Infectious Disease 3 Flashcards

1
Q

How do you treat First infection with C. Diff?

A

IF not severe: Oral Metronidazole

IF Severe: Oral Vancomycin

  • wbc>15
  • Cr increase 1.5X baseline
  • Serum Albumin <3
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2
Q

How do you treat FIRST RECURRENCE of Cdiff.

A
Oral Metronidazole (10-14 days)
or 

Oral Vancomycine (if severe: wbc>15, Cr increase 1.5x baseline, Albumin <3)

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3
Q

How do you treat SECOND RECURRENCE of Cdiff?

A

Oral Vancomycin pulse and taper for 6-7 weeks.

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4
Q

How do you treat THIRD AND SUBSEQUENT RECURRENCE of Cdiff?

A

Oral Vanc followed by…
Rifaximin or Fidaxomicin

Refer for Fecal transplant

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5
Q

How do you treat an Abscess?

What are the 4 major indications for inpatient treatment/hospitalization?

A

Incision and Drainage = Gold standard of treatment.
ABX (Clindamycin or Vanc) if fever or cellulitis surrounding abscess.

Hospitalize if:

  1. Fever
  2. HD instability (low bp, persistent tachy)
    3) rapidly progressing lesion or multiple lesions
  3. poor response or contraindication to PO abx
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6
Q

Most common organism to cause abscess?

A

Staph Aureus

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7
Q

What is the classic symptom of Giardia

A

Acutely -Bulky, greasy foul-smelling diarrhea.

Chronic infection- weight loss, malabsorption.

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8
Q

Who should you treat for Giardia and with what agent?

A

TRX only symptomatic patient with positive stool assay. Asymptomatic carriers (+ stool but no symp) eventually clear the bug on their owns.

METRONIDAZOLE.

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9
Q

How do you diagnose Giardia?

A

stool ELISA = best test.
O/P an option but less sensitive than ELISA.

IF ELISA AND O/P negative but clinical suspicion is high, then can do EGD with duodenal aspirate/bx.

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10
Q

What is the pathophysiology of Toxic Shock syndrome?

What bacteria is most associated with it?

What setting do you commonly see TSS?

A

Exotoxin (superantigen) mediated massive global activation of T-cell, releasing cytokines. ]

Staph Aureus.

Commonly seen with nasal packing, tampons, retained surgical gauze..

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11
Q

How do you treat TSS?

A

1) remove foreign body (nasal packing)
2) aggressive IVF
3) Clindamycin (prevents more toxin production)
4) Anti stapylococcal ABX
- Vanc (if MRSA suspected)
- or Nafcillin OR Oxacillin

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12
Q

What organism causes cat scratch disease?

What is the classic presentation of cat scratch?

A

Bartonella Henselae

Classic presentation:

  • Hx of exposure to cat.
  • Papule/nodule on bite/scratch.
  • 1-2 weeks of bite develop tender lymphadenopathy near bite/scratch.
  • Fever (50%)
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13
Q

Treatment of Cat scratch?

A

Azithromycin

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14
Q

What bacteria is associated with marine environments and causes a rapidly progressive cellulitis, with hemorrhagic bullae and sepsis.

A

VIBRIO VULNIFICUS

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15
Q

How do you diagnose VIBRIO VULIFICUS?

How do you treat VIBRIO VULNIFICUS?

A

Dx –> blood/wound culture.

Cefriaxone and Doxycycline (ASAP. Dont wait for culture results because can rapidly progress to death.)

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