16 - Infectious Diseases including Travel Infections Flashcards
What is antimicrobial stewardship?
Process of persuading prescribers to use evidence-based prescribing to prevent antibiotic overuse and therefore prevent antibiotic resistance
Preserves future effectiveness of antibiotics
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What are some of the steps in antimicrobial stewardship for every prescriber?
- Prescribe the most appropriate dose, for the shortest time to be effective and the most appropriate route, with the narrowest spectrum abx
- Take microbiological samples before prescribing antibiotic and review prescription when get the results
- Consider delayed prescribing for self-limiting conditions
- Explain to patients why antibiotics might do them more harm than good
- Avoid repeat antibiotic prescriptions within 6 months
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What scenarios do the AMS team review?
- Set local antimicrobial guidelines and review regularly
- Review patient safety events
- Ensure antibiotic pack sizes are appropriate for course length
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What is the 10 point approach to a patient with a suspected infection?
- What is the evidence for the infection?
- How severe is it?
- Any patient factors to consider?
- Which organ system is infected?
- What is the likely microorganism?
- Which anti-microbial therapy is best?
- Which route of administration is best?
- Any other treatment needed?
- Any risk of transmitting to others?
- How do we follow up and achieve discharge?
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What are some causes of immunosuppression?
- HIV
- Immunosuppressive drugs e.g steroids, chemo
- Primary immunodeficiency
- Age
- Malnutrition
- Malignancy
- Asplenism
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What do you need to consider with vaccinating immunosuppressed patients?
- Cannot have live vaccines as can develop disseminated disease
- Try to give inactivated vacines two weeks before immunosuppressive therapy as poor antibody response when immunosuppressed
- Need to be offered flu and pneumovax
How are nosocomial infections managed?
- Identify: e.g screening of MRSA
- Protect: isolate multiantibiotic resistant microbes, highly transmissable diseases or hgih risk groups
- Treat: using local guidelines
- Prevent: modify risk factors e.g improve nutrition, remove catheters, clean hands
What are the preventative measures used in hospital to stop infection spreading?
- Hand washing/gelling (wash for C.Diff)
- Bare below elbows and tie back hair
- Scrubs in highly infectous areas
- PPE
- Aseptic techniques
- Clean environment
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What is the difference between standard isolation and respiratory isolation?
Respiratory:
- Negative pressure room if AGP or room with door closed at all times if NAGP
- Respiratory precautions sign on door
- Gown, gloves, face shield and mask/FFP3
- Dispose of waste in the room
- Hand hygeine after glove removal
- Limit movement to other departments and visitors
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What are the most common organisms causing infection in the following systems and what antibiotics are used to treat them:
- Skin/Soft tissue
- MSK
- Respiratory
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- Skin: Staph Aureus, Coagulase negative Staph (S.Epidermidis), Group A Strep (S.Pyogenes), MRSA
- MSK: same as above, Pseudomonas for diabetic foot, TB)
- Respiratory: S.Pneumoniae, H. Influenzae, Legionella, Mycoplasma, Rhinovirus, Adenovirus, Influenza
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What are the most common organisms causing infection in the gastrointestinal system and what antibiotics are used to treat them?
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Diarrhoea: Rotavirus, Adenovirus, Campylobacter, C.Diff, Salmonella
Peritonitis: Enterobacteriacae
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What are the most common organisms causing infection in the following systems and what antibiotics are used to treat them:
- Genitourinary Tract
- CNS
- Endocarditis
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GU: Enterobacteriacae, P.Aeruginosa, N.Gonnorrhea, C.Trachomatis
CNS: S.Pneumonia, N.Meningitidis, HSV, TB, Listeria (>55 or immunocompromised)
Endocarditis: Strep Viridans, Enterococci, S.Aureus, MRSA
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What are the most common organisms causing infection in the following systems and what antibiotics are used to treat them:
- Line infections
- Hospital acquired
- Sepsis
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What is the gram stain of the following:
- S.Aureus
- S.Epidermidis
- C.Diff
- S.Pneumoniae
- S.Pyigenes
- H.Pylori
- Salmonella
- Campylobacter
- Pseudomonas Aeruginosa
- H.Influenzae
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What are some examples of common parasites?
- Protozoa: malaria, entamoeba histolytica, giardia lamblia
- Hyatid disease
- Schistosomiasis
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What are some examples of notifiable diseases?
- Mumps
- Measles
- Food poisoning
- Malria
- SARS
- TB
- Tetanus
- Whooping cough
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What are some bacteria that are encapsulated?
- N.Meningitidis
- H.Influenzae
- S.Pneumoniae
These are destroyed in spleen so sickle cell or after splenectomy need prophylactic vaccinations as higher risk of infection from these
What is the definition of the following:
- Endotoxin
- Exotoxin
- Enterotoxin
Endotoxin: LPS complex on outer membrane of gram negative bacteria that can activate complement and trigger inflammatory response
Exotoxin: toxin secreted by bacteria that works at different site to bacterial growth
Enterotoxin: exotoxin that targets the gut e.g C.Diff
How can antibiotics be grouped by their actions?
