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Viruses Associated with Gastroenteritis Ghazi Jamjoom VIRAL AGENTS CAUSING GASTROENTERITIS Major Viruses 1. Rotavirus 2. Enteric adenoviruses 3. Noroviruses : a. Norwalk-like viruses b. Calicivirus c. Astrovirus Noroviruses Norwalk-like viruses Caliciviruses Astroviruses other viruses Viruses associated with gastroenteritis (cont) : Other viruses (minor): • Coronaviruses • Parvoviruses • Pestiviruses • Toroviruses ROTAVIRUS Family Reoviridae Genus Rotavirus ROTAVIRUS • First isolated in 1973 from children with diarrhea • EM identification from duodenal biopsies • Human and animal strains Rotavirus Rotavirus- EM Structure ROTAVIRUS • 60-80nm in size • Non-enveloped virus • Double capsid • EM appearance of a wheel with radiating spokes • Icosahedral symmetry • double stranded (ds) RNA in 11 segments (double – double) ROTAVIRUS- 3D STRUCTURE Viral Structural Proteins (VP) • Outer structural proteins - VP7 and VP4 VP7=glycoprotein VP4=protease-cleaved, P protein, viral hemagglutinin, and forms spikes from the surface • Inner core structural proteins VP 1, 2, 3, 6 • VP6 is an important antigenic determinant • Genome is composed of 11 segments of double-stranded RNA, six structural coding for proteins five nonstructural • Seven serological groups have been identified (A-G), three of which (groups A, B, and C) infect humans . STRUCTURE Gene coding assignment Classification • Groups, subgoups, serotypes based on viral capsid proteins • 7 Groups (A through G) • Group A is the most common and has 2 subgroups • 10 human serotypes based on G protein (VP 7) • 8 P protein serotypes Classification (contd.) • Electropherotypes mobility of RNA segments by PAGE Used in epidemiologic studies Rotavirus - Properties • Virus is stable in the environment • Relatively resistant to handwashing agents • Susceptible to disinfection with 95% ethanol, ‘Lysol’, formalin Pathogenesis • Targeted host cells- mature enterocytes lining the tips of intestinal villi • Intermediate/infective sub-viral particle (ISVP) produced through proteolysis • Enter host cell by endocytosis • Virus replicates in the host cell cytoplasm Replication • mRNA transcription with viral RNA polymerase • Capsid proteins formed • mRNA segments formed, assembled into immature capsid • mRNA replicated to form double stranded RNA genome Histopathology • Mature enterocytes lining the tips of intestinal villi are affected • Villous atrophy and blunting • Death of the mature enterocytes Histopathology Epidemiology - Worldwide • Millions are affected • 600,000-850,000 deaths/year • A major cause of diarrhea-associated hospitalizations • Seroprevalence studies show that antibody is present in most by age 3y. RotavirusWorldwide distribution (source- centers for disease control and prevention) Estimated Global Distribution of The 800,000 Annual Deaths Caused By Rotavirus Diarrhea Epidemiology : U.S. •No. of children under 5y. affected ~ 2.7 million •Physician visits per year ~ 500,000 •Hospitalizations per year ~ 50,000 •Deaths per year ~ 20 - 40 •% cases w/ dehydration ~ 1-2.5% Epidemiology • Age- 4mo - 2 years Protection of younger infants through transplacental antibody transfer • Asymptomatic infections are common, especially in adults • Nosocomial infections • Outbreaks Epidemiology (contd.) • Seasonality Winter months (Nov. through May in US) Gradual spread W to E Year-round in the tropics • Incubation period - thought to be <4 days Epidemiology : U.S. (Source- centers for disease control and prevention) Epidemiology (transmission) • Mainly person to person via fecal-oral route • Fomites • Food and water-borne spread is possible • Spread via respiratory route is speculated Epidemiology (spread) • Contagious from before onset of diarrhea to a few days after end of diarrhea • Large amounts of viral particles are shed in diarrheal stools • Infective dose is only 10-100 pfu EPIDEMIOLOGY Differences in Groups • Group A infections are most common • Group B has been associated with outbreaks in adults in China • Group C is responsible for sporadic cases of diarrhea