Insect Bites/Parasites Flashcards

1
Q

most easily seen nape of neck and above the ear - nits (eggs) can be found attached to hair shaft

A

pediculosis

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2
Q

lice tx?

A

permethrin 1% cream

for resistant bugs use malathion or oral ivermectin in immunocompromised

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3
Q

presents as severe pruritus 4-6 weeks after initial infestation

  • excoriations of the web spaces, heel of the palm, wrist, elbows, axillae, genitalia and breasts
  • head and neck infection in infants, elderly and immunocompromised
  • burrows can be found with associated small vesicles and pustules
A

scabies

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4
Q

who to treat when scabies are present?

A

entire household

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5
Q

scabies tx?

A

permethrin 5% cream to entire body for 8-12 hours, repeat 1 week later

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6
Q

immunocompromised tx of scabies

A

oral ivermectin, 1 dose

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7
Q

crusted scabies tx?

A

ivermectin once a day on days 1, 2, 8, 9, 15 plus permetrhin daily for 7 days, then 2x a week till cured

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8
Q

how to tx a scabies pt that has intense itching?

A

topical steroids or benadryl

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9
Q

main tx for arthropod bites?

A

topical steroids

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10
Q

breakfast, lunch, dinner bite

A

bed bugs

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11
Q

how long must a tick be attached for risk of lymes disease?

A

must feed for at least 24 hrs to infect host, but 72hrs is more statistically significant

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12
Q

stage 1 lymes

A

Classically an expanding bull’s eye erythematous lesion (erythema migrans)
Associated w/ flu symptoms w/ or w/o fever (HA, arthralgias, myalgias, fatigue)

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13
Q

stage 2 lymes

A

can occur 1-4 weeks after EM
Neuro: Bell’s Palsy, “aseptic” meningitis (mild)
Cards: myopericarditis w/ atrial or ventricular arrhythmias or heart block

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14
Q

stage 3 lymes

A

manifests primarily as musculoskeletal, neurologic and skin sx/symptoms
- classically presents as monoarticular or oligoarticular arthritis with the knee disproportionately swollen compared to pain

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15
Q

Acrodermatits chronica atrophicans

A

blue/red discoloration -> atrophic and sclerotic

rare side effect that can occur up to 10 years later

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16
Q

gold standard test for lymes

A

B. burgdorferi culture

17
Q

confirmatory test for lymes

A

western blot

18
Q

most accessible test for lymes

A

Indirect Immunofluorescence Assay (IFA)

19
Q

IgM and IgG results from lyme

A

IgM-first appears 2-4 weeks post-exposure
- peaks at 3-6 weeks
IgG-first appears 4-6 weeks post-exposure
- peaks 4-6 months

20
Q

how is early lymes actually diagnosed?

A

cliniwhecal symptoms

21
Q

how is late lymes dx?

A

clinical symptoms and lab testing

22
Q

what if the pt has non-specific symptoms?

A

no lab testing required

23
Q

under what cirucumstances would you begin lymes prophylaxis?

A
  1. adult or nymph I. scapularis identified and known to be attached for 36hrs
  2. prophylaxis is started within 72hrs of tick removal
  3. more than 20% of ticks in area known to be infected w/ B. burgdorferi
  4. no contraindication for doxycycline (pregnant, allergic, 8 or younger)
24
Q

stage 1 tx?

A

Doxycycline 100mg BID x2-3 weeks

25
Q

stage 2 tx?

A

ceftriaxone, cefotaximine or PCN G plus doxy