Infections in the immune compromised host Flashcards

1
Q

Define immunocompromised host

A

a patient who does not have the ability to respond to an infection because their immune system is weakened

can be because of an immunodeficiency disorder or other disease or as the result of administration of immunosuppressive drugs/radiation

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2
Q

General causes of immunodeficiency in a host

A

primary immunodeficiency
acquired immunodeficiency (HIV)
diabetes mellitus
leukaemia/lymphoma
transplantation
splenectomy
chemotherapy
radiation

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3
Q

What pathogen factors influence infection?

A

virulence factors
cell wall
capsule
enzymes

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4
Q

What environmental factors influence infection?

A

geographic factors
medical devices
hospital

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5
Q

What host factors influence infection?

A

innate immunity:
- pathogen recognition receptors
- IFNalpha, IFNbeta, NK cells
- complement, skin (anatomic barrier)

phagocytes:
- macrophages
- neutrophils

cytokines:
- IL-1
- TNF
chemokines

cellular immunity:
- B-cells
- T-cells

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6
Q

Name some encapsulated bacteria

A

strep pneumoniae
N.meningitidis
H.influenzae
salmonella
giardia (parasite)
cryptosporidia

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7
Q

What classifies as neutropenia, severe neutropenia and prolonged neutropenia?

A

neutropenia = <2x10^9/L
severe neutropenia = <0.510^9/L
prolonged neutropenia = >21 days

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8
Q

Neutropenia causes

A

Congenital (eg. Fanconi’s anaemia)
Immune-mediated (eg. SLE, Felty’s)
Infection (eg. sepsis, HIV, influenza)
Bone marrow failure (myelodysplasia, leukaemia, lymphoma)
Stem cell transplantation
Chemotherapy
Radiation

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9
Q

Neutropenic sepsis bacterial causes

A

Staphylococcus aureus
Coagulase negative staphylococci
Viridans streptococci
Enterococcus
Escherichia Coli, Enterobacter
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Klebsiella Spp
Listeria

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10
Q

Neutropenic fever fungal causes

A

Aspergillus spp
Pneumocystis Jirovecii (PCP)
Fusarium
Zygomycosis
Candidiasis

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11
Q

Neutropenic fever viral causes

A

Herpes simplex
CMV
Varicella zoster virus
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
Parainfluenza viruses
Influenza A+B
Adenoviruses

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12
Q

Primary prevention of infection

A

prevent or reduce exposure
immunisation

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13
Q

Secondary prevention of infection

A

Chemoprophylaxis (antibiotics, antivirals)

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14
Q

Tertiary prevention of infection

A

effective treatment
physiotherapy

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15
Q

Spleen functions

A

Largest lymphoid organ

a) immune-regulatory (B and T cell memory)
b) immune clearance (opsonic antibody production, complement production)
c) phagocytosis (removal of micro-organisms)
d) immune surveillance (B and T cell trafficking, delivery of antigenic information)

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16
Q

What can cause functional hyposplenism

A

autoimmune disorders
haematologic diseases
lymphoproliferative diseases
infiltrative disease (sarcoidosis, amyloidosis)
intestinal disorders

17
Q

How are infections prevented in absent/dysfunctional spleen?

A

pneumococcal vaccine
haemophilus influenzae vaccine
meningococcal vaccine (B, C, ACWY)
influenza vaccine
alert card/leaflet
antibiotic prophylaxis (Penicillin V/Amoxicillin)