in infants around the world Clinical Features • Incubation period - thought to be <4 days • Fever- can be high grade (>102F in 30%) • Vomiting, nausea precede diarrhea • Diarrhea - usually watery (no blood or leukocytes) - lasts 3-9 days - longer in malnourished and immune deficient indiv. - NEC and hemorrhagic GE seen in neonates Mechanism of diarrhea • Watery diarrhea due to net secretion of intestinal fluid • Activation of the enteric nervous system possible role of enterotoxin Clinical Features (contd.) • Dehydration is the main contributor to mortality. • Secondary malabsorption of lactose and fat, and chronic diarrhea are possible • Recovery is usually complete. • However, severe diarrhea without fluid and electrolyte replacement may result in dehydration and death . Immunological Aspects • Immunoglobulin (Ig) A , in the lumen of the gut immunity to infection . • Actively or passively acquired antibodies (including antibodies in colostrum and mothers milk) lessen the severity of disease but does not consistently prevent reinfection . • Absence of antibody and diarrhea . small amounts of virus infection Diagnosis • Antigen detection in stool by ELISA, Latex Agglutination (for Group A rotavirus) • EM- non-Group A viruses also • Culture- Group A rotaviruses can be cultured in monkey kidney cells • Serology for epidemiologic studies Treatment and Prevention • TreatmentSupportive - oral, IV rehydration • PreventionHandwashing and disinfection of surfaces Vaccine • Live tetravalent rhesus-human reassortant vaccine (Rotashield) • Licensed for use in August 1998 • Removed from the market in October 1999 due to risk of intussusception • Cases were seen 3-20 days after vaccination • Approx. 15 cases/1.5 million doses • New vaccine from bovine rotavirus under trial Production of rhesus rotavirus (RRV), human rotavirus (HRV) x rhesus rotavirus (RRV)reassortant quadrivalent vaccine wit VP7 serotype 1, 2, 3, and 4 specificity GASTROENTERITIS DUE TO ENTERIC ADENOVIRUS GASTROENTERITIS DUE TO ADENOVIRUS • Types 40, 41 • Belong to serogroup F • Some cases due to types 31, 3, 7 Diarrhea due to Enteric Adenovirus • Age <4 years • Year round • Spread via fecal-oral route Clinical features of Enteric Adenovirus gastroenteritis • Incubation period 3 -10 days • Diarrhea lasts for 10 -14 days • Can also cause intussusception, mesenteric adenitis, appendicitis Diagnosis- Enteric adenoviruses • Isolation requires special media-Graham 293 • ELISA for rapid detection is available HUMAN CALICIVIRUSES HUMAN CALICIVIRUSES (HuCV) • Belong to Family Caliciviridae • Non-enveloped RNA viruses with ss RNA • 27-35 nm in size • Contain a single capsid protein HUMAN CALICIVIRUSES •Genomic analysis divides it into 4 groups •Human caliciviruses belong to 2 genera CLASSIFICATION OF HuCV NLV (Norovirus) Norwalk virus Hawaii virus Snow Mountain virus Montgomery county virus Taunton (England) SLV (Sapovirus) Sapporo virus Manchester virus Houston/86 London/92 Morphology of HuCV- typical • Typical morphology • 32 cup-like depressions • EM appearance of “Star of David” E.g.- Sapporo-like viruses HUMAN CALICIVIRUSES - SLV Morphology of HuCV- atypical • Atypical morphology • Smooth surface • Small Round Structured viruses E.g.- Norwalk-like viruses SRSV- NORWALK VIRUS CLINICAL FEATURES • Adults and Children • Usual incubation Period is <24 hours (ranges from 12hrs. to 4 days) • Short duration of illness <3 days • Nausea, vomiting, fever, headache • Abdominal cramping • Watery diarrhea Epidemiology-Noroviruses • Worldwide distribution • >23 million cases/year in the U.S. • Major cause of foodborne outbreaks of GE • Most people have had infections by age 4 years (by seroprevalence studies) Spread of Norwalk virus A. Person-to-person Fecal-oral spread (stool/vomitus) B. Fecal contamination of food or water C. Spread through fomites? Epidemiology-Noroviruses • Asymptomatic infections- seroconversion but asymptomatic shedding of virus • Low infective dose • Viral excretion during convalesence (up to 2 weeks) • Ability to survive in water chlorination at routine levels Epidemiology of