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The later stages of infection – fate of the host

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Following a viral or any infectious disease, the host recovers or dies. While many acute infections result in clearance of virus, this does not invariably happen. While infections with influenza virus, cold viruses, polioviruses, and poxviruses resolve with virus clearance, herpesvirus infections result in a lifelong latent infection. During the latent period, no infectious virus is present, but viral genomes are maintained in certain protected cells. Periodically, a (usually) milder recurrence of the disease (reactivation or recrudescence) takes place upon suitable stimulation.

In distinct contrast, measles infection resolves with loss of infectious virus, but a portion of the viral genome can be maintained in neural tissue. This is not a latent infection because the harboring cells can express viral antigens, which lead to lifelong immunity, but infectious virus can never be recovered.

Other lasting types of virus‐induced damage can be much more difficult to establish without extensive epidemiological records. Chronic liver damage due to hepatitis B virus infection is a major factor in hepatic carcinoma. Persistent virus infections can lead to immune dysfunction. Virus infections may also result in the appearance of a disease or syndrome (a set of diagnostic signs and symptoms displayed by an affected individual) years later that has no obvious relation to the initial infection. It has been suggested that diseases such as diabetes mellitus, multiple sclerosis, and rheumatoid arthritis have viral etiologies (ultimate causative factors). Virus factors have also been implicated in instances of other diseases such as cancer and schizophrenia.

Basic Virology

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