Yellow Fever Research - Immunization, Vaccines, Symptoms, Transmission

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Midzonal lesions in yellow fever: a specific pattern of liver injury caused by direct virus action and in situ inflammatory response.

Quaresma JA, Duarte MI, Vasconcelos PF

Núcleo de Medicina Tropical, Universidade Federal do Pará, Belém, Para, Brazil.

Yellow fever is an acute infectious, non-contagious disease characterized by intense vasculopathy and lesions in different organs. In the liver, one of the main targets of the virus, the infection induces a characteristic midzonal injury characterized by hepatocyte necrosis, apoptosis and steatosis. This characteristics pattern of liver injury in yellow fever is also observed in conditions of low-flow hypoxia and other infections such as dengue and Rift Valley fever. There are no reports in the literature explaining the genesis of this peculiar histopathological pattern in yellow fever. Some hypotheses have been proposed to explain the mechanism of this midzonal distribution pattern observed in the liver such as low-flow hypoxia and tropism of the virus toward hepatocytes in this area. These hypotheses are discussed in view of more recent findings regarding the pathogenesis of yellow fever and regarding hepatic physiopathology, and a new hypothesis is proposed: the midzonal necrosis is consequence of action of combined factors mainly the direct cytopathic effect of YFV associated with a potent immune response in which CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes and the cytokines, especially TGF-beta, but also TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma play an important role.

Published 3 July 2006 in Med Hypotheses, 67(3): 618-21.
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