Title: Rabies:
1 Rabies Neuroimaging-Virus-Cytokine
Studies Laothamatas, Wacharapluesadee,
Lumlertdacha, Ampawong, Tepsumethanon,
Shuangshoti, Phumesin, Asavaphatiboon,
Worapruekjaru, Avihingsanon, Israsena,
Hemachudha Neuroimaging center - Ramathibodi
Hospital Queen Saovabha Memorial Institute Thai
Red Cross Society Department of Medicine
(Neurology), Chulalongkorn University
Hospital
2Laothamatas, et al American Journal
Neuroradiology 2003 Dog variant similar in
furious and paralytic rabies
3 paralytic 2 furious Serial Examinations
3Bat Variant
Pleasure and Fischbein Bat variant Arch Neurol
2000
4- MRI in human rabies
- Similar patterns in patients associated with bat
- and dog variants
- Similar patterns in patients with furious and
- paralytic rabies
- Preferential locations
- Blood brain barrier - intact (during noncomatose
phase) - (no contrast enhanced lesions seen)
- Similar patterns - is it due to timing of
examination?
52 paralytic dogs
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72 distinct MRI patterns
- PARALYTIC
- brainstem, hypothalamus, thalamus
- temporal, hippocampus
-
- FURIOUS
- widespread lesions
- NO CORRELATION BETWEEN SITE OF LESIONS AND
LIMBIC SYMPTOMS -
-
8 1 Frontal, 2Temporal, 3Hippocampus,
4Parietal, 5Occipital, 6Midbrain, 7Pons,
8Medulla, 9Cerebellum, 10Thalamus,
11Basal ganglia, 12Caudate
9RABIES VIRUS DISTRIBUTION
- 2 paralytic and 1 furious
- virus RNA confined to brainstem
- thalamus-basal ganglia-caudate nucleus
- 1 paralytic
- also at temporal and hippocampus
- 1 furious
- widespread distribution
- NO CORRELATION BETWEEN CLINICAL
- MANIFESTATIONS AND SITES OF INFECTION
- ROUGH CORRELATION BETWEEN MRI AND VIRUS
DISTRIBUTION
10 Critical Elements
- Neuronal cells and paths are to be clean and
clear (intactness of morphology and function) for
further dissemination - - Guigoni, Coulon, noncytolysis of rat
motoneuron - - Juntrakul, delayed mitochondrial cell
death in cord and brainstem - Explaining why rabies patient remains
conscious and does not have limb weakness despite
abundant presence of virus in brainstem and
spinal cord. -
- Needs not to be seen by any immune arms
- - Lafon, apoptosis of invading T cells,
regulation of HLA-G1. - - McKimmie, upregulation of TLR 3, 9
- - Prehaud, human postmitotic neurons produce
IFN-beta - - Blondel, Wang, Shutting off all
innate/adaptive immunity -
-
11Resident cells (microglia, astrocytes, neurons)
- TLR (4)
- IL1-beta, IL- 6/ 10/ 12, TNF-alpha
- (in response to viral infection and to
IFN-gamma, IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha)
12Adaptive Immunity
- Th1 - IL-2/12 TNF IFN gamma
- Th2 - IL-4/5/6/10
- Th3 - TGF beta IL-10
13Other cytokines studied
- Cox-2, FGF
- MCP-1
- IL-8
- IL-18 (IFN gamma and GM-CSF inducer)
- GM-CSF
- VEGF
-
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15- CNS immune responses are not that bad, BUT not
early enough and not very efficient !! - CNS immunity of paralytic is better than furious
- limiting the virus from spreading to other
structures within CNS and from CNS to periphery
(by nerves and lymph to LN) in paralytic - explaining rapid progression and shorter
survival period in human furious rabies patient - ( 5 vs. 11.5 days in paralytic )
-
16Furious rabies
- Cellular immunity to rabies virus
- furious 6/9 vs. paralytic 0/7
- (Hemachudha, 1988)
- Related to more viruses emerged from CNS to
periphery not because immuno-pathogenetic - mechanisms play role in furious rabies
paralytic
furious
Furious rabies
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18Invariably fatal
- Killing process begins, may be, even before CNS
and peripheral immune responses develop