Bioterrorism Flashcards
influenza-like illness
cough and severe SOB ~48hrs later
Chest imaging w/: widened mediastinum
think inhalational anthrax
widened MS = LN dissemination and hemorrhagic mediastinitis
(lung parenchyma may be normal)
itchy raised lesion → papule → vesicle
prominent edema
black eschar over few days
swelling often disproportionate to size of skin lesion itself
painless
consider cutaneous anthrax
Dx of anthrax
- can be cultured on standard media = GP nonmotile, spore-forming rods
- PCR
- convalescent sera (4-fold rise)
- skin bx for histo/PCR
GP nonmotile rods in chains (spore-forming)
anthrax
Tx of anthrax
- systemic or meningitis: quinolone + b-lactam + protein synthesis inhibitor (eg cipro + mero + linezolid) x3 wks
- Due to B-lactam R variability and needing good CNS penetration
- B-lactam can be dc if meningitis r/o
- anthrax Ig or antitoxin if inhalation/systemic
- counteract extracellular toxins
- anthrax Ig or antitoxin if inhalation/systemic
- cutaneous alone: cipro or doxy x60 days
severe, progressive, symmetrical, CN signs (diplopia, ptosis, facial weakness → dysphagia, dysphonia)
progressives to descending flaccid paralysis, respiratory failure, autonomic instability
consider botulism
C botulinum
large GP bacilli w/ terminal spores
fevers, sweats, malaise, HA → progressive SOB, bloody sputum, chest pain
consider pneumonic plague (Y pestis, likely inhalation)
this, and bubonic plague, are contagious and require contact/airborne precautions
fat, GN bacilli w/ bipolar staining (“safety-pin” appearance on older cx)
will grow on blood or broth media
slow-growing (not fastidious)
Blood agar colonies: small, grey/white/yellow color w/ irregular surface
yersinia pestis (plague)
tx of yersinia pestis
IV gent + IV cipro x2wk minimum
(PO cipro if mild or as stepdown)
Clinical presentation of smallpox
(in order)
- Initial short prodome (~3D) w/ abrupt fever, severe myalgias, HA, malaise, vomiting
- followed by development of mouth sores
- rash affecting face → trunk → extremities (centrifugal)
- widespread erythema → maculopapular → vesicular → pustular
- characteristic: deep, tense well-circumscribed pustules that scab then heal in 10 days
- same stage of development
dx of smallpox
vesicular fluid and viral throat swabs for NAAT
ulcerative necrosis of tracheobronchial tree w/ regional (neck/MS) LAD
consider glanders (B mallei)
can also have PNA, lung abscesses, effusions, or pulm miliary infection
bacteremia can occur (multiple dissem abscesses)
cx on standard media. may be misidentified as PSAR