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Microbiology- Virology
Ecology and Epidemiology of Vector Borne Illness (T Pierce)
18
Medical
Professional
11/11/2009

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Cards

Term
ecological similarities of arboviruses
Definition
  • require a blood sucking arthopod to complete their life cycle
  • require a minimum of two hosts (a vertebrate and arthopod)
  • must produce a level of viremia in the vertebrate host for the arthopod to become infected with a blood meal
  • with few exceptions, zoonoses depend on animal species other than humans for maintenance in nature
  • humans are "incidental hosts" who usually do not contribute to transmission cycle
Term
Three families of arthopods
Definition
  • togaviridae
  • flaviviridae
  • bunyaviridae
Term
Arboviruses usually occur more in what part of the world? why?
Definition
  • tropic areas
  • cold weather disrupts life cycle
Term
serogroups of Flaviviridae
Definition
  • denge fever viruses
  • yellow fever viruses
  • japanese encephalitis
    • west nile virus
Term
West Nile Virus: epidemic vector, reservoir host, human disease syndrome
Definition
  • vector: Culex pipens mosquitoes as enzootic and epizootic vectors
  • reservoir: birds (remember death of crows in US corresponded with disease prevalance across US)
    • correlates very well with flight patterns
  • human syndrome
    • febrile illness
    • encephalitis

Can infect humans and domestic animals

Term
epidemiology of West Nile virus: ones at risk
Definition
  • elderly and immunocompromised
    • affecting most of US
    • increase human fatalities
Term
West Nile Virus: prognosis for those in tropical areas. what are the hypotheses of this prognosis?
Definition
  • severe neurological and fatal disease rare in humans and equines
  • hypotheses
    • birds infected with more virulent strains too sick to migrate
    • cross protective immunity from heterotypic flavivirus Ab
    • numerous endemic and enzootic flaviviruses
    • cross reactive limits transmission
    • heterotypic favivirus Ab immumodulates clinical illness or viral load
    • intrinsic host factors select for less virulent strains
    • more severe are misdiagnosed as dengue infections
Term
dengue fever (vector, reservoir, human disease syndrome)
Definition
  • epidemic vector: Aedes aegypti (female mosquitos)
    • primarily a daytime feeder
    • lives around human habitation
    • lays eggs and produces larvae preferentially in artificial containers
  • reservoir hosts: humans
  • human disease syndrome
    • undifferentiated fever
    • classic dengue fever
    • dengue hemorrhagic fever
    • dengue shock syndrome
Term
replication and transmission of dengue virus
Definition
  1. virus trasmitted to human in mosquito saliva
  2. virus replicates in target organs
  3. virus infects WBC's and lymphatic tissues
  4. virus released and circulates in blood
  5. second mosquito ingests virus with blood
  6. virus replicates in mosquito midgut and other organs, infect salivary glands
  7. virus replicates in salivary gland
Term
Risk factors for developing DHF: source for pre existing anti dengue antibody
Definition
  • previous infection
  • maternal Ab's in infants
  • higher risk in secondary infections
  • higher risk in location with two or more serotypes circulating simultaneously at high levels (hyperendemic transmission)
Term
pathogenesis of DHF/DSS
Definition
  1. primary dengue infection- develop Ab that can neutralize virus of homologous serotype
  2. subsequent infection: pre-existing heterologous Ab's form complexes with new infecting virus serotype
    • do not neutralize the new virus
    • Ab dependent enhancement- new dengue virus, complexed with non- neutralizing Ab's can enter a greater proportion of monocytes, in creasing virus production
  3. infected monocytes release vasoative mediators, resulting in increased vascular permeability and hemorrhagic manifestations characteristic of DHF/DSS
Term
define enzootic
Definition
  • pathogen endemic in nonhumans
Term
define epizoonotic
Definition
higher than average amplification or occurence of a disease or pathogen in non humans
Term
define vector
Definition
  • live organism that serves to communicate disease (must deliver disease to the host)
Term
define reservoir
Definition
  • location or object that serves as a continuing source of disease
Term
define endemic
Definition
habitual presence of disease within a given geographic area
Term
define epidemic
Definition

occurence in a community or region of a group of illnesses of similar nature clearly in excess of normal expectations and derived from a common source

Term
Describe the overlap of the vector born disease system
Definition
  • all components of system, pathogen, vector and host must occur together in time and space for epizootics or epidemics to occur
  • different arrangements of components results in patchwork of suitable and unsuitable places
  • barriers (ex: water bodies, mountains, deserts) may prevent the occurence of a pathogen in an otherwise suitable location
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