24
Poliomyelitis Ijeoma Ohadugha 4/1/10 Infectious Diseases http://www.immune.org.nz/site_resources/Professionals/Diseases/P olio/Polio.jpg U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Poliomyelitis

  • Upload
    kizzy

  • View
    27

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Poliomyelitis. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Ijeoma Ohadugha 4/1/10 Infectious Diseases. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. http://www.immune.org.nz/site_resources/Professionals/Diseases/Polio/Polio.jpg. Poliomyelitis is an infection of the CNS. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Poliomyelitis

Poliomyelitis

Ijeoma Ohadugha4/1/10

Infectious Diseaseshttp://www.immune.org.nz/site_resources/Professionals/Diseases/Polio/Polio.jpg

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Page 2: Poliomyelitis

Poliomyelitis is an infection of the CNS

• poliós -Greek word “grey”, + myelós “spinal cord’ + suffix –itis “inflammation =poliomyelitis

• Viral infection of the nerves of the CNS

Page 3: Poliomyelitis

Poliomyelitis is caused by an enteric RNA virus

–Caused by an Enterovirus called the poliovirus

–Enteric, small RNA virus

F.P. Williams, U.S. EPA

Page 4: Poliomyelitis

Transmission by fecal-oral route

http://www.co.washington.or.us/HHS/EnvironmentalHealth/PublicPools/

Page 5: Poliomyelitis

Risk Factors

– Not being vaccinated in areas where polio is common

– infants, pregnant women, immunocompromised (eg. HIV)

Page 6: Poliomyelitis

WHO, 2008.

Page 7: Poliomyelitis

Three basic patterns

• Subclinical infection(95% of infections),

Page 8: Poliomyelitis

Three basic patterns

• Subclinical infection(95% of infections), • Nonparalytic poliomyelitis(1-2%)

Page 9: Poliomyelitis

Three basic patterns

• Subclinical infection(95% of infections), • Nonparalytic poliomyelitis(1-2%)• Paralytic poliomyelitis(0.1–0.5%)• -result of accidental transfer of virus from

GI tissue to neural tissue– Spinal polio - 79% of paralytic cases—

Bulbospinal polio - 19% of paralytic cases— Bulbar polio - 2% of paralytic cases

Page 10: Poliomyelitis

Polio afflicted everyone socially as well as medically

• Franklin Delano Roosevelt

• “Once you’ve spent two years trying to wiggle one toe, everything is in proportion.”—Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1945

http://americanhistory.si.edu/polio/howpolio/fdr.htm

Page 11: Poliomyelitis

Jakob Heine(1840)Karl Landsteiner (1909)

Heine named polio as a clinical condition; Lansteiner discovered the virus

Page 12: Poliomyelitis

– poliovirus enters digestive tract via mouth

– Primary site of infection is epithelial and lymphoid tissue associated with the oropharynx and gut

• Virus production at this site leads to a transient viremia, following which the virus may infect the CNS

http://cmbi.bjmu.edu.cn/www-learn/micro-ac-uk/335/Picornaviruses.html

Page 13: Poliomyelitis

Dual Tropism Thought to be the Cause of Poliomyelitis from Poliovirus

• Reflects the distribution of the poliovirus receptor CD155 on cells lymphoid cells as well as the epithelial cells in the gut and on neurons in the CNS

• Viral Tropism relies on host cell permissiveness and receptor susceptibility

Page 14: Poliomyelitis

Virus Replicates Through Viropexis

– attachment of the virus to specific cellular receptors of cells with CD155

– penetration and uncoating of the virus is energy dependent, and occurs by receptor-mediated endocytosis (viropexis)

Page 15: Poliomyelitis

Interferons May Prevent Susceptibility of Most Cells with CD155

– CD155 is present on most human cells, so does not explain why it infects certain tissues

– Recent studies-suggest human type I interferon receptors possibly prevent

– Interferon- protein released by lymphocyte in response to pathogen to trigger immune defenses

Page 16: Poliomyelitis

Only IPV used in US today

– OPV known to in rare cases become virulent and cause iatrogenic (vaccine-induced) polio

– Both used today in the world– IN US, only IPV used since 1990s from

policy changes– Only cases of polio (8-10 per year) were

from people with vaccine-induced polio

Page 17: Poliomyelitis

Jonas Salk- Injected Poliovirus Vaccine(IPV) Albert Sabin – oral live attenuated virus (OPV)

1952 1957

Page 18: Poliomyelitis

SV40 Contamination Concerns

– In 1960, SV40 (Simian Vius-40) found in vaccine from rhesus monkey kidney cells used to prepare vaccine

Page 19: Poliomyelitis

Vaccines with SV40 contamination was accused as cause for HIV

• Accusations in 1990s that vaccines with SV40 caused conditions favorable for SIV jump from monkey to humans, causing HIV/AIDS

Page 20: Poliomyelitis

Accusation now debunked, but stigma lingers for new reasons

– New reasons for vaccination stigma such as rumors of sterility in some areas

Page 21: Poliomyelitis

Treatment in the past often ineffective until Elizabeth Kenny’s procedures

– crutches or wheelchair for motor muscle degeneration

– “convalescent serum”-1920s– iron lung for respiratory failure– early 1940s- Sister Elizabeth Kenny’s

procedures- hotpacks and heating pads w/massages, still used today

Page 22: Poliomyelitis

Present Treatments Offer Relief to Symptoms

– No current cure– Respiratory apparatus – Antibiotics for UTIs, medication for urine

retention– Heating pads and towels for muscle

spasms & pain– Physical therapy, braces, or orthopedic

surgery for recovery of muscle strength/function

Page 23: Poliomyelitis

What still needs to be done

• Eradication efforts– Get rid of stigma surrounding vaccine in

Africa and other polio-afflicted places– Develop new targets for polio cure

Page 24: Poliomyelitis

References

• http://www.polioeradication.org/• https://health.google.com/health/ref/Poliomyelitis• http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/polio/

DS00572/DSECTION=risk-factors• http://www.cloudnet.com/~edrbsass/

poliotimeline.htm• http://www.vaccineinformation.org/polio/

qandavax.as