Title: Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers
1Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers
Craig Corcoran NHLS Virology, Groote Schuur
Hospital
2VHF- what is it all about?
- VHFs attract the attention of medical
professionals and the general public for a
variety of reasons - They are high on the public mind as they are
thought of as highly infectious, killing their
victims in a dramatic way - Mysteries remain as to the source of some of them
3Viral Haemorrhagic Fever
- An acute febrile illness characterized by
malaise, myalgia, and prostration dominated by
generalized abnormalities of vascular
permeability, and regulation. Bleeding
manifestations often occur, particularly in
severe cases they are usually diffuse and
reflect widespread vascular damage rather than
life-threatening volume loss.
4Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers
Arenaviridae (Lassa, Junin, Machupo, Guanarito)
Enveloped RNA viruses
Bunyaviridae (CCHF, RVF, Hantaviruses)
Filoviridae (Ebola, Marburg)
5These viruses share a number of features
- They are all RNA viruses and are enveloped (i.e
covered in a fatty (lipid) coating - Their survival is dependent on an animal or
insect host called the natural reservoir - They are geographically restricted to areas where
their host species live - Humans are not the natural reservoir for any of
these viruses. Humans are infected when they come
into contact with infected hosts, and with some
viruses, can transmit the virus to one another - Human outbreaks occur sporadically and
irregularly. These outbreaks cannot be easily
predicted - With few exceptions, there is no cure or
established drug treatment for VHFs
6- VHF and other infectious diseases travel quickly
nowadays
7- Early clinical signs and symptoms may be very
discrete and cannot easily be distinguished from
those of other illnesses
8- Clinical signs and symptoms are easier to
interpret once the disease has progressed already
9VHF-clinical picture
- Short incubation period
- Non-specific onset of illness
- Headache, myalgia, arthralgia
- Pharyngitis, conjunctival injection/bleed
- GIT discomfort/disturbances
- Impaired consciousness
- Haemorrhages
- Proteinuria
- Jaundice
- Rash, exanthema
10VHF-differential diagnosis
- VHF vs. VHF
- clinical picture-unreliable, epidemiology-approxim
ate, laboratory-proof - VHF vs. bacterial infections
- Typhoid, leptospirosis, tick-bite fever,
shigellosis, purulent pharyngitis, sepsis
(streptococcal, staphylococcal, meningococcal),
plague - VHF vs. parasitic diseases
- Malaria, african trypanosomiasis, amoebiasis
- VHF vs. viral diseases
- Viral hepatitis, herpes simplex
11Dengue fever
- Main hosts- non human primates
- Human-to-human transmission through Aedes spp.
- 2.5 billion individuals at risk
- 40-80 million infected each year with thousands
of deaths
12Dengue-clinical features
- Fever, headache, back pain , chills,
musculoskeletal pain, rash, leucopaenia,
thrombocytopaenia - Usually lasts 4-10 days
- Dengue haemorrhagic fever/Dengue shock syndrome
- Acute vascular hyperpermeability plus abnormal
haemostasis - Rapid deterioration after 2-5 days
- Scattered petechiae, ecchymoses, easy
bruising/bleeding, hepatomegaly, epigastric pain - Pathogenesis enhancing antibodies- maternal in
infants, second infection with a different
serotype - Supportive treatment, vaccine in development
13dengue tourniquet test
DHF
14Yellow Fever
- Historic illness stretching back 400 years
- yellow jaundice affecting certain patients
- Mosquitos (Aedes and haemogogus) are the true
reservoir and vector - Estimated 200 000 cases/year, 30 000 deaths
- Symptoms vary from mild to severe with
haemorrhagic manifestations
Africa and South America only
15- acute phase- fever, headache, muscle pain, GIT
disturbance - 15 enter a toxic phase and rapidly develop
jaundice with bleeding manifestations and renal
failure. 50 die within 10-14 days - Supportive treatment
- Prevention vaccine- 17D live attenuated, safe
and highly effective
16Filoviruses Ebola HF
- 1976- Simultaneous large outbreaks in Yambuku
(Zaire, now DRC) and Nzara/Maridi (Sudan) - Originally thought to be one outbreak
- Virology now recognises 2 distinct viruses
- EBO-Z 318 cases 88 fatal
- EBO-S 284 cases 53 fatal
17Ebola Outbreaks
1994
1976, 1979, 2004
1994, 1996, 1996
2000
Congo 2003
1976, 1995
Doctor returning from Gabon
1996
18(No Transcript)
19Filoviruses Marburg HF
- 1967 Marburg, Frankfurt Belgrade
- African green monkeys from Uganda
- 25 primary
- 6 secondary
- 1 sexual transmission from husband to wife 85
days after onset of illness, virus cultured from
semen - 7 deaths
20Marburg outbreaks
21Routes of transmission filoviruses
- Contact with body fluids of an ill patient
