Pharmaceutical Microbiology and Parasitology Lecture Notes PDF

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Ms. Liza Marie A. De Guzman, RPh, MSc

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virology microbiology parasitology pharmacology

Summary

This document contains lecture notes for a Pharmaceutical Microbiology and Parasitology course. It covers different types of viruses, including coronaviruses, caliciviruses, and echoviruses, and their associated diseases. The notes detail symptoms, transmission, and general aspects of each viral family. It is from a first-semester university course.

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PRPM114: PHARMACEUTICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND PARASITOLOGY LECTURE MS. LIZA MARIE A. DE GUZMAN, RPh, MSc 1ST SEMESTER (A.Y. 2023 – 2024) Group B  Other viruses causing U...

PRPM114: PHARMACEUTICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND PARASITOLOGY LECTURE MS. LIZA MARIE A. DE GUZMAN, RPh, MSc 1ST SEMESTER (A.Y. 2023 – 2024) Group B  Other viruses causing URT infections – coronavirus, adenovirus, enterovirus, parainfluenza virus, influenza  Pleurodynia virus o Epidemic myalgia, Bornholm disease, “devil’s grip” CALICIVIRUS o Types 1 – 5 o Characterized by fever and stabbing chest Calicivirus pain  Norovirus – Norwalk virus  Myocarditis and pericarditis (types 1 – 5) o Most important cause of epidemic viral  Generalized disease of infants (types 1 – 5) – gastroenteritis in adults characterized by simultaneous viral infections of  Sapovirus – Sapporo-like virus multiple organs, including the heart, liver, and brain  Nebovirus – Bovine enteric virus Group A and B  Lagovirus – rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus  Vesivirus – vesicular exanthem virus  Aseptic meningitis (types A7 and A9; type B) – characterized by fever, malaise, headache, nausea, POSITIVE-SENSE RNA VIRUSES (ENVELOPED VIRUSES) and abdominal pain CORONAVIRUS  Hand-foot-and-mouth disease [HFM, (types A5, 10, 160; type B1)] – characterized by oral and pharyngeal Coronavirus ulcerations and a vesicular rash of the palms and soles  Large, enveloped RNA viruses ECHOVIRUS  May cause common colds, lower respiratory tract Echovirus infections, and have been implicated in gastroenteritis in infants  Enteric Cytopathogenic Human Orphan Viruses  Transmission – contact with respiratory droplets,  Transmission – fecal oral contaminated surfaces, and fomites  Diseases – aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, febrile  Helical nucleocapsid illness with or without rash, common colds, ocular  Novel coronaviruses have been identified as the cause disease of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) OTHER ECHOVIRUS Clinical Findings Other Echoviruses  Common cold  Enterovirus 70 – acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis  SARS-CoV – severe acute respiratory syndrome  Enterovirus 71 – meningitis, encephalitis, and paralysis (SARS) resembling poliomyelitis, hand-foot-and-mouth disease o May progress to acute respiratory distress  Hepatitis A virus (enterovirus 72) o Death may result from progressive respiratory failure OTHER ECHOVIRUS  SARS-CoV 2 – Coronavirus disease 2010 o Has 5 distinct types, namely asymptomatic or Rhinovirus presymptomatic infection, mild illness,  Common cold virus moderate illness, severe illness, and critical  Acid-labile illness  Transmission – sneezing, hand-to-hand, hand-to-eye, RETROVIRUS or hand-to-object-to-hand  The virus enters via URT, and replicates in the nasal Retrovirus mucosa  Incubation – 2 to 4 days  Genus Lentivirus  Usual symptoms in adults – sneezing, nasal  Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) – HIV and HIV 2 obstruction, nasal discharge, and sore throat  RNA to DNA to protein – reverse transcription  Other symptoms – headache, mild cough, malaise, and Pathogenesis and Pathology a chilly sensation  Overview of course of HIV infection MAML PRPM114: PHARMACEUTICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND PARASITOLOGY LECTURE MS. LIZA MARIE A. DE GUZMAN, RPh, MSc 1ST SEMESTER (A.Y. 2023 – 2024)  CD 4 lymphocytes, infected memory cells, and latency Clinical Findings  Monocytes and macrophages  Rubella usually begins with malaise, low-grade fever,  Lymphoid organs and a morbilliform rash appearing on the same day  Viral coinfections  Congenital Rubella syndrome Clinical Findings o Three broad categories – transient effects in infants, permanent manifestations at birth or  Acute HIV infections become recognized during the first year,  AIDS developmental abnormalities that appear and  Plasma viral load – amount of HIV in the blood progress during childhood and adolescence  Pediatric AIDS – lymphoid interstitial, pneumonitis, (mental retardation – most common pneumonia, severe oral candidiasis, encephalopathy, abnormality) wasting, generalized lymphadenopathy, bacterial o Classic triad of congenital rubella – sepsis, hepatosplenomegaly, diarrhea, growth Cataracs, cardiac abnormalities, deafness retardation o Progressive rubella panencephalitis – a rare  Neurologic disease – include subacute complication that develops in the second encephalopathy, vacuolar myelopathy, aseptic decade of life in children with congenital meningitis, peripheral neuropathy rubella, is a severe neurologic deterioration  Opportunistic infections – usually do not occur in that inevitably progresses to death HIV-infected patients until CD 4 T-cell count have NEGATIVE-SENSE RNA VIRUSES (ENVELOPED VIRUSES) dropped from the normal level  Cancer – non-Hodgkin lymphoma (both systemic and FILOVIRUS CNS types), Kaposi sarcoma, cervical cancer, anogenital cancer Filovirus Treatment  Pleomorphic particles, appearing as long (filo) filamentous threads or as Odd shaped form  Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)  Single-stranded, non-segmented, negative sense  Therapy with combination of antiviral drugs RNA, contains 7 genes o Suppress viral replication  Two known filoviruses: Ebola virus and Marburg virus o Decrease viral loads in lymphoid tissues  Natural host – African fruit bats o Allow the recovery of immune responses o Prolong patient survival Clinical Findings HUMAN T-LYMPHOTROPIC VIRUS  Fever, headache, sore throat, muscle pain, followed by abdominal pain Human T-Lymphotropic Virus Transmission  Human retrovirus  Transmission – vertically, sexually, and blood  Direct contact with blood, body fluids, or recently transfusion deceased victims Diseases Treatment  Adult T-cell leukemia – lymphomas (ATL)  Maintaining renal function and electrolytes  Tropical spastic paraparesis ORTHOMYXOVIRUS TOGAVIRUS Orthomyxovirus Togavirus  Influenza virus (cause epidemic and pandemic)  Genus Rubivirus – Rubella virus (German measles; 3-  Three types Influenza A, B, C (human and swine; mild) day measles)  The envelope has two different types of spikes  Pathogenesis – nasopharynx → lymph nodes → o Hemagglutinin (HA) – acts at the start; binds  blood → organs and skin to the target cell, specifically binds to sialic acid o Neuraminidase (NA) – acts at the end MAML

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