Hospital Acquired Infections Flashcards
Define the following:
a. Antimicrobial
b. Antibacterial
c. Antibiotic
a. Antimicrobial
Interferes with growth and reproduction of a microbe
b. Antibacterial
Commonly used to describe agents that reduce or eliminate harmful bacteria
c. Antibiotic
Type of antimicrobial that is used as medicine for humans and animals
What is a health-care associated infection?
Infections that occur after exposure to healthcare Infection starts >48 hours after admission to hospital
Why do health-care associated infections cost money to the healthcare system?
They increase the length of stay at hospital
List some medical interventions that can increase the risk of infection.
Catheterisation Intubation Lines (e.g. central venous lines) Chemotherapy Prosthetic material
State some factors that increase the risk of infection in the hospital setting.
Intervention
Dissemination by healthcare staff
Concentration of ill patients
What are the ESCAPE pathogens?
Enterococcus faecium Staphylococcus aureus Clostridium difficile Acinetobacter baumanii Pseudomonas aeruginosa Enterobacteriaceae - (includes path. E.coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, other enterobacter species) NOTE: ESC are Gram-positive APE are Gram-negative
What is the main problem with the escape pathogens?
They are antibiotic resistant
What is the most frequent cause of bacteraemia by a Gram-negative bacterium?
E. coli
What does E. coli frequently cause?
UTI
Which antibiotics is E. coli resistant to in many countries?
Cephalosporins
Which antibiotics is E. coli still sensitive to?
Carbapenems
State the target proteins and the method of resistance to the following classes of antibiotics:
a. Cephalosporins
b. Carbapenems
c. Methicillin
d. Vancomycin
a. Cephalosporins
Target: Penicillin binding proteins (PBP)
Resistance: Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (ESBL)
b. Carbapenems
Target: PBP
Resistance: Carbapenemase enzymes
c. Methicillin
Target: PBP
Resistance: alternative target (PBP2A), which has low affinity for methicillin and can function in its presence - can still produce peptidoglycan
d. Vancomycin
Target: peptidoglycan precursor
Resistance: synthesis of a different peptidoglycan precursor - Vancomycin resistant enterococcus
What is ESBL encoded on?
Plasmid
What are carbapenemases encoded on?
Transposon
What types of infections does Klebsiella pneumoniae tend to cause?
UTI
Respiratory tract