Paeds infection Flashcards

1
Q

Management threadworms

A
  • anthelmintic with hygiene measures for all members of the household

mebendazole is used first-line for children > 6 months old. A single dose is given unless infestation persists

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2
Q

TB pathogen and histology

A

mycobacteria - acid fast bacilli

resistant to gram stain

stain with Zeil Neelson –> red/pink

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3
Q

Drugs for TB

A

RIPE

Rifampicin
Isonizad
Pyrazinamide
Ethanbutol

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4
Q

Side effects rifamicin

A

R
Red/oragne urine
Hepatitis

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5
Q

Side effects Isonizid

A

Hepatitis
Neuropathy

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6
Q

Side effects pyrazinamide

A

hepatitis
Arthralgia / gout
rash

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7
Q

Side effects ethanbutol

A

optic neuritis

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8
Q

Complications of mumps

A

Pancreatitis
Orchitis
Meningitis
Sensorineural hearing loss

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9
Q

How good is MMR at protecting against mumps

A

80% effective

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10
Q

Diagnosis mumps

A

PCR testing on a saliva swab.

oral fluid sample (salivary IgM)

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11
Q

Along with treating patient for mumps, what else do you need to do?

A

Notify Public health england

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12
Q

incubation period and presentation mumps

A

14 – 25 days

prodrome general illness
unilateral or bilateral parotid gland swelling

May also have:
Abdominal pain (pancreatitis)
Testicular pain and swelling (orchitis)
Confusion, neck stiffness and headache (meningitis or encephalitis)

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13
Q

Screening for Hep B

A

HBcAb (for previous infection/vacciantion)

and HBsAg (for active infection)

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14
Q

Management of neonates born to mothers with Hep B

A

Give at birth:
Hepatitis B vaccine
Hepatitis B immunoglobulin infusion

Infants are given an additional hepatitis B vaccine at 1 and 12 months of age.

They will also receive the hepatitis B vaccine as part of the normal 6 in 1 vaccine given to all infants aged 8, 12 and 16 weeks.

They are tested for the HBsAg at 1 year to see if they have contracted hepatitis B.

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15
Q

Breastfeeding and Hep B

A

Safe to breastfeed provided their babies are properly vaccinated

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16
Q

Hep B type of virus and spread

A

DNA virus. It is transmitted by direct contact with blood or bodily fluids.

17
Q

Testing for Hep C

A

Hepatitis C antibody is the screening test

Hepatitis C RNA testing is used to confirm the diagnosis of hepatitis C, calculate viral load and identify the genotype

18
Q

Management babies born to mothers with hep C

A

tested at 18 months of age using the hepatitis C antibody test

can breastfeed

19
Q

Presentation infectious mononucelosis

A

Fever
Sore throat
Fatigue
Lymphadenopathy (swollen lymph nodes)
Tonsillar enlargement
Splenomegaly and in rare cases splenic rupture

20
Q

Testing for EBV

A

heterophile antibodies 6 weeks after

Monospot test: this introduces the patient’s blood to red blood cells from horses. Heterophile antibodies (if present) will react to the horse red blood cells and give a positive result.
Paul-Bunnell test: this is similar to the monospot test but uses red blood cells from sheep.

100% specific but only 7-0% sensitive

It is possible to test for specific EBV antibodies. These antibodies target something called viral capsid antigen (VCA):

The IgM antibody rises early and suggests acute infection
The IgG antibody persists after the condition and suggests immunity

21
Q

Complications EBV

A

Splenic rupture
Glomerulonephritis
Haemolytic anaemia
Thrombocytopenia
Chronic fatigue

EBV infection is associated with certain cancers, notable Burkitt’s lymphoma (a type of non-hodgkins lymphoma)

22
Q

how to reduce chance of splenic rupture ebv

A

Advise against contact sports and heavy lifting for 1 month to minimise risk of splenic rupture

23
Q

presentations mumps

A

1) Parotitis: The parotid glands are almost always affected, usually bilaterally (though can be unilateral). Swelling can be severe enough to prevent the mouth from being opened and usually lasts 3-4 days. Prior to parotitis, there may be flu-like symptoms such as headache, malaise and myalgia.

2) Orchitis: Epididymo-orchitis is the second most common extra-salivary symptom of Mumps, which presents as severely painful swelling of one or both testicles and/or backache. It usually develops 4-5 days after onset of parotitis. 7% of post-pubertal females get oophoritis, with rare cases of infertility and premature menopause as a result.

3) Aseptic meningitis: A relatively common complication in 4-25% of cases. Usually mild and self-limiting

4) Encephalitis: Rare complication presenting as headache, vomiting, seizures, unconsciousness.

5) Deafness: A rare cause of acute or insidious sensorineural hearing loss (usually unilateral) in children.

6) Other: Pancreatitis, nephritis, arthritis, thyroiditis, pericarditis.

24
Q

parotitis

A

parotitis (‘earache’, ‘pain on eating’)