Ch. 10 - Upper Respiratory Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

Group A Streptococci - S. pyrogenes

A

gram positive

streptococcal pharyngitis = strep throat

transmissible through respiratory droplet

virulence factors: M protein (resist phagocytosis); streptokinase (remove fibrin clots)

treatment: ampicillin, amoxicillin; hand hygiene best prevention

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2
Q

scarlett fever

A

strain of s. pyrogenes has genes coding erythrogenic exotoxins

cause pink-red rash on skin – from blood leaking through walls of damaged capillaries

treatment: penicillin

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3
Q

rheumatic fever

A

develop from lack of treatment of strep throat

affects joints and heart

scarring and distortion of heart valves – antibodies confuse heart muscle for M protein

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4
Q

Diptheria - corynebacterium diptheriae

A

gram positive bacteria

transmission from respiratory droplets

bacterial cells secrete exotoxin that inhibits translation – cell death

accumulation of pseudomembrane on tonsils and pharynx

treatment: penicillin

TDaP

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5
Q

epiglottitis

A

epiglottis infected with bacterial pathogen (eg Haemophilus influenzae) - infected in surrounding tissue

inflammation of epiglottis

difficulty breathing - stridor (wheezing sound breathing in/out)

prevention: immunization with Hib vaccine

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6
Q

sinusitis

A

inflammation of the sinuses

begins with viral infection of nasal cavity (rhinitis)

acute sinusitis - blockage at the opening of the sinuses

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7
Q

acute otitis externa

A

outer ear infection

swimmer’s ear - streptococcus, staphylococcus, pseudomonas

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8
Q

acute otitis media

A

middle ear infection

most common

causative agents: streptococcus pneumonia, haemophilus influenza

start with common cold in URT – travel to ear

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9
Q

bacterial meningitis

acute bacterial meningitis (ABM)

A

inflammation of the meninges ( membranes that envelope brain and spinal chord)

attaches to nasopharyngeal mucosa by pili
local URT infection
invasion of epithelium
spread to blood
cross blood-brain barrier
meninges inflamed – pressure on spinal chord and brain

Diagnosis: spinal tap, Gram stain

Symptoms: fever and stiff neck, headache, nausea, vomiting, sensitivity to light

Treatment: penicillin, cephalosporins, vancomycin (may be beta lactamase resistant

Vaccine: conjugate vaccines

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10
Q

meningococcal meningitis - neisseria meningitis

A

encapsulated

gram negative diplococcus - endotoxin + capsule

found in 10% latent worldwide

most common form - accounts for 90% of ABM cases

transmitted via respiratory droplets

High risk: 6mo - 2yrs; young adults – overcrowded places

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11
Q

Pneumococcal meningitis - streptococcus pneumoniae

A

encapsulated

gram positive diplococcus

community acquired meningitis - affecting infants and elderly

treatment: penicillin

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12
Q

Haemophilus meningitis - Haemophilus influenzae

A

encapsulated

gram negative coccobacillus

High risk: 6mo - 4yrs

vaccine: Hib vaccine – combined with TDaP = Tetramune
DTP-HbOC = conjugate vaccine

capsule not as good at stimulating immune response; conjugate to protein, more immunogenic

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13
Q

Pertussis – bordatella pertussis

A

transmitted via respiratory droplets

pili adhere to epithelial cells in mouth/throat

exotoxin - paralyze ciliated epithelial cells – impair mucus movement

stage 1 (catarrhal) - cough, low fever, high bacterial load

stage 2 (paroxysmal) - disintegrating cells and mucus accumulate in airways – labored breathing; paroxysms = rapid coughing in one exhalation

stage 3 (convalescence) - sporadic coughing

“100 day cough”

Treatment: erythromycin during catarrhal stage

Vaccine: DTaP

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14
Q

Tuberculosis - mycobacterium tuberculosis

A

waxy cell wall – more resistant to antibiotics

90% latent infection

transmitted via small aerosol droplets – from person with active pulmonary disease (active TB)

primary infection = pulmonary infection with bacterial cells entering alveoli

infection arrested in tubercle = latent infection

infection spread throughout = active infection (pulmonary TB, Extrapulmonary TB)

miliary TB: tubercles throughout the body (from spread of infection)
Treatment: isoniazid, rifampin, ethambutol

acid fast - resistance to decolorization during staining procedures

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15
Q

healthcare-acquired pneumonia

A

causative agent: staphylococcus aureus, klebsiella pneumonia

inflammation of one or both lungs

s. aureas (gram positive):
- spread through hand contamination

klebsiella (gram negative rod):

  • acquired by respiratory droplets
  • bloody sputum
  • those with impaired lung function
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16
Q

community-acquired pneumonia

A

causative agent: streptococcus pneumonia

Gram positive, encapsulated diplococci

transmitted via aerosol droplets

treatment: penicillin

17
Q

primary atypical pneumonia

A

causative agent: mycoplasma pneumonia

transmitted via breath droplets

diagnosis: fried egg colony on blood agar plate
treatment: tetracyclines (penicillin will not work!)

18
Q

Legionnaires’ Disease

A

causative agent: legionella pneumophila

Gram negative rods

live where water collects

airborne transmission

treatment: erythromycin