Title: Immunodeficiencies HIV/AIDS
1Immunodeficiencies HIV/AIDS
2Immunodeficiencies
- Due to impaired function of one or more
components of the immune or inflammatory
responses. - Problem may be with
- B cells
- T cells
- phagocytes
- or complement
3- Immunodeficiencies may be
- Congenital (primary)
- Caused by a genetic abnormality
- Acquired (secondary) more common
- Normal physiologic changes aging
- Severe malnutrition or selective deficiency
- Caused by another illness Diabetes Cancer Vira
l infection
4Main cause is disruption of lymphocyte
function Stem cell defect Prevent normal
lymphocyte development and total failure of
immune system Lymphoid organ dysfunction preve
nts maturation of B or T cells or final
maturation of B cells lack of specific class
of immunoglobulins
5Hallmark Tendency to develop unusual or
recurrent, severe infections. Deficiencies in T
cells suggested by recurrent infections with
viruses, fungi and yeast. Deficiencies in B
cells suggested by recurrent infections with
certain bacteria or viruses affected by humoral
immunity
6Routine treatment
- No live vaccines
- Be aware breaks in skin for routine blood tests
can cause septicemia - At risk for Graft-versus-Host disease
7Acquired Immunodeficiencies Nutritional
deficiencies Iatrogenic drugs
immunosuppressive therapy chemotherapy and
radiation Trauma esp. burns Stress
8HIV/AIDS
- Human immunodeficiency virus
- Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
- Two forms HIV1 and HIV-2
- High mortality rate
- Asymptomatic carriers
- Logarithmic increase in number of patients
- Medical community cannot control spread
9Transmission
- Sexual transmission
- Contaminated needles sharing
- Blood products
- Transplacental or nursing
10History
- Probably arose in central Africa before 1931
- Believed to be a monkey virus mutated to affect
humans - Found Abs against HIV in serum samples taken in
1960s - First cases reported 1980s in male homosexuals
11- In 1995, the number 1 cause of death for ages 25
44 in U.S. - Heterosexual transmission is increasing in the
U.S. and is the most common route of transmission
outside of the U.S. - Greater than 50 of cases are women
12High Risk Individuals
- Homosexual/bisexual men
- I.V. drug abusers
- Recipients of blood products
- Female partners of bisexual men/ I.V. drug
abusers - Children of infected mothers
13- Health care workers are at risk
- Nurses
- Clinical lab techs
- Most HIV workers infected off duty
- TAKE PRECAUTIONS !!!
14Pathogenesis
- Retrovirus RNA plus reverse transcriptase,
integrase and protease - Attachment Binds to CD4 receptors (TH) and
chemokine receptors gp 120 or gp 41 - Internalization RNA enters the cell
- Reverse transcriptase converts RNA ?DNA
- Integrase inserts viral DNA into Host DNA
15- Viral DNA is transcribed into mRNA
- mRNA is translated into protein polyprotein
- Cleavage of polyprotein into usable proteins
- Viruses are assembled
- Host cell is killed as viruses are released
- BUT helper T cells are replaced and viruses are
killed, but CD4 cells decrease over time.
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18Helper T cells
- Coordinate the response of both B and T cells
- Patients susceptible to infections and
malignancies - Normally 600 - 1200 /mm3
- Category1 gt 500 cells/ µL
- Category 2 200- 499 cells/ µL
- Category 3 lt 200 cells/ µL (AIDS)
19Clinical Manifestations
- Category A no symptoms or persistent generalized
lymphadenopathy or symptoms of primary HIV
infection - Category B symptoms of immune deficiency not
serious enough to be called AIDS - Category C person has AIDS defining illness
(chart 15-2)
20Clinical manifestations
- Infection - serologically negative
- In seven days followed by acute phase in 30-70
of people lasts a few days - 2 weeks resembles
influenza or mononucleosis sore throat, muscle
aches, fever, swollen glands, rash, headache
or meningitis
21- Seroconversion occurs 3 17 weeks after
infection HIV proteins can be detected in the
blood - Seropositive patients have anti-HIV Abs
circulating - Following infection through blood products, in
general see anti-HIV Abs in 4-7 weeks - Following infection through sexual exposure, it
may take 6-14 months for detection of anti-HIV
Abs (one case - years)
22Window period time between infection, Ab
detection An infected person can infect others
within 2 weeks of initial HIV exposure, at a time
well before anti-HIV Abs can be detected.
Average time from initial infection to AIDS is
about 10 years, though this rate of development
is lengthening with new treatments available.
23- Chronic phase can last for years
- Asymptomatic
- Viral load decreases
- Chronic lymphadenopathy
- orofacial herpes zoster, oral candidiasis
- B cells make antibodies, but are ineffective
- Gradual drop in T4 cells no symptoms until
below 200/mm3
24- Crisis phase ARC AIDS-related complex
- CD4 count lt 200 cells/ µL
- Long lasting fever lt 3 months
- Malaise
- Diarrhea
- Weight loss and wasting syndrome
- Multiple opportunistic infections
- Persistent viral or fungal infections of the skin
- Without therapy death in 2-3 years
25AIDS Related Diseases
- AIDS To be positive for AIDS requires positive
lab test and clinical symptoms -Unusual
infections or neoplasms - Kaposis sarcoma
- Non-Hodgkins lymphoma
- Wasting syndrome
- AIDS dementia complex
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27AIDS Related Diseases
- Fungal
- Candidiasis
- Cryptococcus
- Viral
- Herpes simplex
- Herpes zoster
- Cytomegalovirus
28Opportunistic infections
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
- Toxoplasmosis gondii
- Mycobacterium avium intracellulare
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
29Treatment
- Expensive 1,200 -1,500 / month if healthy
- Cocktail of 3 different meds
30Treatment
- Restore immune function
- Hasnt been easy or successful
- Bone marrow transplant, immunomodulators,
transfusions - Prevent viral replication
- Reverse transcriptase inhibitors (AZT)
- Protease inhibitors
- Integrase inhibitiors
- Maturation inhibitors
- Fusion inhibitors - newest
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33Difficulties with Vaccines
- HIV is antigenically variable
- Antibodies are not protective
- Can be transmitted by cell to cell contact
- Animal models are protected species
34Other problems
- Viral DNA incorporated into host cell DNA
- Virus mutates as the virus replicates