosis :
• Electron micrography or DNA detection (PCR).
C) Cowpox:
• Humans in contact with infected cows.
• Fever and regional lymphadenitis.
• Large vesicles on the hands or arms and
associated.
• Molluscum contagiosum is caused by a DNA poxvirus
• It is most common in children over the age of 1 year,
particularly those with atopic dermatitis. It also occurs frequently
in immunosuppressed patients, including those with HIV (p. 306).
• Clinical feature:
• Lesions are dome-shaped, ‘umbilicated’, skin-coloured papules
with central punctum (Fig. 29.25). They are often multiple and
found at sites of apposition, such as the side of the chest and
the inner arm. Spontaneous resolution occurs but can take
months. Prior to resolution, they often become inflamed and
may leave small, atrophic scars. Destructive therapies may
be painful and risk scarring, and the decision not to treat is
often sensible. Gentle squeezing with forceps after bathing can
hasten resolution. Topical salicylic acid, podophyllin, cantharidin,
trichloroacetic acid, cryotherapy and curettage are alternatives.
Efficacy with imiquimod has also been reported
C) Molluscum contagiosum:
Gastrointestinal viral infections
1= Norovirus (Norwalk agent)
• Outbreaks in hospital wards, cruise ships and military
camps.
• Food handlers, relatively resistant to decontamination
procedures.
• The incubation period is 24–48 hours.
• Clinical feature:
• Prominent vomiting and Gastroenteritis.
• Diagnosis:
• Electron microscopy.
• Antigen or DNA detection (PCR) in stool samples.
• Management:
1. Patient isolation.
2. Cleaning environmental surfaces with detergents and
disinfected with bleach.
2= Rotavirus
• Occurs in young children worldwide.
• Winter epidemics in developed countries, particularly in
nurseries.
• Rotaviruses infect enterocytes.
• Incubation period is 48 hours.
• Clinical feature:
1. Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, fever and abdominal pain.
2. Prominent dehydration.
• Diagnosis:
• Enzyme immunoassay kits which require fresh or
refrigerated stool samples.
• Vaccination Monovalent and multivalent.
Respiratory viral infections
• Multiple viral diseases causes upper & lower
respiratory diseases:
• Adenoviruses, rhinoviruses and enteroviruses
(Coxsackie viruses and echoviruses):
Often produce non-specific upper respiratory tract
symptoms but may cause viral pneumonia.
• Parainfluenza and respiratory syncytial viruses:
Cause upper respiratory tract disease, croup and
bronchiolitis in small children and pneumonia in the
immunocompromised & nursing home.
• Metapneumovirus and bocavirus:
Cause upper and occasionally lower respiratory tract
infection.
1= Middle East respiratory syndrome
coronavirus (MERS-CoV)
• In 2012, a several deaths connected with
pneumonia are caused by novel coronavirus & SARS
(severe acute respiratory syndrome) coronavirus.
• History of travel to Saudi Arabia.
• Zoonosis [bats to camels and then to humans].
• Person-to-person transmission.
• Incubation period 2–14 days.
• Clinical features:
• Fever, chills, headache, myalgia, dry cough and
dyspnoea.
• Abdominal pain and diarrhoea may be prominent.
• Complication:
• ARDS and multi-organ failure.
• Diagnosis:
o Lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia and raised lactate
dehydrogenase (LDH).
o PCR of serum.
o Nasopharyngeal or other respiratory samples.
• Management:
• Supportive.
• Patients should be managed in an airborne infection
isolation room.
• Health-care workers should wear protective
equipment.
Viral infections with
neurological involvement
1= Japanese B encephalitis
• This flavivirus, are endemic in Japan, China, Russia, South-
east Asia, India and Pakistan;
• Pigs and aquatic birds reservior, and transmission is by
mosquitoes.
• Exposure to rice paddies is a recognised risk factor.
• Incubation period is 4–21 days.
• Clinical features:
• Subclinical.
• Fever, malaise and anorexia is followed by headache,
photophobia, vomiting and changes in brainstem function.
