Session 3 ILO'S Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the Sepsis Six Bundle with regard to Adaptive Immunity

A

Give 3, take 3:

Give:

  • (IV) Antibiotics
  • Fluids
  • Oxygen (if appropriate)

Take:

  • Cultures (blood)
  • Urine (monitor urine output)
  • Lactate and Hb

Within the first hour, following the recognition of sepsis

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2
Q

Describe the main microbiological features of Streptococcus pneumoniae

A
  • Gram positive cocci

- Facultative anaerobe

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3
Q

Describe the relevant anatomy and physiology linked to pneumonia

A

Anatomy:

Airways of lungs:

  • Trachea
  • Bronchi
  • Smaller bronchioles
  • Alveoli (where gas exchange happens)

Each lung divided into lobes - right lung =3 left lung = 2

  • Air enters into the lung and reaches the alveoli. In the alveoli OXYGEN moves from the air into capillaries where it is bound to haemoglobin.
  • CO2 moves from capillary to the alveoli to be expelled from lungs
  • Pneumonia is infection of alveoli and tissue of the lungs
  • Alveoli may become inflamed and fill with fluid or pus
  • Causes cough with phlegm or pus, fever, chills, difficulty breathing
  • Since the alveoli are the main gas exchange surface for replenishing the blood oxygen levels, infection and damage to the alveoli in viral and/or bacterial pneumonias can be severe and life-threatening.
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4
Q

Identify the specific and supportive tests for sepsis

A

Specific: (3)

  • Cerebral spinal fluid - test for meningitis using microscopy and PCR
  • Throat swab
  • EDTA bottle for PCR

Supportive: (7)

  • Full blood count
  • Urea and electrolytes
  • Blood sugar
  • CRP
  • Liver function tests
  • Coagulation studies (to assess liver function)
  • Blood gases (look at the oxygen sat)
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5
Q

Which individuals are at an increased risk of sepsis?

A
  • Very young (< 1 year old).
  • Elderly (>75 years) or very frail.
  • Pregnant, post-partum (within last 6 weeks).
  • Patients with impaired immune system due to illness (diabetes, chronic
    kidney failure, HIV etc.) or drugs (steroids, immunosuppressant etc.)
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6
Q

Understand the principles of supportive and specific treatment for acute sepsis
Describe sepsis prevention

A

Specific - Directly treat the infection causing septic shock
- Antibiotics which crosses blood brain barrier - Ceftriaxone (usually first line)

Supportive - Treat only symptoms of sepsis
- Sepsis 6 bundle

Prevention:

  • Vaccination against meningitis
  • Prophylaxis for close contacts
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7
Q

Describe red flag sepsis and NEWS

A
  • ‘Red Flag Sepsis’ is not a formal diagnosis! It identifies septic patients that are at high risk of deterioration/ end organ dysfunction.
  • Sepsis is diagnosed via nursing baseline observations (NEWS)! :
  • Respiration rate
  • Oxygen saturation
  • Systolic blood pressure
  • Pulse rate
  • Level of consciousness or new confusion*
  • Temperature
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8
Q

Understand the features of acute sepsis

A

Sepsis - life threatening organ dysfunction due to dysregulated host response to infection

Capillary leakage - allow inflammatory response and causes tumor(swelling)
Amplification of immune system- increased cell signal activity (can lead to dolor(pain))
Vasodilation - increases blood cells in area - rubor and calor

  • Increased heart rate
  • Increased respiratory rate
  • Decreased urine output
  • Decreased blood pressure
  • As a result of reduced blood perfusion to the brain, patients can present with:
  • Confusion
  • Drowsiness
  • Slurred speech
  • Agitation
  • Anxiety
  • Reduced level of consciousness.
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9
Q

Describe the role of the innate immune system and microbiota relating to infections of the lower respiratory tract

A

Physical barriers - Mucocillary escalator/Mucosal membrane, bronchial cilia

Physiological barriers - coughing/cough reflex and sneezing

Chemical barriers - antimicrobial molecules ie immunoglobulin A (IgA)

Biological barriers - normal flora

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10
Q

Describe and identify Adenovirus(double stranded DNA)as a cause of upper respiratory tract infections with regard to Sepsis

A
  • In the nasopharynx areas can spread to respiratory tract and cause infections like acute febrile pharyngitis, acute respiratory disease or viral pneumonia
  • Overreaction from immune system to tackle this can lead to sepsis
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11
Q

Describe the main features of community-acquired pneumonia Streptococcus pneumoniae

A
  • primary disease in healthy patient or secondary to a predisposing factor such as chronic lung disease, diabetes mellitus, or malignancy
  • Caused by tree pneumoniae, haemophilias influenza, staph.aureus
  • Common x-ray patterns are lobar consolidation(dense area by border of Lung segment or lobe)bronchopneumonia consolidation (patchy dense areas around larger airways) and interestitial(fine shadowing in lung fields w/o sputum)
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12
Q

Understand the mechanism by which micro-organisms trigger the inflammatory cascade

A
  • Cells sense, capture, process and then present antigens from microbe
  • This triggers adaptive immunity to get either a humoral response(extracellular) or cell-mediated immunity
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13
Q

Outline the humoral response and cell-mediated immunity

A

Humoral response- antibodies
Cell mediated immunity - cytotoxic T cell response

COME BACK TO

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14
Q

Describe features of antigen presenting cells

A
  • Strategic location - mucosal membrane, skin, blood, lymph nodes, spleen
  • Diversity in pathogen capture mechanisms - phagocytosis(whole microbe), macropinocytosis(soluble particles)
  • Diversity in pathogen sensors(PRRs)- extracellular pathogens(bacteria, fungi, Protozoa), intracellular(viruses)
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15
Q

Describe the role of MHC molecules in relation to microbe presentation

A
  • Binds to antigen in order to form an antigen presenting cell in immune system
  • Class 1 - expressed on all nucleated cells
  • Class 2 - expressed on APCs
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16
Q

Describe the processing and presentation of microbial antigens to T lymphocytes

A

Exogenous pathway
Microbes captures via phagocytosis or micropinocytosis and degraded into peptides the endosome
The peptides in the vesicle bind with vesicles containing MHC class 2 molecules and form a complex
Only occurs in APCs which present to CD4+ molecules on T cells

Endogenous pathway 
Viral protein in cytosol marked for destruction by protea some
Proteasome-generated viral peptide transported to ER by TAP proteins to form peptide-MHC class 1 complex
Occurs in all cell types to present to CD8+ receptors on T cells