Title: Infectious Mononucleosis.
1Infectious Mononucleosis.
2- Infectious Mononucleosis (IM also known as EBV
infectious mononucleosis or glandular fever or
Pfeiffer's disease or Filatov's disease and
sometimes colloquially as the kissing disease
from its oral transmission or simply as mono in
North America and as glandular fever in other
English-speaking countries) is an infectious,
widespread viral disease caused by the
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV).
3Infectious Mononucleosis Cause
- EBV 90 of acute IM
- Etiology of most EBV-negative IM unknown
- Other Herpesviruses
- Cytomegalovirus (CMV)
- herpes simplex 1 and simplex 2
- human herpesvirus 6
- Other viruses
- adenovirus
- hepatitis A, hepatitis B, or hepatitis C
- rubella
- primary human immunodeficiency virus in
adolescents or young adults.
4VIROLOGY.
- Epstein Barr Virus (EBV)
- Herpes Family (linear DNA virus HHV4)
- Surrounded by nucleocapsid and glycoprotein
envelope - Also associated with nasopharyngeal carcinoma,
Burkitts lymphoma, Hodgkins Disease, B cell
lymphoma.
5Virology Structure and Genome
- The structure of EBV is typical for a member
of herpesvirus family
Inner core of DNA surrounded by a nucleocapsid,
tegument,and an envelope. - The entire EBV genome short and long
sections of unique sequences
(Us and UL)
6Epidemiology Incidence
- Population-based studies 90 of population have
been infected or have antibodies to the virus. - Highest incidence rates 15-19 years.
- No seasonal predilection.
- Higher rate in persons of white race than in
other ethnic groups.
7Epidemiology Seroprevalence
- In the mid-1960s detection of antibodies to
- VCA (long
lasting, early in infection) - - EA (short duration, early in infection)
- EBV-VCA antibodies 85 in normal adults
- 80-95 of adults have serologic evidence, most
infections occuring during infancy and children.
8Primary EBV infection Seroprevalence
- In developing countries -80-100 of children
becoming infected by 3-6 yrs of age - -clinically silent or mild disease.
- In developed countries
-occurs later in life, 10-30 years of age
-induce clinically
mononucleosis syndrome (U.S.college students
50-75 associated with primary EBV infection)
9Infectious MononucleosisTransmission
The Kissing Disease
10Epidemiology Transmission
- Incubation period 30 50 days.
- (shorter in young children)
- Oral secretion major
role but occur slowly - Blood products,Transplanted organs
less commonly than CMV - Intrauterine infrequently if
infected no adverse fetal outcomes and
no viral transmission to the fetus.
11 Pathophysiology
- Reservoir of EBV Humans only.
- EBV founds in the saliva for the first 12-18
months after acquisition. - Viral replication
- lymphoreticular system
- liver
- spleen
- B lymphocytes in peripheral blood.
12 Pathophysiology
- Host immune response to the viral infection
- atypical lymphocytes.
- After acute EBV infection, latently infected
lymphocytes and epithelial cells persist and are
immortalized. - During latent infection, the virus is present in
the lymphocytes and oropharyngeal epithelial
cells as episomes in the nucleus.
13 Pathophysiology
- A low rate of viral reactivation occurs within
the population of latently infected cells. - Primary source of new virus in latently infection
- Epithelial cells.
- Virus can be isolated from oral secretions of
20-30 of healthy latently infected individuals
at anytime.
14Molecular Biology Replication
- To infect cells, EBV uses a cell surface receptor
(CR2,CD21) found primarily on B lymphocytes and
nasopharyngeal epithelial cells. - MHC class II protein functions as a cofactor for
this virus-receptor interaction. - After infection of epithelial cells, active
replication occurs and leads to lysis and death
of the cell.
15Molecular Biology Replication
- Viral capsid antigens (VCAs) are the primary
structure protiens in viral capsids and are found
in replicating cells. - EBV early antigens (EAs) consist of gt15 protiens
codes by genes distributed throughout the genome. - EBV nuclear antigen (EBNA) corresponds to six
virally encoded protiens found in the nucleus of
an EBV-infected cell.
16Viral capsid antigens (VCAs)
17Molecular Biology Latency
- Latently infected B cells are the primary
reservoir of EBV in the body. - gt100 gene products may be expressed during
active viral replication, only 11 are
expressed during viral latency. - In this way, the virus limits cytotoxic T-cell
recognition of EBV-infected cells.
18Molecular Biology Transformation
- EBV generally transforms relatively mature B
lymphocytes secreting a complete immunoglobulin
product. - EBV infect and transform B cells in earlier
stages of development (e.g. pre-B cells and
lymphoid precusors lacking immunoglobulin gene
rearrangement)
19Molecular Biology EBV Subtype
- 2 subtypes
- EBV-1 (type A) Western countries
- EBV-2 (type B) less virulence
- In immunocompromised persons co-infection
both type 1 and type 2 strains -
- No one subtype is responsible for specific
lymphoproliferative diseases
(geographic differences)
20Infectious Mononucleosis
21Serum EBV antibodies
22Serum Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) Antibodies in EBV
Infection
Infection VCA IgG VCA IgM EA(D) EBNA
No previous infection - - - -
Acute infection Recent infection /- /- /- - /-
Past infection - /-
23Symptoms.