• Meningism, seizures, cranial nerve palsies, flaccid or spastic
paralysis and extrapyramidal syndromes.
• Diagnosis:
• Neutrophilia, hyponatraemia.
• CSF - lymphocytosis and elevated protein.
• Management and Prevention:
• Treatment is supportive.
• Vaccination is recommended for travellers to
endemic areas during the monsoon.
• Some endemic countries include vaccination in
their childhood schedules.
2= West Nile virus
• This flavivirus cause disease in Australia, India and
Russia through Africa and Southern Europe and
across to North America.
• Avian reservoir and a mosquito vector.
• Older people are at increased risk of neurological
disease.
• Incubation period 2-6 days.
• Clinical features:
• Asymptomatic.
• Mild febrile illness and arthralgia.
• Children may develop a maculopapular rash.
• Neurological disease encephalitis, meningitis or
asymmetric flaccid paralysis.
• Diagnosis:
• Detection of viral RNA in blood or CSF.
• Serological tests may show cross-reactivity with
other flaviviruses.
• Management:
• is supportive.
3= Enterovirus 71:
• Globe of enteroviral disease with hand, foot and
mouth disease aseptic meningitis.
• Complication:
• Encephalitis with flaccid paralysis or by
brainstem involvement and death.
• Diagnosis:
• Vesicle fluid, stool or CSF, and viral RNA can be
detected in CSF by RT-PCR.
4= Human T-cell lymphotropic virus
type I (HTLV-1):
• Chronic infection with development of adult T-cell
leukaemia/lymphoma (ATL) or HTLV-1-associated
myelopathy (HAM).
• Japan, the Caribbean, Central and South America, and the
Seychelles.
• Clinical feature:
A. HAM infection: spastic paraparesis with gait disturbance,
spasticity of the lower extremities, urinary incontinence,
impotence and sensory disturbance.
B. HTLV-1 infection: Myositis and uveitis.
• Diagnosis: PCR.
• Management: is usually supportive.
Rheumatological viral infection:
• Variety of viral infections causes
rheumatological disease (rubella, parvovirus
B19, Hepatitis B Virus, HIV-1, Ebola virus
disease.
1= Chikungunya virus:
• Chikungunya is an alphavirus.
• Africa and Asia, vector Aedes aegypti mosquito.
• Incubation period is 2–12 days.
• Clinical feature:
• Fever and rash.
• Arthritis in adults.
• Management:
• symptomatic.

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Lec 4. systemic viral infections of (skin, respiratory, git, & others)

  • 1. VIRAL INFECTIONS ON SKIN, RESPIRATORY, GASTROINTESTINAL, OTHERS.
  • 3. 1= Herpes simplex virus 1 and 2 • Herpes simplex viruses (HSVs) cause recurrent mucocutaneous infection. • HSV-1 typically involves the mucocutaneous surfaces of the head and neck. • HSV-2 predominantly involves the genital mucosa. • Clinical features:  Initally: Fever and regional lymphadenopathy.  Gingivostomatitis, pharyngitis.  Recurrent HSV genital disease is a common cause of recurrent painful ulceration. • Recurrent attacks occur throughout life. • Oral lesion “herpes labialis”. • lesion on the finger “Herpetic whitlow”.
  • 4.
  • 5. • Complications: A. Skin: eczema (eczema herpeticum). B. Eye: Herpes keratitis (pain and blurring of vision, corneal scarring and permanent visual impairment). C. Nervous: meningitis or transverse myelitis, encephalitis, temporal lobe epilepsy and altered consciousness/coma. D. Neonatal: cutaneous lesions, hepatitis, pneumonitis and frequently encephalitis. E. Immunocompromised hosts: oesophagitis, hepatitis, pneumonitis, encephalitis or retinitis. • Diagnosis: • Vesicular fluids - Direct immunofluorescence or PCR. • CSF - HSV encephalitis by a positive PCR. • Management: • Oral lesions - topical aciclovir. • HSV encephalopathy - Aciclovir if resistance [foscarnet].
