Infectious Disease Medications Flashcards

1
Q

What is the etiology of AOM?

A

Viral (Most common)

Bacterial
o Strep. pneumoniae
o H. influenzae

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2
Q

What are the risk factors for AOM?

A
➢	Winter season/outbreaks of RSV or influenza virus
➢	Day-care center attendance
➢	Lack of breast-feeding
➢	Early age of first diagnosis
➢	Nasopharyngeal colonization with middle ear pathogens
➢	Genetic predisposition
➢	Siblings in the home
➢	Lower socioeconomic status
➢	Exposure to tobacco smoke
➢	Pacifier use
➢	Male gender
➢	Immunodeficiency
➢	Allergies
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3
Q

How does a patient present with AOM?

A
  • Acute onset
  • Middle ear effusion
  • Middle ear inflammation
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4
Q

How do we treat AOM?

A

Acetaminophen and ibuprofen are fist line

Amoxicillin

Symptomatic treatment should be offered to all patients, regardless of diagnosis and use of antibiotics

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5
Q

What is the etiology of pharyngitis?

A

Acute infection of the oropharynx or nasopharynx
➢ Viral (40-60% of cases)
➢ Bacterial (5-40% of cases)
• Group A β-hemolytic Streptococcus (GABHS)
• S. pyogenes (Strep Throat)

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6
Q

How do we treat pharyngitis?

A

Analgesics: APAP first line (acetomenophen); ibuprofen; viscous lidocaine or throat sprays

Non-pharmacologic: Rest, fluids, lozenges, saltwater gargles

Antibiotics: Penicillin VK first line

Treatment failure: Clindamycin, amoxicilin-clavulanate

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7
Q

How does a patient present with pharyngitis?

A
Sudden onset of sore throat
➢	Age 5 – 15 years
➢	Fever
➢	Headache
➢	N/V/Abdominal pain
➢	Tonsillopharyngeal inflammation
➢	Patchy tonsillopharyngeal exudates

If Viral: Conjunctivitis, Coryza, Cough

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8
Q

What is the etiology or laryngitis?

A

Pathogens:
• Viral: Most common pathogen (any respiratory virus)
• Bacterial: M. catarrhalis or H. influenzae

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9
Q

How does a patient present with laryngitis?

A

Recent onset of hoarseness or husky voice with a high pitch, often associated with a dry cough

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10
Q

How do we treat laryngitis?

A

Voice rest and humidification

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11
Q

What is the etiology of epiglottitis?

A

Most commonly due to Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib)

Strep. pneumoniae, Groups A, B, and C Streptococcus, Candida albicans, Varicella zoster

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12
Q

How does a patient present with epiglotittis?

A

Infection, inflammation, and swelling of the epiglottis

• Severe cases may cause complete airway obstruction

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13
Q

How do we treat epiglotitis?

A

Maintain airway

IV antibiotics for 7-10 days total:
Peds: Cefotaxime, ceftriaxone
Adults: ceftriaxone, cefotaxime

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14
Q

What is the etiology of pneumonia?

A

Bacteria 90% (S. pneumonia 20–60%)

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15
Q

What are the risk factors for pneumonia?

A
  • RR > 30 bpm
  • PaO2 /FiO2 ratio < 250
  • Multilobar inflitrates
  • Confusion/disorientation
  • BUN > 20 mg/dL
  • WBC < 4000 cells/mm3
  • Plts < 100,000 cells/mm3
  • Temp < 36ºC
  • Hypotension requiring fluid resuscitation
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16
Q

How does a patient present with pneumonia?

A

Respiratory symptoms (cough, SOB), sputum production, pleuritic chest pain, fever, tachycardia, tachypnea

Physical exam: Rales, rhonchi, decreased bronchial breath sounds

17
Q

How do we treat pneumonia?

A

1st line: Macrolide
• Azithromycin, Clarithromycin&raquo_space; Erythromycin
• 2nd line: doxycycline (or minocycline)

β-lactam + macrolide (or doxycycline)- OPTION #1: Ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, high-dose ampicillin

18
Q

What is the etiology of bronchitis?

A

Most commonly viral etiology, but can be bacterial

19
Q

How does a patient present with bronchitis?

A

Inflammation of one or more bronchi, usually secondary to infection. Does not affect bronchioles or alveoli.
➢ Common during winter months
➢ Acute – affects all ages

Begins as URTI; hallmark is cough and occurs early

20
Q

How do we treat bronchitis?

A

Almost always self limited; symptomatic and supportive treatment only.

Chronic – primarily adults with COPD

Persistent symptoms > 2 weeks, consider bacterial involvement

➢ Macrolides – Azithro-, Clarithro- > Erythromycin
➢ Respiratory FQ – avoid unless recent h/o antibiotic use

21
Q

What is the etiology of sinusitis?

A

Usually preceded by a viral respiratory tract infection → mucosal inflammation. Sinus ostia (drainage system to nasal cavity) becomes blocked. Mucosal secretions become trapped, defenses are impaired → bacterial proliferation.

  • S. pneumo
  • H. influenzae

Really mostly viral 90 – 98%

22
Q

What are the risk factors for sinusitis?

A
  • Age extremes (old, young)
  • Smoke, other air pollutants
  • Air travel & changes in atmospheric pressure
  • Swimming
  • Asthma/Allergies
  • Dental disease
  • Other medical conditions (DM, AIDS, pregnancy)
  • Hospitalization
23
Q

How does a patient present with sinusitis?

A

Inflammation and/or infection of the paranasal sinus mucosa

24
Q

How do we treat sinusitis?

A

Augmentin, Doxy if PCN allergy

25
Q

What are the risk factors for skin and soft tissue infections?

A
  • Obesity
  • Poor hygiene
  • Diabetes
  • Immune deficiency
  • Systemic or topical steroids
  • Problems with venous or lymphatic drainage of the area
  • Previous injury to the limb (e.g. trauma, radiotherapy, surgery)
  • Tinea pedis in the toes of the affected limb
  • Contact sports
  • IV drug use
  • Recurrent hospital admission
26
Q

How do we treat skin and soft tissue infections?

A

Dicloxacillin

27
Q

What is CURB-65?

A

Scoring system that uses presence/absence of disease modifying risk factors or clinical signs and symptoms to stratify patients based on mortality risk

Helps identify appropriate tx setting for patient: Confusion, Uremia (BUN > 20), Resp Rate > 30, BP < 90/60, Age > 65 years