38
Epstein-Barr Virus

Epstein barr virus

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Epstein barr virus

Epstein-Barr Virus

Page 2: Epstein barr virus

Infectious mononucleosis

• Caused by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). • Characterized by: fatigue, malaise, fever, sore throat, and

generalized lymphadenopathy. • Was called glandular fever: Because it has mononuclear lymphocytosis with

atypical- lymphocytes.

Other infections may cause infectious mononucleosis-like illnesses

Page 3: Epstein barr virus

ETIOLOGY

• EBV, a member of the γ-herpesviruses, causes >90% of cases of infectious mononucleosis.

• Two distinct types of EBV: - type 1 (type A): more prevalent worldwide - type 2 (type B): more common in Africa • Both types lead to persistent, lifelong, latent infection.• Dual infections with both types have been documented

among immunocompromised persons.

Page 4: Epstein barr virus

Infectious mononucleosis-like illnesses

5–10% of are caused by: - CMV -Toxoplasma gondii - adenovirus - viral hepatitis - HIV - rubella virus.

• Causes of majority of mononucleosis-like illnesses still unknown.

Page 5: Epstein barr virus

EPIDEMIOLOGY

• EBV infects >95% of the world's population. • Transmitted by: 1. sexual intercourse 2. through oral secretions. 3. In children by exchange of saliva • Not transmitted by: - Nonintimate contact - fomites.

Page 6: Epstein barr virus

• EBV is shed in oral secretions consistently for >6 mo after acute infection and then intermittently for life.

• 20–30% excrete virus at any particular time.

• 60–90% in infected immunosuppressed patients.

• Immunosuppression help reactivation of latent EBV

• Also found in male and female genital secretions.

Page 7: Epstein barr virus

• Infection with EBV occurs during infancy and early childhood.

• 1ry infection in children usually inapparent.

• in >50% adolescents and adults:

classic triad:

- fatigue

- pharyngitis

- generalized lymphadenopathy.

Page 8: Epstein barr virus

INCIDENCE:

• Estimated: up to 70/100,000 persons/yr.

• in young adults:1/1,000 persons/yr.

• Almost all adults in USA are seropositive.

Page 9: Epstein barr virus

PATHOGENESIS

• Infection of the oral epithelial cells cause pharyngitis • viral replication and cell lysis.

• spreads to near structures as the salivary glands

• viremia and infection of B lymphocytes and the lymphoreticular system, including the liver and spleen.

Page 10: Epstein barr virus

• Characteristic atypical lymphocytes are CD8+ T lymphocytes.

• Transient reversal of the normal 2 : 1

CD4+/CD8+(helper:suppressorT-lymphocytes)

• This causes cytokine release which causes many of the clinical manifestations.

Page 11: Epstein barr virus

• Sexual transmission infects the epithelial cells of the uterine cervix.

• EBV is consistently found intracellularly in smooth muscle cells of leiomyosarcomas of immunocompromised persons.

• EBV has lifelong latent infection after the primary illness.

• The latent virus found in oropharyngeal epithelial cells and in memory B lymphocytes.

Page 12: Epstein barr virus

ONCOGENESIS

• EBV was the 1st human virus to be associated with malignancy.

• Spectrum of EBV infection:

- self-limited infectious mononucleosi

- nonmalignant proliferations

- malignancies in lymphoid and epithelial cell.

Page 13: Epstein barr virus

ONCOGENESIS-2

• Benign EBV-associated proliferations include: - Oral hairy leukoplakia, primarily in adults with AIDS - Lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis, in children with AIDS. • Malignant EBV-associated proliferations include: - nasopharyngeal carcinoma - Burkitt lymphoma - Hodgkin disease - lymphoproliferative disorders, and - leiomyosarcoma in immunodeficient including AIDS.

Page 14: Epstein barr virus

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma

• It is worldwide • 10 times more common in southern China,

where it is the most common malignant tumor among adult men.

• Patients present with: - cervical lymphadenopathy - eustachian tube blockage - nasal obstruction with epistaxis.

Page 15: Epstein barr virus

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma-cont

• Patients have elevated EBV antibody titers that are both diagnostic and prognostic.

Page 16: Epstein barr virus

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma-cont

• Diagnosis: - CT and MRI - Biopsy from lymph nodes or masses - Surgery is important for staging and diagnosis.

