IC15 URTI Flashcards

1
Q

Types of Influenza virus

Which Influenza virus can cause seasonal epidemics?

A

Influenza A, B, C

Influenza A and B cause seasonal epidemics

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2
Q

Which influenza virus can cause pandemics

A

Influenza A

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3
Q

When should antivirals be used in Influenza? (3 points)

A

1) Hospitalised
2) High risk for infections eg. immunocompromised, respiratory conditions, anatomical anomalies
3) Have severe or complicated illness

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4
Q

What is the antiviral for Influenza and the MOA?

A

Oseltamivir
Neuraminidase inhibitor, inhibit release of new virus

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5
Q

Oseltamivir dose

When need to have dose adjustment?

A

75mg BD for 5 days
Need dose adjustment for renal impairment < 60ml/min

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6
Q

What is the concept of the Influenza vaccine?

A

Prepared from prevailing strains of Influenza A and B and predicting strain for the season

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7
Q

Criteria for Bacterial pharyngitis (5 points)

A

Fever >38

Swollen lymph nodes

Tonsillar exudate

Absence of cough

Age
3 - 14 (+1)
15 - 44 (0)
45 years or older (-1)

0-1: presumed viral
2-3: Treat S.pyogenes if (+)
4-5: Start empiric

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8
Q

How to test for S.pyogenes pharyngitis

A

Throat culture (gold standard)

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9
Q

What are 2 acute complications that can arise from S.pyogenes infection?

Which can be prevented by antibiotics?

A

Acute rheumatic fever
Acute glomerulonephritis

Fever can be prevented

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10
Q

What is the bacteria causing pharyngitis?

A

Grp A beta hemolytic strep: Strep Pyogenes

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11
Q

First line treatment for S.pyogenes pharyngitis?

A

Penicillin V 250mg Q6
Amoxicillin 500mg Q12

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12
Q

Treatment for S.pyogenes with Penicillin allergy

A

(only for Penicillin V allergy) Cephalexin 500mg Q12
(For Amoxicillin allergy) Cefuroxime 250mg Q12

Clindamycin 300mg Q8

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13
Q

Second line for S.pyogenes

Why is this second line?

A

Azithromycin 500mg OD
Clarithromycin 250mg Q12

Macrolides are 2nd line due to increasing resistance

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14
Q

Symptoms of acute rhinosinusitis (4 points)

A

Purulent nasal discharge
Facial pain
Fever
Nasal congestion, obstruction

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15
Q

When should acute rhinosinusitis cases be referred to ED?

A

When there is evidence that infection has spread to orbits or CNS

Limited ocular movements
Acute vision changes
Confusion
Unilateral weakness

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16
Q

Most common pathogens for Acute Rhinosinusitis

A

Strep Pneumo
Haem Influenzae

17
Q

First line for Acute Rhinosinusitis (2 points, both are penicillins)

A

Higher dose than Pharyngitis

Amoxicillin 500mg Q8
Amoxicillin Clav 625mg Q8

18
Q

Treatment for Acute Rhinosinusitis with non-severe / severe penicillin allergy

A

Non severe
Cefuroxime 500mg Q12

Severe
Levofloxacin 500mg OD
Moxifloxacin 400mg OD

19
Q

When should antibiotics be given for acute rhinosinusitis? (3 points)

A

Symptoms persist for more than 10 days without improvement

Symptoms are severe and last more than 3 days (Fever > 39, Purulent nasal discharge, facial pain)

Symptoms worsen after initial improvement (eg. new onset fever, headache, nasal discharge)

20
Q

Common cold VS Influenza

A

Common cold
No high fever (>38), low grade fever
gradual symptom onset

Influenza
High fever, chills , headache
sudden symptom onset
can cause secondary bacterial infection (worsening symptoms)