Bacterial Pneumonia 2 Flashcards

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1
Q

legionella bacteriology

A

gram (-) rods. stains poorly by gram stain or H&E (use silver or IF). facultative intracellular parasites. free-living form is motile (flagella). intracellular form is non-motile. reservoirs are in freshwater protozoa and biofilms in commercial water systems. humans are unnatural “dead end” host for legionella

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2
Q

legionella replication

A

begins living in biofilm in warm water or soil. taken up by phagocytosis. contained in an altered phagosome that doesn’t get merged to a lysosome. becomes motile and escapes the phagosome. lyses cell and spreads to another cell.

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3
Q

3 outcomes of legionella infection in humans

A

asymptomatic seroconversion. pontiac fever (flu like, resolves without complication). legionnaires disease (pneumonia. suppression of kidney function. usually resolves with hospitalization and treatment. can be fatal)

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4
Q

risk factors for legionnaires disease

A

increasing age. immunosuppression. smoking. chronic heart or lung disease. chronic swallowing disorder. being male. for outbreaks, treavel is common: conventions/weddings at a hotel.

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5
Q

legionnaires occurrence and mortality

A

80% of cases are isolated. 20% present as members of an outbreak. reportable. outbreaks are a simultaneously exposed group, not contagious. mortality decreasing due to prompt diagnosis and early use of appropriate antibiotics.

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6
Q

presentation of legionnaires disease

A

altered mental status. high fever/chills. headache. acute renal failure. pneumonia/cough/chest pain. pancreatitis. diarrhea. need labs to differentiate from other pneumonias.

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7
Q

how to diagnose legionella infection (urine antigen test)

A

urine antigen test: commercial ELISA test. fast test. reliably detects LP1 strain of L pneumophila, which causes 90% of LD in the USA. testing significantly associated with reduced mortality.

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8
Q

how to diagnose legionella infection (culture)

A

respiratory secretion culture. slower. technically demanding. detects many strains and species of legionella. 27% fatality rate among culture pos, urine test neg patients.

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9
Q

treatment of legionella infections

A

pontiac fever often resolves witout treatment. LD requires an antibiotic that penetrates infected cells: levofloxacin, azithromycin, erythromycin.

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10
Q

C. burnetii bacteriology

A

zoonosis of asymptomatic infection of ruminants. transmitted to humans by inhalation of aerosols of infected ruminant urine, feces, birthing matter (no vector). super infectious. multiplies in aveolar monocytes and macrophaeges and travels in them to liver, spleen, bone marrow. acid phosphatase and superoxide dismutases help survive in fused lysosome/endosome.

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11
Q

C. burnetii pathogenesis/presentation

A

fever, chills, sweats, headache, dry cough, pneumonia, hepatits, pregnancy issues, rash, endocarditis, rarely fetal, reportable.

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12
Q

C. burnetii diagnosis and treatment

A

imunohistochemical methods, ELISA, immunofluorescence. use doxycycline or fluoroquinolones to treat. vaccine available to farm and vet personnel and military stationed in the middle east

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13
Q

mycoplasma pneumoniae bacteriology

A

smallest freeliving organisms. strictly aerobic. no cell wall. only prokaryotic cell membrane that contains cholesterol. difficult to culture. fried egg shaped colonies. only one serotype, but immunity is incomplete

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14
Q

mycoplasma pathogenesis

A

resides on mucosal surfaces of respiratory and genital tracts. transmitted by inhalation of respiratory aerosols. causes tracheobronchitis, bronchiolitis, 5-10% progresses to atypical walking pneumonia. P1 adhesin binds respiratory epithelial cells. some intracellular penetration. CARDS exotoxin causes ciliostasis and some cell death. local inflammation from bacterial wastes.

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15
Q

mycoplasma and anemia?

A

antibodies against mycoplasma cross-react with red blood cell membranes (cold agglutinins) so patients may become anemic. resolves spontaneously with disease.

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16
Q

mycoplasma diagnosis

A

exam: nonspecific upper/lower airway, fever, aches and pains, oropharyngeal inflammation, erythematous tympanic membranes, conjunctivitis, rash, lung sounds with ronchi and rales.
lab: self-limited and antibiotic responsive, labwork not usually required. culture and molecular testing available. may be anemic

17
Q

mycoplasma treatment

A

fluoroquinolones cover mycoplasma and all similarly presenting bacterial infections. erythromycin, azithromycin, clarithromycin, tetracycline all work slightly better against mycoplasma. longer treatment courses (14-21 days) needed because of mycoplasmas slow growth and intracellular penetration