Infections of skin, soft tissue, muscle bones and joints Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 lines of invasion/damage

A
  1. breach of intact skin- infection of skin
  2. Skin manifestations of systemic infection
  3. Toxin mediated skin damage
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2
Q

What are the most common causes of skin and soft tissue infection

A

Staph aureus

Strept pyogenes

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3
Q

What does staph aureus lead to

A

Boils
styes
carbuncles

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4
Q

What can Staph aureus lead to

A

Toxic shock syndrome

Scalded skin syndrome

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5
Q

What causes and abscess

A

Infection in and around a hair follicle
Organism multiply
Influx of neutrophils and fibirn is deposited

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6
Q

What is panton- valetine leukocidin

A

Cytotoxin that destroys WBC - extensive tissue necrosis and severe infection

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7
Q

How are staph infections diagnosed

A
usually made on clinical grounds 
culture and further investigation is important in hospital infections 
Pus/infected tissue/ blood 
- gram stain 
- culture
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8
Q

of treatment of staph infections
minor lesions
severe infection and fever
recurrent/persisitant infections

A

minor lesions - drainage
Severe infection and fever- antibiotics
Recurrent/ persistant infections- decolonization

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9
Q

Treatment for MSSA + MRSA

A

MSSA- flucloxicillin

MRSA- vancomycin

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10
Q

What type of bacteria is strept pyogones

A

Gram +ve cocci in chains

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11
Q

How are streptococcal skin infections diagnosed and treated?

A

diagnosed clinically

treated with penicillin

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12
Q

Symptoms of pyogenic local infections

A

Impetigo- yellow crust lesions

AGN may complicate skin infections

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13
Q

Treatment for impetigo

A

Oral fluclox

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14
Q

Symptoms of invasive diseases

A

erysipelas - dermal lymphatics
soft tissue sepsis cellulitis
necrotizing fasciitis
acute spreading infection of the skin that involves SC tissue

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15
Q

treatment for erysipelas

A

Penicillin

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16
Q

Treatment for sepsis cellulitis

A

Flucloxicillin

17
Q

Toxigenic streptococcal skin infections

A

Scarlet fever and TSS

18
Q

What is necrotising soft-tissue infections

A

Infection below the dermis
spreads along the fascial panes disruption of blood supply
“ flesh eating “

19
Q

What is gas gangrene

A

Organisms invade into muscle casue necrosis and produced gas bubbles

Immediate surgical debridement is vital

20
Q

What is leprosy also known as

A

Myobacterium leprae

21
Q

Clinical features of leprosy

A

IP - years - gradual onset

22
Q

Diagnosis of leprosy

A

M leprae acid - fast rods in nasal scrapping s and lesion biopsies

23
Q

Treatment of leprosy

A

Dapsone given as part of a multidrug regimen to avoid resistance

24
Q

Fungal infection of the skin

A

Superficial Mycoses
Cutaneous mycoses
SC mycoses
Skin manifestations of systemic mycosis include blastomycosis, cryptomycosis

25
What is pityriasis - tinea versicolor
Common skin disease caused by overgrowth of yeast malassezia
26
Treatment for pityriasis - tinea versicolor
Topical treatment (Azole) / selenium suplphide lotion
27
What happens in dermatophyte infections
Filamentous fungi invading keratinized structures; skin hair and nails
28
Features of reactive arthritis
Infection at a distant site Mainly viral Immunological - mediated several joints at once
29
Septic arthritis
``` Bacteria localise to joints - after trauma - haematogenous -can occur in prosthetic joints post surgery - often occurs in one joint Staph aureus most common ```