Treatment:• Radiation therapy is effective for control of the

primary tumor and regional nodal metastases.• Chemotherapy is effective but not always curative.Prognosis: good if the tumor is localized.

Page 17: Epstein barr virus

Endemic (African) Burkitt lymphoma

• Often in the jaw• The most common childhood cancer in equatorial East Africa• The median age at onset is 5 yr. • These regions are endemic for Plasmodium falciparum

malaria and have a high rate of EBV infection early in life. • Malarial exposure acts as a B-lymphocyte mitogen

increasing the risk of Burkitt lymphoma. • Approximately 98% of cases of endemic Burkitt lymphoma

contain the EBV genome.

Page 18: Epstein barr virus

1Other Malignancies-

• Infection with EBV also increase the risk for Hodgkin disease.

• EBV is find in the Reed-Sternberg cells which are pathognomonic malignant cells of Hodgkin disease.

• Duncan syndrome: (X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome): is associated with severe, persistent, and fatal EBV infection .

• Many Immunodeficiency syndromes are associated with an increased incidence of EBV-associated B-lymphocyte lymphoma include:

- X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome, - common-variable immunodeficiency, - ataxia-telangiectasia, - Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, and - Chédiak-Higashi syndrome.

Page 19: Epstein barr virus

- T-lymphocyte lymphomas (including lethal midline) - angio-immunoblastic lymphadenopathy-like lymphoma - thymomas and thymic carcinomas - supraglottic laryngeal carcinomas - lympho-epithelial tumors of the respiratory tract and GIT. - gastric adenocarcinoma.

2Other Malignancies-

Page 20: Epstein barr virus

CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONSof EBV infection

• The incubation period: 30–50 days. • 1ry infection in infants and young children is silent. • In older patients: insidious and vague onset.

Page 21: Epstein barr virus

Prodromal symptoms: last 1–2 wk. • Malaise• fatigue• Fever & headache• sore throat, nausea, abdominal pain• myalgia.

• Splenic enlargement :may cause left upper abdominal discomfort and tenderness

Page 22: Epstein barr virus

Physical examination• generalized lymphadenopathy (90% of cases), • splenomegaly (50% of cases), • hepatomegaly (10% of cases).

• Lymphadenopathy :

Common in: - anterior and posterior cervical

- submandibular

less common in: axillary and inguinal.

Epitrochlear lymphadenopathy is suggestive of infectious mononucleosis.

Page 23: Epstein barr virus

• elevated liver enzymes are common. • Splenomegaly to 2–3 cm below the costal

margin is typical; massive enlargement is uncommon.

• The sore throat is often accompanied by moderate to severe pharyngitis with marked tonsillar enlargement, occasionally with exudates .

• Petechiae at junction of the hard and soft palate• Others: rashes and edma of the eyelids .

Page 24: Epstein barr virus
Page 25: Epstein barr virus

• Maculopapular in 3–15% of patients • Up to 80% of patients have “ampicillin rash” if treated

with ampicillin or amoxicillin. • This vasculitic rash is immune mediated and resolves

without specific treatment. • Gianotti-Crosti syndrome: a symmetrical rash on the

cheeks with multiple erythematous papules, which may coalesce into plaques, and persists for 15–50 days.

Page 26: Epstein barr virus

DIAGNOSIS

• clinical symptoms• atypical lymphocytosis• heterophile antibody or specific EBV antibodies.• Culture of EBV requires 4–6 wk. • The cultures are observed for 6 wk for signs of cell

transformation: - proliferation and rapid growth - mitotic figures: large vacuoles, granular morphology,

and cell aggregation.

Page 27: Epstein barr virus

Differential Diagnosis

• Cytomegalovirus-adenovirus-viral hepatitis-HIV- rubella. • Streptococcal pharyngitis: not associated with

hepatosplenomegaly. - If failure of streptococcal pharyngitis to improve within

48–72 hr you suspect infectious mononucleosis.

• In patients with extremely high or low white blood cell counts, moderate thrombocytopenia, and even hemolytic anemia.

You do: bone marrow examination and hematologic consultation to exclude the possibility of leukemia.

Page 28: Epstein barr virus

LABORATORY TESTS

• leukocytosis of 10,000–20,000 cells/mm3: In >90% of cases ⅔ are lymphocytes 20–40% atypical lymphocytes

• The atypical lymphocytes are large, with larger eccentric and folded nuclei with a lower nuclear-to-cytoplasm ratio.