  • 6. 2= Human herpesvirus 8 • Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) causes Kaposi’s sarcoma in both AIDS-related and non-AIDS-related forms. • HHV-8 is spread via saliva, and men – men intercourse. • Highest in sub-Saharan Africa. • HHV-8 also causes two rare haematological malignancies: 1. Primary effusion lymphoma. 2. Multicentric Castleman’s disease (a condition resembling lymphoma but without recognizable malignant cells usually seen in abdominal or mediastinal). • Current antivirals are not effective.
  • 7. 3= Enterovirus infections • Systemic infection is caused by Coxsackie viruses usually, or occasionally by Echoviruses. • It affects children and occasionally adults, resulting in local or household outbreaks. • Incubation period of 10 days. • Clinical features: • Fever and lymphadenopathy during incubation period. • 2–3 days later: • Painful papular or vesicular rash appears on palmoplantar surfaces of hands and feet. • Oral lesions on the buccal mucosa and tongue that ulcerate rapidly.
  • 8. • A papular erythematous rash on buttocks and thighs. • Management: • Symptom relief with analgesics.
  • 9. 4= Poxviruses: • These DNA viruses are rare but potentially important pathogens. • Smallpox (variola). • Monkeypox. • Cowpox. • Others: orf and molluscum contagiosum.
  • 10. A) Smallpox (variola): • High mortality, was eradicated worldwide • Spread by the respiratory route or contact with lesions, and is highly infectious. • The incubation period is 7–17 days. • Clinical feature: • A prodrome with fever, headache. • Rash on the face and distal extremities (macules and papules to vesicles and pustules). • National public health authorities must be contacted. • Electron micrography and DNA detection tests (PCR).
  • 11. B) Monkeypox: • Caused by small squirrels and rodents. • Central Africa. • Vesicular rash + lymphadenopathy. • Little person-to-person transmission occurs. • Diagnosis : • Electron micrography or DNA detection (PCR).
  • 12. C) Cowpox: • Humans in contact with infected cows. • Fever and regional lymphadenitis. • Large vesicles on the hands or arms and associated.
  • 13. • Molluscum contagiosum is caused by a DNA poxvirus • It is most common in children over the age of 1 year, particularly those with atopic dermatitis. It also occurs frequently in immunosuppressed patients, including those with HIV (p. 306). • Clinical feature: • Lesions are dome-shaped, ‘umbilicated’, skin-coloured papules with central punctum (Fig. 29.25). They are often multiple and found at sites of apposition, such as the side of the chest and the inner arm. Spontaneous resolution occurs but can take months. Prior to resolution, they often become inflamed and may leave small, atrophic scars. Destructive therapies may be painful and risk scarring, and the decision not to treat is often sensible. Gentle squeezing with forceps after bathing can hasten resolution. Topical salicylic acid, podophyllin, cantharidin, trichloroacetic acid, cryotherapy and curettage are alternatives. Efficacy with imiquimod has also been reported C) Molluscum contagiosum:
  • 14.
  • 16. 1= Norovirus (Norwalk agent) • Outbreaks in hospital wards, cruise ships and military camps. • Food handlers, relatively resistant to decontamination procedures. • The incubation period is 24–48 hours. • Clinical feature: • Prominent vomiting and Gastroenteritis. • Diagnosis: • Electron microscopy. • Antigen or DNA detection (PCR) in stool samples. • Management: 1. Patient isolation. 2. Cleaning environmental surfaces with detergents and disinfected with bleach.
  • 17. 2= Rotavirus • Occurs in young children worldwide. • Winter epidemics in developed countries, particularly in nurseries. • Rotaviruses infect enterocytes. • Incubation period is 48 hours. • Clinical feature: 1. Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, fever and abdominal pain. 2. Prominent dehydration. • Diagnosis: • Enzyme immunoassay kits which require fresh or refrigerated stool samples. • Vaccination Monovalent and multivalent.