Outbreaks • Cruise ships, schools, nursing homes, etc. • Can involve infants and school-age children • Source usually is contaminated food and water (seafood-oyster and shellfish etc.) Diagnosis- Human Caliciviruses • Specimen- stool , vomitus, environmental swabs, [not yet on foods] • Immune EM • RT-PCR in state public health labs. • Serology for epidemiologic purposes HUMAN ASTROVIRUS ASTROVIRUS • Described in relation to an outbreak of gastroenteritis in 1975 • Detected by EM • Immunologically distinct from Human Caliciviruses • Belong to family Astroviridae • 8 human serotypes are known ASTROVIRUS- structure • Small ss RNA virus • Non-enveloped • 27-32nm in size • Round with an unbroken, smooth surface • EM appearance of a 5 or 6 pointed star within smooth edge • Contain 3 structural proteins ASTROVIRUS- EM STRUCTURE ASTROVIRUS - Epidemiology • Worldwide • Mainly in children <7 years of age. • Transmission person-to-person via fecal-oral route • Outbreaks due to fecal contamination of sea-food or water ASTROVIRUS - Clinical Features • Infants and children are most often affected • Short incubation period 1-4 days • Nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping and watery diarrhea • Constitutional symptoms-fever, malaise, headache ASTROVIRUS - Diagnosis • EM (virus shed in stool in great numbers) • EIA • RT-PCR Rotaviruses Ghazi Jamjoom • Twenty-five years ago, little was known about the causes of diarrhea, which kills an estimated 3 million infants and children worldwide every year. • Scientists knew that bacteria and parasites were implicated in only approximately 10 to 20 % of all cases of diarrhea.. • In 1973,, researchers in Australia discovered a virus in infants with severe diarrhea and named it “rotavirus” for its wheel-like shape. • One year later, NIAID researchers were the first to identify rotavirus in the United States. Rotavirus Biology • Rotaviruses belong to the family Reoviridae , genus Rotavirus. • They have a characteristic wheel-like appearance when viewed by electron microscopy. • Nonenveloped, double-shelled Group A rotaviruses • Endemic worldwide (represents > 95% of currently identified strains in humans ) • The leading cause of severe diarrhea among infants and children . • Accounts for about half of the cases requiring hospitalization. Group B rotavirus, • Also called adult diarrhea rotavirus or ADRV • Has caused major epidemics of severe diarrhea affecting thousands of persons of all ages in China. Group C rotavirus • • Has been associated with rare and sporadic cases of diarrhea in children in many countries. • First outbreaks were reported from Japan and England • Subgroups classification based upon neutralization epitopes of the outer capsid proteins, VP4 and VP7 Antigenic specificity of VP7 G serotypes Antigenic specificity of VP4 P serotypes Fourteen G serotypes and twenty one P serotypes have been detected in humans. Neutralization assays measure reactivity predominantly to VP7 proteins. Distribution of Rotavirus Strains From A Global Collection of 2,748 Strains. Transmission • Rotavirus infection is very contagious . • Viral particles pass in the stool of infected persons before and after they have symptoms of the illness . • Spread is by the oral-fecal route and tables) and is not killed by standard fectants... children forget to wash their hands often gh, especially before eating and after using the toilet. t Get infected d food handlers may contaminate foods that require ing and no further cooking, such as salads, fruits. • The infective dose is presumed to be 10-100 infectious viral particles. Because a person with rotavirus diarrhea often excretes large numbers of the virus (108-1010 infectious particles/ml of feces), infection doses can be readily acquired . • Asymptomatic rotavirus excretion has been well documented may play a role in perpetuating endemic disease . N.B some have reported low titers of virus in respiratory tract secretions and other body fluids.. Epidemiology Rotavirus is the single most important cause of life-threatening diarrhea in children younger than 2 years. • • Affects