• the highest degree of atypical lymphocytes is classically seen with

EBV infection.

• Mild thrombocytopenia rarely associated with purpura. • Mild elevation of hepatic transaminases without jaundice.

Page 29: Epstein barr virus

• Other syndromes with atypical lymphocytosis : - cytomegalovirus infection - toxoplasmosis - viral hepatitis - rubella - roseola - mumps - tuberculosis - typhoid - Mycoplasma - malaria, - Some drug reactions.

Page 30: Epstein barr virus

HETEROPHILE ANTIBODY TEST

• known as Paul-Bunnell antibodies, are IgM antibodies detected by the Paul-Bunnell-Davidsohn test for sheep red cell agglutination.

• Titers of >1 : 28 or >1 : 40, depending on the

dilution system used, after absorption with guinea pig cells are considered positive.

Page 31: Epstein barr virus

response to viral capsid antigen (VCA) is divided because of the significant differences noted according to age of the patient.

SPECIFIC EBV ANTIBODIES

Page 32: Epstein barr virus

TREATMENT • no specific treatment

• Acyclovir in high doses of acyclovir, with or without corticosteroids: - decreases viral replication and oropharyngeal shedding

- not reduce the severity or duration of symptoms.

• Rest and symptomatic treatments are the mainstays of management. • Bed rest is necessary only when the patient has debilitating fatigue.

• Blunt abdominal trauma may predispose to splenic rupture: advise not to participate in contact sports during the 1st 2–3 wk of

illness.

Page 33: Epstein barr virus

• Short courses of corticosteroids (<2 wk) may be helpful for complications. Indications only if complications:

- airway obstruction - thrombocytopenia with hemorrhaging - autoimmune hemolytic anemia - seizures, and meningitis. • A recommended dosage is prednisone 1 mg/kg/day

(maximum 60 mg/day) or equivalent for 7 days and tapered over another 7 days.

Page 34: Epstein barr virus

COMPLICATIONS

• Subcapsular splenic hemorrhage or splenic rupture: - during the 2nd week of the disease - rate of <0.5% of cases in adults; much lower in children. • Rupture is commonly related to trauma, which often may

be mild, and is rarely fatal. • Airway obstruction: - due to swelling of tonsils and oropharyngeal lymphoid

tissue - manifests as drooling, stridor, and difficult breathing. - give steroids, may need intubation for 24 hours.

Page 35: Epstein barr virus

COMPLICATIONS-2

Nurological:• Headache• seizures and ataxia• Alice in Wonderland syndrome (metamorphopsia):

Perceptual distortions of sizes, shapes, and spatial relationships.

• There may be meningitis with nuchal rigidity and mononuclear cells in the CSF, facial nerve palsy, transverse myelitis, and encephalitis.

Page 36: Epstein barr virus

• Guillain-Barré syndrome or Reye syndrome may follow acute illness.

• Hemolytic anemia, often with a positive Coombs test result and with cold agglutinins specific for red cell antigen i, occurs in 3% of cases.

• The onset is typically in the 1st 2 wk of illness and lasts for <1 mo.• Aplastic anemia is a rare complication that usually presents 3–4 wk

after the onset of illness, usually with recovery in 4–8 days, but some cases do require bone marrow transplantation.

• Mild thrombocytopenia and neutropenia are common, but severe thrombocytopenia (<20,000 platelets/μL) or severe neutropenia (<1,000 neutrophils/μL) are rare.

• Myocarditis or interstitial pneumonia may occur, both resolving in 3–4 wk. Other rare complications include pancreatitis, parotitis, and orchitis.

COMPLICATIONS-3

Page 37: Epstein barr virus

PROGNOSIS • The prognosis for complete recovery is excellent if no

complications ensue during the acute illness.

• The major symptoms typically last 2–4 wk, followed by gradual recovery.

• Second infections with a different type of EBV (type 1 or type 2) have been demonstrated in immunocompromised persons.

• Prolonged and debilitating fatigue, malaise, and some disability that may wax and wane for several weeks to 6 mo are common complaints even in otherwise unremarkable cases.

• Occasional persistence of fatigue for a few years after infectious mononucleosis is well recognized.

Page 38: Epstein barr virus