Anthrax Flashcards

1
Q
  • Organism Type: Aerobic, gram-positive, spore-forming, nonmotile, rod-shaped bacterium.
  • Scientific name: Bacillus anthracis.
A

Anthrax

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2
Q

Predisposing Factors for anthrax

A
  • Working with any unvaccinated animal that is a
    common anthrax reservoir.
  • More common in ranchers, leather workers, veterinarians, wildlife researchers.
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3
Q

Transmission of anthrax

A
  • Handling B. anthracis–infected animals, carcasses,
    meat, hides, or wool.
  • Products derived from infected animals are also documented sources of human infection
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4
Q

Incubation of anthrax

A

1–7 days; upwards of 12 days in rare cases.

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5
Q

Zoonotic disease primarily affecting ruminant herbivores such as cattle, sheep, goats, antelope, and deer that become infected by ingesting contaminated vegetation, water, or soil

A

Anthrax

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6
Q

How are anthrax spores introduced to skin

A
  • Spores introduced through the skin can result in cutaneous anthrax; abrasion of the skin increases susceptibility.
  • Anthrax in humans generally is not considered contagious; person-to-person transmission of cutaneous anthrax has been reported only rarely.
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7
Q

Anthrax has 4 main clinical presentations

A
  • Cutaneous
  • Ingestion,
  • injection
  • Inhalation.
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8
Q

Most common form of anthrax in humans

A

Cutaneous anthrax (95-99%)

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9
Q
  • B. anthracis spores introduced under skin start to multiply and spread.
  • Organism makes exotoxin that causes marked edema and causes tissue necrosis.
  • Eschar with extensive surrounding edema is hallmark.
  • Can be transmitted from the discharge from skin lesions.
A

Cutaneous anthrax

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10
Q

Presentation:
- Small, painless, pruritic papules emerge anywhere from 1 – 12 days after exposure.
- Papules enlarge rapidly to vesicles or bulla (blisters).
- Vesicle or bulla start to erode and leave painless black necrotic ulcer.

A

Cutaneous anthrax

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11
Q

Dx of cutaneous anthrax

A
  • Vesicular fluid and ulcers should be swabbed for gram stain and culture and PCR.
  • Eschar edge should be lifted and swabbed.
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12
Q

Treatment of Cutaneous Anthrax

A
  • Suspected case of anthrax should be referred to an infectious disease specialist
  • Ciprofloxacin 500mg PO BID x 7-10 days.
  • Levofloxacin 750mg PO QD x 7-10 days.
  • Doxycycline 100mg PO BID x 7-10 days.
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13
Q

Prevention of Cutaneous Anthrax

A
  • Vaccine should be administered to high-risk personnel, including military personnel who deploy to endemic areas.
  • Precautions should be taken when handling animals or animal products, especially the hides.
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14
Q

Disposition of Anthrax

A
  • Any patient suspected of an anthrax infection requires an immediate referral and/or medevac to an appropriate treatment facility.
  • If untreated, cutaneous anthrax may result in sepsis or meningitis.
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