approximately 130 million infants and children worldwide. In the United States alone, rotavirus causes more than 3 million cases of childhood diarrhea each year, leading to an estimated 55,000 to 100,000 hospitalizations and 20 to 100 deaths. • Who catch the infection ? • Humans of all ages are susceptible to rotavirus infection, although Children , premature infants, the elderly, and the immunocompromised are prone to more severe symptoms caused by infection with group A rotavirus. • An infant’s first bout of diarrhea from rotavirus is the most severe , subsequent reinfections decrease in severity. These findings indicated that infants gradually develop partial immunity to the virus and that a vaccine might prevent the disease. • Temporary lactose intolerance may occur. • NSP4 protein may act in a toxin-like manner Neuronal alteration in water absorption Release of neuronal activators • Loss of the ability to absorb water of water and loss of ions Calcium ion influx into enterocytes net secretion watery diarrhea Watery diarrhea isotonic) and may lead to death . dehydration (most commonly metabolic acidosis and Symptoms and Signs • The incubation period ranges from 1-3 days . • Symptoms often start with vomiting followed by 4-8 days of diarrhea. • Some may have a slight rise in temperature . Immunological Aspects • Immunoglobulin (Ig) A , in the lumen of the gut immunity to infection . • Actively or passively acquired antibodies (including antibodies in colostrum and mothers milk) lessen the severity of disease but does not consistently prevent reinfection . • Absence of antibody and diarrhea . small amounts of virus infection • Infection in infants and small children is generally symptomatic . • In adults infection is usually asymptomatic . • Asymptomatic rotavirus infections are common in neonates because of passively acquired maternal immunity , breast feeding , and possible infection with less virulent strains Diagnosis (EIA) 1) Identification of the viral antigen in the patient's stool latex agglutination most widely used screening test for clinical specimens . 2) Electron microscopy (EM) 3) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) is used in some laboratories for RNA typing. 4) A reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) has been developed to detect and identify all three groups of human rotaviruses. • Serotypes can be identified using monoclonal antibodies against VP7 and VP4. • Neutralization is detected on tissue cultures as a CPE Antigenic specificity of VP7 G serotypes Antigenic specificity of VP4 P serotypes Treatment • Treatment is nonspecific and consists of : 1) Oral rehydration therapy to prevent dehydration. 2) About one in 40 children with rotavirus gastroenteritis will require hospitalization for intravenous fluids . • For persons with healthy immune systems, rotavirus gastroenteritis is a self-limited illness, lasting for only a few days. prevention • Even in the cleanest environments with the best hygiene, most children still become infected with rotavirus before age 4 or 5. • Total prevention of the spread of rotavirus is virtually impossible. • In hospitals health officials control rotavirus outbreaks by isolating infected patients and by ordering strict hand-washing procedures. Rotavirus Vaccine Rotavirus vaccine • Scientists knew that although many strains of rotavirus exist, only four cause the majority of diarrhea cases in young children in the United States. • Aiming for prevention : NIAID researchers developed a vaccine (RRV-TV) designed to protect against the four strains of rotavirus . • During the 1970s, NIAID scientists analyzed the genetic material of rotavirus, Identified two important proteins , VP4 and VP7 produced by the genes , and determined the function of these proteins. • Proteins on the surface of the virus were found to be critical for triggering an immune response in the body against rotavirus. • NIAID researchers focused on these proteins to develop a vaccine. Tetravalent Oral Live-Attenuated Vaccine • The oral vaccine contains four different, live attenuated viral