  • 19. • Multiple viral diseases causes upper & lower respiratory diseases: • Adenoviruses, rhinoviruses and enteroviruses (Coxsackie viruses and echoviruses): Often produce non-specific upper respiratory tract symptoms but may cause viral pneumonia. • Parainfluenza and respiratory syncytial viruses: Cause upper respiratory tract disease, croup and bronchiolitis in small children and pneumonia in the immunocompromised & nursing home. • Metapneumovirus and bocavirus: Cause upper and occasionally lower respiratory tract infection.
  • 20. 1= Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) • In 2012, a several deaths connected with pneumonia are caused by novel coronavirus & SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) coronavirus. • History of travel to Saudi Arabia. • Zoonosis [bats to camels and then to humans]. • Person-to-person transmission. • Incubation period 2–14 days. • Clinical features: • Fever, chills, headache, myalgia, dry cough and dyspnoea. • Abdominal pain and diarrhoea may be prominent.
  • 21. • Complication: • ARDS and multi-organ failure. • Diagnosis: o Lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia and raised lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). o PCR of serum. o Nasopharyngeal or other respiratory samples. • Management: • Supportive. • Patients should be managed in an airborne infection isolation room. • Health-care workers should wear protective equipment.
  • 23. 1= Japanese B encephalitis • This flavivirus, are endemic in Japan, China, Russia, South- east Asia, India and Pakistan; • Pigs and aquatic birds reservior, and transmission is by mosquitoes. • Exposure to rice paddies is a recognised risk factor. • Incubation period is 4–21 days. • Clinical features: • Subclinical. • Fever, malaise and anorexia is followed by headache, photophobia, vomiting and changes in brainstem function. • Meningism, seizures, cranial nerve palsies, flaccid or spastic paralysis and extrapyramidal syndromes.
  • 24. • Diagnosis: • Neutrophilia, hyponatraemia. • CSF - lymphocytosis and elevated protein. • Management and Prevention: • Treatment is supportive. • Vaccination is recommended for travellers to endemic areas during the monsoon. • Some endemic countries include vaccination in their childhood schedules.
  • 25. 2= West Nile virus • This flavivirus cause disease in Australia, India and Russia through Africa and Southern Europe and across to North America. • Avian reservoir and a mosquito vector. • Older people are at increased risk of neurological disease. • Incubation period 2-6 days. • Clinical features: • Asymptomatic. • Mild febrile illness and arthralgia. • Children may develop a maculopapular rash. • Neurological disease encephalitis, meningitis or asymmetric flaccid paralysis.
  • 26. • Diagnosis: • Detection of viral RNA in blood or CSF. • Serological tests may show cross-reactivity with other flaviviruses. • Management: • is supportive.
  • 27. 3= Enterovirus 71: • Globe of enteroviral disease with hand, foot and mouth disease aseptic meningitis. • Complication: • Encephalitis with flaccid paralysis or by brainstem involvement and death. • Diagnosis: • Vesicle fluid, stool or CSF, and viral RNA can be detected in CSF by RT-PCR.
  • 28. 4= Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-1): • Chronic infection with development of adult T-cell leukaemia/lymphoma (ATL) or HTLV-1-associated myelopathy (HAM). • Japan, the Caribbean, Central and South America, and the Seychelles. • Clinical feature: A. HAM infection: spastic paraparesis with gait disturbance, spasticity of the lower extremities, urinary incontinence, impotence and sensory disturbance. B. HTLV-1 infection: Myositis and uveitis. • Diagnosis: PCR. • Management: is usually supportive.
  • 30. • Variety of viral infections causes rheumatological disease (rubella, parvovirus B19, Hepatitis B Virus, HIV-1, Ebola virus disease.
  • 31. 1= Chikungunya virus: • Chikungunya is an alphavirus. • Africa and Asia, vector Aedes aegypti mosquito. • Incubation period is 2–12 days. • Clinical feature: • Fever and rash. • Arthritis in adults. • Management: • symptomatic.