- Acute infectious mononucleosis
- fatique and malaise 1-2 wks
- sore throat, pharyngitis
- retro-orbital headache
- fever
- myalgia
- nausea
- abdominal pain
- generalized lymphadenopathy
- hepatosplenomegaly
24- Pharyngitis is the most consistent physical
finding. - 1/3 of patients exudative pharyngitis.
-
- 25-60 of patients petechiae at the junction
of the hard and soft palates. - Tonsillar enlargement can be massive, and
occasionally it causes airway obstruction.
25- Lymphadenopathy 90
- symmetrical enlargement.
- mildly tender to palpation and not fix.
- posterior cervical lymph nodes.
- anterior cervical and submandibular nodes.
- axillary and inguinal nodes.
- Enlarged epitrochlear nodes are very suggestive
of infectious mononucleosis.
26- Hepatomegaly 60
- jaundice is rare.
- Percussion tenderness over the liver is common.
- Splenomegaly 50
- palpable 2-3 cm below the left costal margin and
may be tender. - rapidly over the first week of symptoms, usually
decreasing in size over the next 7-10 days. - spleen can rupture from relatively minor trauma
or even spontaneously.
27- Maculopapular rash 15
- usually faint, widely scattered, and erythematous
- occurs in 3-15 of patients and is more common in
young children. - 80 of patients, treatment with amoxicillin or
ampicillin is associated with rash - Circulating immunoglobulin G (IgG) and
immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies to ampicillin
are demonstrable.
28Infectious Mononucleosis
IM with rash after treatment with amoxicillin or
ampicillin
29Infectious Mononucleosis
- Eyelid edema 15
- may be present, especially in the first week
- Children younger than 4 years more commonly
- splenomegaly or hepatomegaly
- rash
- symptoms of an upper respiratory tract infection
30Clinical manifestation of IM
in children and adults
- Frequency ()
- Sign or symptom Age lt 4 yr Age 4 16
yr Adults (range) - Lymphadenopathy 94 95 93 100
- Fever 92 100 63 100
- Sore throat or 67 75 70 91
- tonsillopharyngitis
- Exudative 45 59 40 74
- tonsillopharyngitis
- Splenomegaly 82 53 32 51
- Hepatomegaly 63 30 6 24
- Cough or rhinitis 51 15 5 31
- Rash 34 17 0 15
- Abdominal pain or 17 0 2 14
- discomfort
- Eyelid edema 14 14 5 34
31Infectious Mononucleosis
32Infectious Mononucleosis
Exudative pharyngotonsillitis
33Infectious Mononucleosis
Hepatosplenomegaly
Cervical lymphadnopathy
34(No Transcript)
35Infectious Mononucleosis Lab
- The 3 classic criteria for laboratory
confirmation - 1 lymphocytosis
- 2 the presence of at least 10 atypical
lymphocytes on peripheral smear - 3 a positive serologic test for Epstein-Barr
virus (EBV).
36Infectious Mononucleosis Lab
- Complete blood count
- 40-70, Leukocytosis
(WBC 10,000-20,000 cells per
cm3) - By the second week of illness, approximately
10 have a WBC count gt 25,000 per
cm3. - 80-90 of patients have lymphocytosis,
with greater than 50 lymphocytes.
Lymphocytosis is greatest during 2-3 weeks of
illness and lasts for 2-6 weeks. - 20-40 of the lymphocytes atypical
lymphocytes gt 10 Downey types - 25-50, Mild thrombocytopenia
37Infectious Mononucleosis
atypical lymphocytes Downey types
38Infectious Mononucleosis Lab
- Liver function tests
- 80-100 of patients elevated LFT
- Alkaline phosphatase, AST and bilirubin
peak 5-14 days after onset - GGT peaks at 1-3 weeks. Occasionally, GGT remains
mildly elevated for up to 12 months - 95 of patients elevated LDH
- most liver function test results are normal by
3 months.
39Infectious Mononucleosis Lab
- Heterophile antibodies
- 50 in first week of illness
- 60-90 in the second or third weeks
- begins to decline during the fourth or fifth week
and often is less than 140 by 2-3 months after
symptom onset - 20 of patients have positive titers 1-2 years
after acquisition - children lt 2 years 10-30
- children 2-4 years 50-75
40Infectious Mononucleosis Lab
- EBV serology
- EAs (early antigens) early in the lytic
cycle - VCA (Viral capsid antigen) and membrane antigens
late in the lytic cycle - EBNA (Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen) latent
infection - Antibodies to membrane antigens usually are
not measured
41Infectious Mononucleosis Lab
- Time course of antibody production
- EA is rising at symptom onset rise for 3-4
weeks, then quickly decline to undetectable
levels by 3-4 months, although low levels may be
detected intermittently for years. - VCA-IgM usually is measurable at symptom onset,
peaks at 2-3 weeks, then declines and
unmeasurable by 3-4 months. - VCA-IgG rises shortly after symptom onset, peaks
at 2-3 months, then drops slightly but persists
for life. - EBNA convalescence and remain present for life.
