Influenza Flashcards

1
Q

Seasonal influenza reamins among the leading causes of ____ in the US.

A

DEATH

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2
Q

How do you classify influenza types?

A

Type A and B

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3
Q

When is “flu season”?

A

October-May, with peak in February

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4
Q

What percentage of the population becomes ill from influenza each year?

A

5-20%

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5
Q

How many people are hospitalized each year for influenza? How many die?

A

200,000 hospitalized,

36,000 die

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6
Q

How is influenza spread?

A

respiratory droplets and/or contact with infected object

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7
Q

When is a person with influenza infectious?

A

1 day prior to and 5 days after becoming ill

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8
Q

How do you best prevent an influenza infection?

A

flu vaccine (shot or nasal spray)

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9
Q

How many influenza viruses are contained in each vaccine?

A

three; two type A and one type B

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10
Q

How many weeks does it take for an influenza vaccine to become effective?

A

2

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11
Q

What is a novel influenza? What is the result of a novel influenza infection?

A

A subtype of influenza that has not previously circulated in humans; tends to result in more severe disease since there is not immunity.

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12
Q

What are some examples of pandemic influenza infections?

A

Spanish influenza pandemic (1918), Asian influenza pandemic (1957), Hong Kong influenza pandemic (1968), and H1N1 (2009).

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13
Q

How is influenza transmitted?

A

Close contact, primarily through large respiratory droplets or short distance aerosols.
Indirect transmission, such as hand contact with secretions or through environmental contact.

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14
Q

What are the typical signs and symptoms of influenza? In infants? In elderly?

A

Sudden onset of fever >101F, cough, sore throat, cough, myalgia, lymphadenopathy, fatigue.
Infants may present with irritability, dehydration, and fever.
Elderly may appear disoriented.
Novel types may present with PNA, acute respiratory distress, NVD.

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15
Q

How do you test for influenza?

A

Commercial rapid influenza antigen tests, RT-PCR, and viral cultures (take 3-10 days to result).

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16
Q

How do you treat influenza?

A

Antivirals (depends on strain), recommended treatment includes neuraminidase inhibitors (Tamiflu, Relenza)

17
Q

Who are the treatment priorities with influenza?

A

those with severe illness, hospitalized patients, pregnant women, and other high risk patients.

18
Q

When must prophylaxis be started to be most effective?

A

Right away (Tamiflu)

19
Q

Who should get vaccinated against influenza?

A

Everyone 6 months and older should receive the vaccine every year

20
Q

What are the (abbreviated) general guidelines for preventing transmission of communicable disease?

A

Treat, isolate, quarantine, vaccinate, reduce risk factors (DM, HIV, smoking, etc), avoid transmission, proper handling of contaminated objects