Flu Flashcards

1
Q

Flu pathophysiology?

A
  • influenza A and B are RNA viruses of the Orthomyxoviridae family
  • A is more common, severe, and causes epi/pandemics like H5N1 (aVIan) and H1N1 (swINe)
  • B is milder and, unlike A, occurs almost exclusively in humans
  • spread through droplets, so masks help prevent transmission.
  • 1-3 days incubation
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2
Q

how many get flu each year?

A
  • 20 percent of the population are infected each flu season
  • most remain Asx carriers, with only 1 in 4 becoming symptomatic
  • with mild URTI
  • only 1 in 5 symptomatic individuals present to a doctor
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3
Q

Sx flu?

A
  • quick onset
  • Respiratory symptoms: cough, coryza
  • Systemic symptoms: fever, rigors, fatigue, anorexia
  • Pain: headache, myalgia
  • N, V, conjunctivitis, photophobia
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4
Q

Ix flu?

A
  • diagnosis usually clinical

* nasal/throat swabs for viral culture or PCR are useful for confirmation in severe disease

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5
Q

Tx flu?

A
  • vaccination reduces infection, symptomatic disease, and complications 50 percent
  • whole trivalent vaccine IM
  • fragmented nasal vaccine if <13

Indications: toddlers, age >65, diabetes, respiratory disease (COPD, asthma), organ failure (heart, liver, kidney), immunosuppressed

• rest, paracetamol, and hydration

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6
Q

Complications of flu?

A
  • pneumonia can result directly from influenza itself or, more commonly, secondary bacterial infection (Strep. pneumo, Staph. aureus, H. influenzae)
  • Other local infections: bronchitis, sinusitis, otitis media
  • Neurological complications: encephalitis, post-influenza encephalopathy in children, Guillain-Barré syndrome
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