strains, serotypes ( 1,2,3,4) . • One strain (serotype 3) is an unmodified rhesus monkey rotavirus (RRV) which does not cause disease in humans • The other three are made by reassortment (genetic recombination) of that monkey RRV with three human rotaviruses of serotypes 1,2,4. • Each reassortant vaccine strain contains 10 monkey RRV genes and the VP7 gene for one serotype of the human rotavirus envelope proteins: VP-7 (serotype 1) , VP-7 (serotype 2) , VP-7 (serotype 4) • The combined vaccine provided comprehensive protection against the four serotypes (1,2,3,4) • Studies showed that high doses of the RRV-TV vaccine, designed to protect against four strains of rotavirus, were very effective in preventing severe, dehydrating rotavirus disease. • Breast-feeding did not interfere with the effectiveness of the rotavirus vaccine ensuring good nutrition in infants • In August 1998, the first live attenuated rotavirus vaccine (Rotashield{registered} {Wyeth Lederle Vaccines and Pediatrics}) was approved for use in infants by the Food and Drug Administration. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices has recommended that this vaccine be given as a three-dose schedule to infants aged 2, 4, and 6 months. •However, on July 15, 1999, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended that doctors stop giving the rotavirus vaccine to infants. • On October 22, 1999, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted to stop recommending the vaccine Why? • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advisory committee received an overwhelming amount of data all indicating a strong association between ( rotavirus vaccine ) and bowel obstruction among some infants during the first one to two weeks following vaccination. • Apparently, many infants who received the rotavirus vaccine developed Intussception of the bowel within one to three weeks after receiving a dose or two of the vaccine. • The risk of intussusception was increased 19-fold in the first 3 to 7 days after vaccination and almost fourfold (3.6) in the 8 to 14 days after vaccination (P<0.0002). • Children who have already received the vaccine and have not had problems do not appear to be at risk now. • In the meantime, research on better vaccines for rotavirus continues. 708 males (54.76%) 1293 585 females ( 45.24%) All were tested using enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). 73 males (53.68%) Number of infected patients 136 63 females (46.32%) 5.65% males % of infected patients 10.52 4.87% females % of infected males = 10.31 % % of infected females = 10.77 % Numbers of Infected Males to Females in Different Age Groups 40 30 30 20 21 22 17 10 SEX Count 7 6 6 7 3 0 neonates 0-28 AGE infants 28d-1y toddlers 1-3 preschool 3-6 4 school 6-18 male 3 adults >18 female Infections Among Males : Females (saudies : non saudies) 47 sex 45 male female Bars show counts 19 7 Infections in( Males : Females ) in Different Seasons sex 27 24 15 13 10 12 12 10 male female Bars show counts Duration of Illness 80 76 60 40 20 22 Std. Dev = 1.77 0 4 0.0 2.0 4.0 7 7 6.0 8.0 DURATION (days) Mean = 3.3 N = 118.00 10.0 Number of Patients in Different Seasons (Males : Females ) 30 27 24 20 15 12 10 12 10 13 10 Count SEX male 0 female winter SEASON spring summer automn Number of Patients in Different Seasons (Males : Females ) 30 27 24 20 15 12 10 12 10 13 10 Count SEX male 0 female winter SEASON spring summer automn male SEX 10 IG RD U D N I IA N A D SO L A M N S O TA S KI P A INO IP IL PH O N TI YP EG A N RI YT ER I M YE N N IA D N I N S TI LA PA A N I ER N JO SA ALL NATIONALITIES female 0 Count Number of Infected Males & Females in Each Nationality 50 40 30 20 Infections Among Different Nationalities in Each Season 40 30 SEASON 20 winter spring summer IG N I IA D N A D SO L A M AN SO ST KI O P A IN IP IL P H IO N T YP E G IA N R YT ER I M YE N N IA D IN IN S T LA N P A IA ER N U RD SA 0 JO Count 10 ALL NATIONALITIES automn Distribution of Different Durations of Illness 80 76 60 40 20 22 Std. Dev = 1.77 0 4 0.0 2.0 4.0 7 7 6.0 8.0 DURATION (days) Mean = 3.3 N = 118.00 10.0