- HCW and relatives
- Infected carcasses (handling/cutting of dead
primates) - Needle transfer
- Preparation of body for burial
- Sexual transmission
- Laboratory accident
- Aerosol infectivity potential demonstrated
experimentally in monkeys (Ebola)
22Reservoir of infection
- Not identified in terrestrial animals or in
insects - Non-human primates suffer but are not the
reservoir - Association with caves and mines make bats
suspects for Marburg - Fruit bats- ? reservoir for Ebola and Marburg
(antibodies and RNA found by researchers in Gabon)
23Filoviruses clinical presentation
- 1-2 week incubation
- Abrupt onset fever, headache, myalgia
- Non-pruritic papular erythematous eruption
becoming large coalescing macules and papules - Palatal petechiae and haemorrhages
- GI symptoms, chest pain, delirium
- Sever cases- haemorrhages from venipuncture
sites, mucous membranes and venipuncture sites - 53-88 case-fatality
- 45 hemorrhage
- Supportive treatment
- Vaccines in development
24Marburg blanching maculopapular rash, day 5,
Johannesburg 1975
25Marburg 2005 335 cases, 283 deaths
26Arenaviridae
- Arenaviruses associated with human disease
- Virus Origin of Name Year Distribution
- Lassa Town, Nigeria 1969 West Africa
- Junin Town, Argentina 1957 South America
- Machupo River, Bolivia 1962 South
America - Guanarito Area, Venezuela 1989 South America
- Sabia Town, Brazil 1990 South America
- LCMV Clinical disease 1933 Worldwide
27Lassa general facts
- Viral hemorrhagic fever caused by the Arenavirus
Lassa - Transmitted from rodents to humans
- Discovered in Nigeria, 1969
- Endemic in portions of West Africa
- Seasonal clustering Late rainy and early dry
season - Affects all age groups and both sexes
28Lassa virus
arenosus (Latin sandy)
29- Endemic in areas of West Africa, including
Nigeria, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea - Estimated 300,000-500,000 infections/year, with
5000 deaths - Rodent-to-human transmission (the multimammate
rat, Mastomys species-complex) - Secondary human-to-human transmission with the
potential for nosocomial outbreaks with high
case-fatality
30Rodent reservoir
Mastomys species complex
31Lassa Transmission
- Rodent-to-human
- Inhalation of aerosolized virus
- Ingestion of food or materials contaminated by
infected rodent excreta - Catching and preparing Mastomys as a food source
32Lassa Transmission
- Human-to-human
- Direct contact with blood, tissues, secretions or
excretions of infected humans - Needlestick or cut
- Inhalation of aerosolized virus
- Sex
- Breast feeding
33Lassa Clinical Aspects
- 80 asymptomatic
- Incubation period of 5-21 days
- Gradual onset of fever, headache, malaise and
other non-specific signs and symptoms - Pharyngitis, myalgias, retro-sternal pain, cough
and gastrointestinal symptoms typically seen - A minority present with classic symptoms of
bleeding, neck/facial swelling and shock - Case fatality of hospitalized cases 15-20
- Particularly severe in pregnant women and their
offspring - Deafness a common sequela
34Lassa Treatment
- Supportive measures
- Ribavirin
- Guanosine nucleoside analog
- blocks viral replication by inhibiting IMP
dehydrogenase - Licensed for treatment of RSV and HCV
- Potential adverse effects
- Dose dependent reversible anemia
- Pancreatitis
- Teratogen in rodents
35Crimean-Congo Haemorrhagic Fever
36CCHF-some background
- 1944- Crimean peninsula- Crimean haemorrhagic
fever (about 200 cases) - 1956- Belgian Congo- 1 child- Congo Fever
- Virus isolated in suckling mice in 1967
- 1-10 cases diagnosed annually in South Africa
- Case fatality rate 20-25, 30-50 without proper
medical attention - Mid 1980s- nosocomial outbreak at TBH- 8 cases,
2 deaths - 27 cases October 1996- Oudtshoorn ostrich
abattoir workers
37Distribution of CCHF virus
38- Distribution of the bont-legged ticks in South
Africa - reservoir and vector
Hyalomma marginatum rufipes
Hyalomma marginatum turanicum
Hyalomma truncatum
39(No Transcript)
40- Hyalommas are two host ticks
- Lavae and nymphs feed on the first host
- Adults feed on the second host
- Cattle
- Sheep
- Goats
- Ostriches
41So when are humans at risk?
- Bitten by tick/s or crushed tick/s with bare
hands - Direct contact with fresh blood or other tissues
of livestock or game animals (ear tagging,
castration ect.) - Direct contact with blood, secretions or
excretions of a confirmed or suspected CCHF
patient including needlestick injuries - Resided in or visited a rural environment where
contact with livestock or ticks was possible but
a specific incident constituting exposure cannot
be identified - NB- incubation period usually 2-7 days hence
exposure usually lt 7days
42What are the clinical features?
- Sudden onset
- Fever 38ºC on at least one occasion
- Severe headache
- Myalgia
- Nausea and/or vomiting
- Pharyngitis, conjunctivitis
- Bleeding tendency petechial rash, ecchymoses,
epistaxis, haematemesis, haematuria or melaena
43(No Transcript)
44Skin petechiae
45Petechial haemorrhages on the palate
46Large ecchymoses
47(No Transcript)
48CCHF- laboratory findings
- Leukopaenia or leukocytosis
- WCClt 3 x 109/l or 9 x 109/l
- Thrombocytopaenia
- Platelet lt 150 x 109/l
- Usually lt 100 x 109/l
- Abnormal INR and APTT
- Transaminitis
- AST 100iu/l
- ALT 100iu/l
49CCHF-differential diagnosis
- Malaria, tick bite fever, disseminated HSV, viral
hepatitis, typhoid, rift valley fever, anthrax,
brucellosis, Q fever - History of exposure, incubation period following
exposure, signs and symptoms, laboratory findings
50CCHF viral/antibody kinetics
IgM
IgG
viremia
5
0
10
RT-PCR
16
Viral isolation
ELISA IgM IgG
IFA
IgM duration 2-3 months up to 6 months
51CCHF laboratory diagnosis
- NICD, Johannesburg, BSL-4 (3)
- Viral detection (blood specimen)
- RT-PCR (nested)
- Cell culture (Vero E6 cells)
- Innoculation of newborn mice
- Antibody detection (serum sample)
- IFA
- ELISA
- NT
52Specific management
Isolation and barrier nursing
Supportive monitoring of vital functions blood,
fluid replacement treatment of DIC Specific Rib
avirin ?? Immune plasma
53PREVENTION OF CCHF
- Ticks most active during Dec, Jan, Feb, March-
avoid hiking/camping - DEET repellents for skin
- Permethrin repellents for clothing
- (0.5 permethrin should be applied to clothing
ONLY) - Check for and remove ticks at least twice daily.
- If a tick attaches, do not injure or rupture the
tick. - Remove ticks by grasping mouthparts at the skin
surface using forceps and apply steady traction.
54PREVENTION OF CCHF
- Persons working with livestock- wear gloves and
other protective clothing to prevent skin contact
with infected tissue or blood - Quarantine and treatment with an ascaricide prior
to slaughter (ostriches)
55Infection Control
56(No Transcript)
57Handling laboratory specimens from patients with
suspected or confirmed VHF-non viral diagnostic
specimens
- Common sense- know the risks
- Blood and other specimens are highly infectious
- Risk of transmission through skin/mucous membrane
contact and needle stick injuries. ?? Respiratory
transmission but avoid aerosolisation of
specimens - Limit laboratory testing to what is strictly
necessary and where possible run specimens at a
time when there is minimal disruption to routine
work
58- Useful to for two techs to work together- one to
process the specimen, other to operate the
instrument - Protective clothing disposable gown, 2 pairs of
gloves, mask and eye protection - Centrifuge with closed buckets and decontaminate
after use - Open buckets, specimens and load instrument racks
in a BSL-2 cabinet - Discard residual sample and sampling containers
into 2 glutaraldehyde or sodium hypochlorite - Decontaminate instruments according to
manufacturers instructions - Clean BSL-2 cabinet with glutaraldehyde or sodium
hypochlorite - Discard protective clothing, gloves, specimens,
ect. Into a biohazard labelled autoclave bag.
Double bag and send for autoclaving
59- Haematology
- prepare slides in a BSL-2 cabinet, once fixed
regard as non-infectious - Regard air dried slides as infectious,
decontaminate microscope after use - Microbiology
- protective clothing, process specimens in BSL-2
cabinet, discard residual specimen into 2
glutaraldehyde or sodium hypochlorite - Process positive blood cultures in a BSL-2
cabinet - Referral of specimens- appropriate packaging,
inform receiving laboratory - Virology
- Routine specimens- as above
- VHF diagnosis- requires BSL 3-4 laboratory
60(No Transcript)
61BSL-2 cabinet ?
- provide personnel, environmental and product
protection - Approx 30 air exhausted, 70 re-circulated
A. front openingB. sashC. exhaust HEPA
filterD. rear plenumE. supply HEPA filterF.
blower
62BSL-4 laboratory?
- dangerous and exotic agents that pose a high
individual risk of aerosol-transmitted laboratory
infections and life-threatening disease - special engineering and design features to
prevent microorganisms from being disseminated
into the environment. - Activities are confined to Class III biological
safety cabinets, or Class II biological safety
cabinets used with one-piece positive pressure
personnel suits ventilated by a life support
system.
63 Laboratory safety BSL-4
- In contrast to patient-care,
- high-level protection required for
- Laboratory manipulation
- Mechanical generation of aerosols
- Concentrated infectious material
- Viral culture
64