42IM Treatment
- Medical Care
- self-limited illness not require specific
therapy. - Inpatient therapy of medical and surgical
complications may be required. - Acyclovir (10 mg/kg/dose IV q8h for 7-10 d)
- inhibit viral shedding from the oropharynx
- clincal course is not significantly
- IVIG (400 mg/kg/d IV for 2-5 d)
- immune thrombocytopenia associated with
43IM Treatment
- Medical Care
- Short-course corticosteroids
- prednisolone (1 mg/kg/d, max 60 mg/d for 7 d
- and tapered over another 7 d)
- Marked tonsillar inflammation with impending
airway obstruction - Massive splenomegaly
- Myocarditis
- Hemolytic anemia
- Hemophagocytic syndrome
- Seizure and meningitis
- Surgical Care
- Splenic rupture.
44Infectious Mononucleosis
- Activity
- depends on severity of the patient's symptoms.
- Extreme fatigue bed rest for 1-2 weeks.
- Malaise may persist for 2-3 months.
- Patients should not participate in contact sports
or heavy lifting for at least 2-3 weeks - some authors recommend avoiding activities that
may cause splenic trauma for 2 months.
45IM Complications
- Hepatitis gt 90 of patients
- LFT lt 2-3 times of NUL in the second and third
weeks of illness - 45 of patients elevated bilirubin, but
jaundice occurs in only 5. Mild thrombocytopenia
occurs in approximately 50 of patients with
infectious mononucleosis. -
- Platelet count approximately 1 week after
symptom onset (100,000-140,000/cm3. ), then
gradually improves over the next 3-4 weeks. Mild
thrombocytopenia occurs in approximately 50 of
patients with infectious mononucleosis. -
46IM Complications
- Hemolytic anemia
- 0.5-3, associated with cold-reactive antibodies,
anti-I antibodies, and with autoantibodies to
triphosphate isomerase - mild and is most significant during the second
and third weeks of symptoms. - Upper airway obstruction
- 0.1-1, due to hypertrophy of tonsils and other
lymph nodes of Waldeyer ring - treatment with corticosteroids may be beneficial
-
47- Splenic rupture 0.1-0.2
- Spontaneous or history of some antecedent trauma.
- occur during the second and third weeks.
- mild-to-severe abdominal pain below the left
costal margin, sometimes with radiation to the
left shoulder and supraclavicular area. - Massive bleeding Shock
- Hematologic complications
- hemophagocytic syndrome.
- Immune thrombocytopenic purpura occurs and may
evolve to aplastic anemia. - accelerate hemolytic anemia in congenital
spherocytosis or hereditary elliptocytosis. - Disseminated intravascular coagulation associated
with hepatic necrosis has occurred.
48IM Complications
- Neurologic complications lt 1
- during the first 2 weeks.
- negative for the heterophile antibody.
- Severe (fatal), complete recovery
- aseptic meningitis, acute viral encephalitis,
coma, meningitis, and meningoencephalopathy. - Hypoglossal nerve palsy, Bell palsy, hearing
loss, brachial plexus neuropathy,
multiple cranial nerve palsies, Guillain-Barré
syndrome, autonomic neuropathy, gastrointestinal
dysfunction secondary to selective cholinergic
dysautonomia, acute cerebellar ataxia, transverse
myelitis. - Cardiac and pulmonary complications
- rare
- chronic interstitial pneumonitis.
- myocarditis and pericarditis.
49IM Complications
- Autoimmune complications
- Autoimmune diseases and Reye syndrome have been
associated with EBV infection. - Infectious mononucleosis stimulates production of
many antibodies not directed against EBV. These
include autoantibodies, anti-I antibodies, cold
hemolysins, antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid
factors, cryoglobulins, and circulating immune
complexes. These antibodies may precipitate
autoimmune syndromes.
50IM Complications
- Miscellaneous complications
- Renal disorders immune deposit nephritis, renal
failure, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. - After cardiac bypass or transfusion, an
infectious mononucleosislike syndrome primary
CMV infection gt EBV. - A syndrome of chronic fatigue, myalgias, sore
throat, and mild cognitive dysfunction occurring
primarily in young adult females initially was
attributed to EBV. Current data suggest that EBV
is not the etiologic agent.
51IM Prognosis
- Immunocompetent full recovery in several
months. - The common hematologic and hepatic complications
resolve in 2-3 months. - Neurologic complications
- Children resolve quickly
- Adults neurological deficits
- All individuals develop latent infection
- asymptomatic.
52PREVENTION.
53Prevention
- Isolation is not required low transmission.
- Avoid contact with saliva.
- Avoid kissing when in acute phase.
- Maintain clean conditions avoid sharing toys
among children in day care. - Vaccine development is proceeding, although the
role of a vaccine is unclear.
54- THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION.