blood infections Flashcards

1
Q

define a blood stream infection (BSI)

A

presence of microorganisms growing in blood cultures

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2
Q

what is the differences in a primary and secondary BSI

A
primary = unknown source of infection
secondary = has another infection (pneumonia, UTI, soft tissue...)
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3
Q

what is the appropriate empiric treatment for a gram positive BSI

A

empiric therapy is vancomycin

better than like linezolid= static; vanc = cidal

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4
Q

what is considered a community acquired BSI

A

occurs less than 48 hours after hospital admission without healthcare risk factors

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5
Q

what are healthcare risk factors for a BSI

A
  1. hospitalization in an acute care hospital in past 90 days for longer than 1 day
  2. resident in a nursing home or long term care facility
  3. dialysis
  4. IV home therapy
  5. immunosuppressive medications
  6. invasive device present
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6
Q

what are common causes of transient bacteremia

A

tooth brushing

biopsy

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7
Q

what is a common cause of intermittent bacteremia (when it goes away and comes back repeatedly)

A

abscess

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8
Q

what is a common cause of persistent/ sustained bacteremia

A

intravascular (endocarditis present)

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9
Q

what pathogens may be true pathogens or contaminants in a BSI

A

viridans streptococci

enterococci spp.

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10
Q

what species are usual contaminants (not pathogens) in a BSI

A
  1. coagulase negative staph
  2. bacillus
  3. corynebacterium
  4. propionibacterium acnes
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11
Q

what are the most frequently occurring inpatient bacteria in BSIs in order

A
  1. S. aureus
  2. e. choli
  3. enterococcis
  4. Coagulase negative staph
  5. pseudomonas
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12
Q

what are the most frequently occurring out patient bacteria in BSIs in order

A
  1. e. choli
  2. S. aureus
  3. enterococci
  4. pseudomonas
  5. Cooag negative staph
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13
Q

what organsims are more likely to disseminate in BSIs

A

candida and gram positive cocci are much more likely than gram negative rods

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14
Q

what are some host dependent factors that put people at risk for dissemination of BSIs

A
  1. advanced age and arthritis
  2. prosthetic material in place
  3. immunosuppressed state
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15
Q

what are some frequent sites of dissemination

A
  1. heart valves
  2. bone and joints
  3. intervertebral discs
  4. eyes
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16
Q

What should be used to treat an MSSA BSI?

A

nafcillin

17
Q

what should be used to treat an MRSA BSI

A

continue vancomycin

18
Q

what should be used to treat an enterococcus BSI

A

ampicillin (can add gentamicin for cidal activity)

19
Q

what should be used to treat an streptococcus BSI

A

beta-lactam

20
Q

what organism gets static activity from vanc and ampicillin

A

enterococcus

21
Q

what should be used to treat an vancomycin resistant enterococcus (VRE)

A

daptomycin

22
Q

what is the minimum duration for a gram positive BSI

A

2 weeks after 1st negative culture

23
Q

what gram positive BSI organism may be treated for a shorter duration?
for how long?

A

enterococcus

7-14 days