Affect:
- Cell wall synthesis
- Nucleic Acid synthesis
- Protein synthesis
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What are the two different categories of antibiotic resistance and give some examples of each?
Intrinsic: due to structural characteristics e.g vancomycin cannot outer membrane of gram negative bacteria
Acquired: bacteria have evolved via mutation due to selection pressue from antibiotic use (including agricultural antibiotics)
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What are some examples of antibiotics that inhibit cell wall synthesis?
Beta lactams: penicillins, carbapenems, cephalosporins
Non beta lactams: glycopeptides
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What is Tazocin?
Piperacillin + Tazobactam
(beta lactam + betalactamase inhibitor)
What are the indications for the following antibiotics:
- Benzylpenicillin (Penicillin G)
- Phenoxymethylpenicillin (Penicillin V)
- Co-Amoxiclav
- Tazocin
- Flucloxacillin
- Vancomycin
- Cetriaxone
Penicillin G: usually gram positive such as streptococci (chest, endocarditis, cellulitis), meningococcus
Penicillin V: prophylaxis after splenectomy, rheumatic heart disease
Co-Amoxiclav: chest, pyelonephritis, cellulitis, bone
Tazocin: broad spectrum gram positive and negative, neutropenic sepsis, nosocomial infection
Flucloxacillin: staphylococcus e.g skin, bone, post viral pneumonia
Vancomycin: complicated gram positive e.g MRSA, oral for C.Diff
Ceftriaxone: meningococcus
What are some examples of antibiotics that inhibit protein synthesis?
- Aminoglycosides
- Macrolides
- Tetracyclines
- Fusidic acid
- Chloramphenicol
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What are the indications for the following antibiotics and what are some side effects:
- Gentamicin/Tobramycin
- Azithromycin/Clarithromycin/Erythromycin
- Tetracycline/Doxycycline
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What are some examples of antibiotics that inhibit nucleic acid synthesis?
- Folate synthesis inhibitors: trimethoprim
- Fluoroquinolones: ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin
- Metronidazole
- Rifampicin
What are the indications for the following antibiotics and what are the side effects:
- Trimethoprim
- Ciprofloxacin
- Metronidazole
- Rifampacin
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Which antibiotics have a risk of the following:
- Long QT
- C.Diff
- Nephrotoxic
- Ototoxic
Long QT: macrolides, fluoroquinolones, azole antifungals
C.Diff: cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, clindamycin, amoxicillin, ampicillin
Nephrotoxic: aminoglycosides, glycopeptides (vancomycin, gentamicin)
Ototoxic: gentamicin/tobramycin (aminoglycosides)
How are staphylococcal organisms classified and what are some infections that they cause?
Gram positive and coagulase +ve/-ve
S.Epidermidis (coag -ve): less virulent and usually only infection if immunosuppressed or foreign material e.g prosthetic joint, heart valve, catheter, IV line
S.Aureus (coag +ve): toxic shock, cellulitis, impetigo, endocarditis, mastitis, septic arthritis
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How are staphylococcal infections treated?
- Usually penicillins
- If MRSA use vancomycin
How are streptococcal organisms classified and what are some infections they cause?
Gram Positive, Haemolytic a/b/y, Lancefield Group
S.Pyogenes (B Haemolytic Group A): tonsillitis, scarlet fever, pneumonia, necrotising fascitis
S.Pneumoniae: otitis media, meningitis, pneumonia
S.Viridans: endocarditis from dental origin
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What are some examples of gram positive bacilli?
- C.Diff
- C.Botulinum
- Listeria
What are some examples of gram negative cocci and bacilli ?
Cocci
- N.Meningitidis
- Moraxhella Catarrhalis
Bacilli
- P.Aeruginosa
- E.Coli
- Klebsiella Pneumoniae
- Haemophillus influenzae
- Whooping cough/Bordetella Pertussis
What is the definition of sepsis and septic shock?
Sepsis is dysregulated immune response to an infection leading to life threatening organ dysfunction
Septic Shock is a subset of sepsis with profound circulatory, cellular and metabolic abnormalities with greater risk of mortality than sepsis
How is the risk of sepsis stratified?
LEARN RED FLAGS!!
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What is included in the sepsis 6?
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What are the most common manifestations of travel related illness?
- Fever
- GI symptons (N+V, Diarrhoea)
- Jaundice
- Lymphadenopathy
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Respiratory symptoms (SOB, Cough)
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What are the most common infections acquired from travel in the following areas:
- Subsaharan Africa
- South East Asia
- South and Central Asia
- South America
- Malaria
- Dengue fever
- Typhoid (enteric) fever
Do not forget community acquired infections that may not be related to travel!!!
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