Staphylococcus Flashcards

1
Q

Staph are all..

A

catalase positive

Gpos cocci in clusters

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2
Q

Staph groups

A

Staph aureus

Staph epidermidis

Staph saprophyticus

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3
Q

Staph aureus features

A
  • basic habitat nares of nose
  • produces yellow pigment
  • beta-hemolytic
  • coagulase positive (forms fibrin clots in plasma)
  • catalase positive
  • Protein A virulence factor (blocks Fc-IgG interaction preventing phagocytosis and complement activation)
  • produces toxin related diseases
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4
Q

Staph aureus infections

A
  • Toxin disease
    • Toxic shock syndrome (TSST-1)
    • Food poisoning (staph aureus enterotoxin)
    • Scalded Skin Syndrome (Exfoliatin)
  • Infectious diseases
    • Skin infections (impetigo)
    • Pneumonia
    • Endocarditis
    • Osteomyelitis
    • Abscesses
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5
Q

Toxic shock syndrome

A

Toxin: TSST-1

fever

shock

red rash

diffuse red erythema (sun burn)

after weeks desquamation of palms and soles

diarrhea

tampons or surgical wound packing

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6
Q

Staph food poisoning

A

food handler contaminates food and often when food is left at room temp for several hours (picnic)

staph grows in food and makes enterotoxin (ingest pre-formed toxin to get sick)

illness develops 3-6 hours later

NV and abdominal cramps

multiple sick people

classic food is mayonaise (potatoe or egg salad)

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7
Q

Scalded skin syndrome

A

Staph Exfoliative toxin (exfoliatin)

occurs in newborns 3-7 days old

fever, diffuse erythema starting at the mouth

sloughing of skin (toxin destroys keritnocyte attachments in stratum granulosum only)

Damage in intraepidermal and heals completely without scarring

Nikolsky’s sign (skin slips off with gentle tug)

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8
Q

Bullous impetigo

A

Bullous type is caused by Staph aureus

honey colored crusted lesions

bullous impetigo is a variant of impetigo with bullae (fluid-filled sacs)

occurs in children and easily spread

S. aureus exfoliative toxin strains

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9
Q

Staph pneumonia

A

rare cause of lobar pneumonia

classically occuring as a post-infectious pneumonia (following influenza)

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10
Q

Staph endocarditis

A
  • classic cause of acute endocarditis featuring
    • rapid onset of symptoms
    • very ill pts
    • often no pre-existing valve disease
  • Contrast with subacute endocarditis caused by Strep viridans
    • slower onset
    • less sick patient
    • prior valve abnormality
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11
Q

Subacute endocarditis

A
  • subacute endocarditis caused by Strep viridans
    • slower onset
    • less sick patient
    • prior valve abnormality
  • As opposed to Staph acute endocarditis
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12
Q

Staph bacteremia

A

common cause is central lines

most important prevention technique is the sterile technique

  • wash hands
  • gloves
  • sterile insertion practices
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13
Q

Staph osteomyelitis

A
  • Staph is a common cause of osteomyelitis
  • in children often occurs in long bones
    • femur
    • tibia
    • fibula
  • in adults
    • usually spine
  • hematogenous spread
  • spread from skin soft tissues
  • Trauma (surgery)
  • symptoms
    • localized pain +/- fever
  • Dx: imaging (CXR, CT or MRI)
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14
Q

Classic causes of Osteomyelitis

A
  • Child
    • staph aureus (hematogeonous spread)
  • Sickle Cell patient (functionally asplenic)
    • Salmonella (hematogenous spread)
  • TB pts
    • Pott’s Disease (vertebrae/spine)
  • Diabetic
    • Polymicrobial from foot ulcer
  • bedbound pts
    • polymicrobial from pressure sores
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15
Q

Staph cellulitis

A

infection of deep dermis and subcutaneous fat

Most often cause by beta-hemolytic strep but S aureus can also cause it

Use antibiotics that cover staph and strep

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16
Q

Staph abscesses

A
  • Bacteria and inflammatory cells (pus)
  • walled off in deep tissues
  • skin abscesses are commonly caused by Staph aureus
    • furuncle= boil; infection of hair follicle
    • carbuncle= multiple boils clustered together
  • Tonsilar abscesses
  • mainstay of treatment is incision and drainage
17
Q

Staph aureus antibiotics

A
  • most staph are resistant to pennicllin
  • produce beta-lactamases
  • antistaphylococcal penicillins
    • Dicloxacillin
    • Nafcillin
    • Oxacillin
  • First generation cephalosporins
    • Cephalexin
  • Beta-lactam + inhibitor
    • Amoxicillin/Claulanate
18
Q

MRSA antibiotics

A
  • Resistant to all beta-lactams (altered penicillin binding proteins)
  • important hospital acquired bacteria
    • sometimes can be community acquired
  • Vancomycin or Daptomycin are the antibiotics of choice
  • can also use Linezolid
19
Q

Staphylococcus epidermidis features

A
  • normal skin flora
  • not normally pathogenic but
    • blood culture contaminant (needle or IV contaminated with S. epidermidis)
    • infects prosthetic materials in blood (catheters, pacemakers, prosthetic valves and joints)
      • surface molecules aid in adherance
      • produce biofilms
  • Often Methicillin resistant
  • Tx: Vancomycin
20
Q

Staphylococcus epidermidis treatment

A

***Vancomycin***

As it is often Methicillin resistant

21
Q

Staphylococcus saprophyticus features

A
  • Cause of UTIs (especially in sexually active women)
    • most are caused by E. coli (90%)
      • others are Proteus, Klebsiella, S. saprophyticus
  • Key features
    • sexual activity (honeymooner’s cystitis)
    • Nitrite negative on urine dipstick (E. coli is nitrite positive)
  • Treated with UTI antibiotics
    • Fluoroquinolones
    • SMX-TMP
    • Nitrofurantoin