bacterial infections of URT Flashcards

1
Q

normal flora of nares

A

S epidermidis
S aureus
Corynebacterium spp.

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2
Q

normal flora of nasopharynx

A
Streptococcus:
Viridans group (S mutans, mitis, milleri, salivarius)
Moraxella catarrhalis
Bacteroids
S pneumoniae
H influenzae
N meningitides
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3
Q

M protein

A

causes degradation of C3b (opsonin) –> antiphagocytic

essential for virulence

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4
Q

Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins (SPEs)

A

super antigens responsible for scarlet fever, toxic shock syndrome, and necrotizing fasciitis
only scarlet fever preceded by strep throat symptoms
nine proteins
cause fever, rash, T cell proliferation, B cell suppression

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5
Q

is scarlet fever or acute rheumatic fever caused by inflammatory response?

A

acute rheumatic fever

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6
Q

do SPEs cause scarlet fever or acute rheumatic fever?

A

scarlet fever

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7
Q

will cultures for acute rheumatic fever show S pyogenes?

A

no, onset ~3 weeks after initial infection
host has fought off infection
disease caused by inflammatory response to infection

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8
Q

diseases associated with S pyogenes

A
Streptococcal pharyngitis
Scarlet fever
Acute rheumatic fever
Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome
Post-streptococcal infection sequelae (acute glomerulonephritis)
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9
Q

diagnosis of Strep pharyngitis

A

culture of posterior pharynx and tonsils

blood agar plates –> beta hemolysis

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10
Q

treatment of Strep pharyngitis

A

10 day course of penicillin or erythromycin

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11
Q

symptoms of scarlet fever

A

desquamation of hands, redness of skin, white coating on tongue

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12
Q

symptoms of acute rheumatic fever

A

fever, joint pain, chest pain, rash, nodules, jerky movements

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13
Q

acute glomerulonephritis

A

post-streptococcal infection sequelae
1-4 weeks after strep pharyngitis, or 3-6 weeks after skin infection
seen in children
deposition of antigen-antibody complexes in glomeruli –> inhibition of filtration
symptoms: edema, HTN, hematuria, proteinuria, decreased serum complement levels

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14
Q

epidemiology of strep pharyngitis

A

respiratory droplets
if untreated, can be carried for weeks
anal carriers –> nosocomial infection
can spread by food contaminated by carriers

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15
Q

diagnosis of strep pharyngitis

A

culture –> blood agar –> beta hemolysis

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16
Q

treatment of strep pharyngitis

A

10 days penicillin or erythromycin

17
Q

symptoms of diphtheria

A

mild sore throat, slight fever, high fatigue, dramatic neck swelling, whitish gray membrane to tonsils/throat/nasal cavity

18
Q

organism that causes diphtheria

A

Corynebacterium diphtheriae

19
Q

Corynebacterium diphtheriae

A

gram + rod
non spore forming
Chinese letters

20
Q

treatment of diphtheria

A

a

21
Q

symptoms of pinkeye

A

tears, conjunctival redness, photophobia, EYELID SWELLING, PUS

22
Q

organisms that cause pinkeye

A
Haemophilus influenzae
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Moraxella lacunata
Enterobacteria
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
23
Q

pathogenesis of pinkeye

A

airborne respiratory droplets or rubbed in eye from contaminated hands
organisms resist lysozyme
symptoms induced by inflammatory response to organisms

24
Q

treatment of pinkeye

A

gentamicin or ciprofloxacin drops

25
Q

organisms that cause otitis media and sinusitis

A

Haemophilus influenzae
Streptococcus pneumoniae
MCAT

26
Q

treatment of otitis/sinusitis

A

ampicillin

27
Q

diseases caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae

A

otitis media
sinusitis
lobar pneumonia
meningitis

28
Q

Haemophilus influenzae

A

small pleomorphic gram negative rods or coccobacilli
facultative anaerobes
fermentative

29
Q

diseases caused by H parainfluenzae and non-encapsulated H influenzae (which colonize URT)

A

otitis media, sinusitis, bronchitis, pneumonia

30
Q

disease caused by encapsulated H influenzae serotype B

A

meningitis, epiglottitis, cellulitis in unvaccinated children

31
Q

Chlamydia spp

A

small obligate intracellular parasites
differ from other bacteria in development cycle:
inactive infectious elementary bodies + active noninfectious reticulate bodies

32
Q

Chlamydia trochamitis pathogenesis

A

direct destruction of host cells during replication + host inflammatory response
organisms gain access via abrasions/lacerations
granuloma formation

33
Q

diseases caused by Chlamydia trochamitis

A

trachoma
adult inclusion conjunctivitis
neonatal conjunctivitis
infant pneumonia