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Viremia

Presence of virus in the blood


Summary

Presence of virus in the blood

FieldValue
nameViremia
synonymsViraemia
fieldInfectious disease

Viremia () is a medical condition where viruses enter the bloodstream and hence have access to the rest of the body. It is similar to bacteremia, a condition where bacteria enter the bloodstream. The name comes from combining the word "virus" with the Greek word for "blood" (haima). It usually lasts for 4 to 5 days in the primary condition.

Primary versus secondary

Primary viremia refers to the initial spread of virus in the blood from the first site of infection. Secondary viremia occurs when primary viremia has resulted in infection of additional tissues via bloodstream, in which the virus has replicated and once more entered the circulation.

Usually secondary viremia results in higher viral shedding and viral loads within the bloodstream due to the possibility that the virus is able to reach its natural host cell from the bloodstream and replicate more efficiently than the initial site. An excellent example to profile this distinction is the rabies virus. Usually the virus will replicate briefly within the first site of infection, within the muscle tissues. Viral replication then leads to viremia and the virus spreads to its secondary site of infection, the central nervous system (CNS). Upon infection of the CNS, secondary viremia results and symptoms usually begin.

Active versus passive

Active viremia is caused by the replication of viruses which results in viruses being introduced into the bloodstream. Examples include the measles, in which primary viremia occurs in the epithelial lining of the respiratory tract before replicating and budding out of the cell basal layer (viral shedding), resulting in viruses budding into capillaries and blood vessels.

Passive viremia is the introduction of viruses in the bloodstream without the need of active viral replication. Examples include direct inoculation from mosquitoes, through physical breaches or via blood transfusions.

References

References

  1. (2004). "Sherris Medical Microbiology". McGraw Hill.
  2. (2017-01-01). "Chapter 7 - Pathogenesis of Virus Infections". Academic Press.
  3. (Jan 1997). "Antibody responses to the hepatitis C virus E2 protein: relationship to viraemia and prevalence in anti-HCV seronegative subjects". J Med Virol.
  4. (Mar 2006). "Viral RNA in the bloodstream suggests viremia occurs in clinically ill rabies-infected mice". Virus Res..
  5. (Jul 1982). "Viraemia in rabies". Acta Virol.
  6. (2007-12-10). "Antigen-Specific B-Cell Responses to Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus Infection". [[Journal of Virology]].
  7. (Dec 2007). "Epitope determinants of a chimpanzee dengue virus type 4 (DENV-4)-neutralizing antibody and protection against DENV-4 challenge in mice and rhesus monkeys by passively transferred humanized antibody". J Virol.
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