Bacterial Infections Flashcards
Antibiotics for perichondritis:
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
–> *Ciprofloxacin
I&D if fluctuant (ENT)
Don’t miss- deformity
ESCAPPM organisms, and significance:
Enterobacter
Serratia
Citerobacter
Aeromonas, Acetinobater
Proteus (not mirabelis)
Pseudomonas, providencia
Morganella
Induceable beta-lactamase
ie. Resistant to most cephalosporins, penicillins and even B-lactamase inhibitors like Augmentin
Treat with:
Carbapenam, or
aminoglycoside
Acute Rheumatic Fever
Sequelae 3 weeks after a Group A strep pharyngitis
–> 30% subclinical initial infection
School-age children
ATSI, developing
CLINICAL
- Jones Criteria
IX
- Throat swab for GAS -often negative
- Antistreptolysin (ASO) + AntiDNaseB titres
- ECG: ?AV block
MX
- Penicillin
—> Single dose IM Pen G
or
—> 10 days PO Phenoxy (penV)
…….then years of prophylaxis
- ECHO
- High-dose aspirin 100mg/kg/day for joints
- Notifiable
Jones Criteria in acute rheumatic fever:
Diagnosis:
- History of recent Strep A infection
plus
- 2 major
or
- 1 major + 2 minor
_______________
MAJOR- ’SPECC’
- polyarthritis, or polyarthralgia
- Carditis (AR/MR murmur or on echo)
- Subcut nodules (rare)
- Erythema marginatum (rare)
- Chorea
MINOR
- Prolonged PR
- Fever
- ESR, CRP, Leuks
- Monoarthralgia
Most common manifestation in Rheumatic Heart Disease?
Mitral REGURGITATION (or stenosis)
–> Emboli
–> IE
–> CCF
AV block
Pericarditis
Myocarditis
What is the false + rate for blood cultures:
50%!
Also only 10% yield.
Ways to minimise spurious blood culture results:
- 2 sets, from 2 sites
- Before antibiotics
- Only from aseptic sites or newly inserted line
- If line sepsis, take from line
- Sterile technique
- Don’t under or overfill bottle (9ml adult)
- Fill BC bottles before other tubes
- Use appropriate specialised bottle (eg. fungal, HACEK)
What things suggest a contaminated/ false + blood culture sample:
Polymicrobial
COAG NEG STAPH
BACILLUS
DIPTHEROIDS
–> Skin flora.
Not all bottles positive
Slow to grow
Which organisms almost never represent contaminants?
S. aureus
S. pneumoniae
S. pyogenes (GAS)
Pseudomonas
What are the main marine pathogens. Where are they acquired, and how are they treated?
AEROMONAS:
- Fresh or brackish
- Unremarkable cellulitis
–> CIPROFLOXACIN 500mg BD
VIBRIO:
(Vulfunicans)
- Salt or brackish
- Nasty + necrotising wounds
(Parahaemolyticus)
- Dysentary from undercooked shellfish
–> DOXYCYCLINE plus CEFTRIAXONE
MYCOBACTERIUM:
- Fish tanks
- “Fishtank granuloma”
- DOXYCYCLINE
TB: Natural course
PRIMARY TB usually causes an unremarkable pneumonia anywhere in lung.
It can spread systemically to cause:
- Miliary/ disseminated
- Extrapulmonary (tuberculomas, meningitis, cutaneous, lymphadenitis, pericarditis, spinal (Potts) etc.)
TB pneumonia gets ‘walled off’ into a Gohn focus (granuloma). It is now either cured or dormant (latent).
Latent either stays this way, or reactivates as SECONDARY TB. Typically upper zone cavitating pneumonia
________
Only active, pulmonary TB is infectious (airborne)
Latent + extrapulmonary TB is not.
TB: Diagnosis of active TB
Sputum, for:
- Culture (takes 3 weeks!!)
- Gram stain
–> Acid-fast bacillus, Zeihl-Neillson
- PCR
TB: Management
Airborne precautions
‘RIPE’
- Rifampicin
- Isoniazid
- Pyrozinamide
- Ethambutol
….+ pyridoxine (neuropathy)
For 6 months.
Contact PEP
CXR in TB:
Primary TB:
- Non-specific pneumonia + lymphadenopathy
- May get calcified lymph nodes
- Or, miliary
Gohn Focus:
- 1-2cm
- Subpleural
- Mid zone
Secondary TB:
- Upper/ hilar and cavitating
Gas Gangrene
Clostridium (perfringens)
Soil-borne anaerobe
Rapidly progressive MUSCLE necrosis
Gas filled blisters, crepitus
Foul smelling+++
100% fatal without treatment.
- Antis (Ceftriaxone + Gent + Metro)
- HBO
- Debridement/ amputation