Infectious Disease Flashcards
4 week history of painless mass of jaw; sinus formation
Actinomyces israelii
A 19-year-old woman visits her physician for a preventive health examination. Her medical history is unremarkable. She is sexually active with her boyfriend, and they use condoms inconsistently. She had one prior sexual partner and reports no symptoms of vaginal infections or sexually transmitted diseases. Results from her gynecologic examination are normal. Should this woman be screened for chlamydia, and if so, how?
- screening via self-collected vaginal swab or endocervical swab - use nucleic acid amplification assays Alternatively: first-catch urine Testing of a urine sample has slightly lower sensitivity
a 42 year old asymptomatic man with hypertension. Meds: atenolol + chlorthalidone FH: type 2 diabetes mellitus later in life. Does not smoke cigarettes. BMI: 32.3, BP: 130/80 mm Hg. Would you screen the patient for diabetes, and if so, how?
- Whether fasting glucose or A1C measured remains debatable - Sensitivity higher when both tests are performed, I typically assess both simultaneously — although most guidelines suggest the use of a single test initially. - If the patient has positive results on both tests, the diagnosis is confirmed. - If only one test is positive, I would repeat it on a separate day.
Acute bronchitis groups: What differentiates groups 1, 2 and 3 from each other?
Group 1: No risk factors
Group 2: > 1 of the following:
- FEV1 <50% predicted
- >4 exacerbations/yr
- Cardiac disease
- Use of home O2
- Chronically on prednisone
- Antibiotic use in past 3 mo
Group 3: symptoms as in group 2 + one of
- constant purulent sputum
- bronchiectasis
- FEV1 <35% predicted
- Multiple risk factors from Group 2
Acute epiglottitis: Empiric Abx
Ceftriaxone + Vancomycine
Acute epiglottitis+stridor: Rx
Awake fiberoptic Nasotracheal intubation
hearing loss that occurs acutely, usually within 12 hours of onset, and is unilateral in 90 percent of cases. The hearing loss may occur suddenly, be found on awakening, or may be rapidly progressive over hours (or perhaps over two to three days).
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL)
Many etiologies for SSNHL; however, for many cases, cause is not known.
Most : viral cochleitis, a microvascular event, or an autoimmune process.
Spontaneous improvement is common
Studies are contradictory on the effectiveness of glucocorticoid therapy.
Rx: 10- to 14-day prednisone, 60 per day
Intratympanic glucocorticoids may be used as initial therapy if intolerant to PO steroids.
Subset of patients with SSNHL may have HSV-I infection and could benefit from antiviral drug
The rapid expansion of HIV-1, first in _-_ _ _ and then systemically, along with a sharp rise in plasma levels of viral RNA, is clinically important because of the irreversible destruction of reservoirs of _ _ cells and the establishment of viral latency (defined as the _ _ of HIV-1 DNA into the _ of resting T cells, an effect that has stymied curative treatment efforts.
The rapid expansion of HIV-1, first in gut-associated lymphoid tissue and then systemically, along with a sharp rise in plasma levels of viral RNA, is clinically important because of the irreversible destruction of reservoirs of helper T cells and the establishment of viral latency (defined as the silent integration of HIV-1 DNA into the genomes of resting T cells, an effect that has stymied curative treatment efforts.
Acute onset of fever, myalgia, maculopapular rash, pharyngitis, aseptic meningitis: Dx
Acute HIV
Acute prostatitis: Rx
Ceftriaxone, quinolone, Bactrim for 2 weeks
acute viral or postviral inflammatory disorder of the vestibular portion of the eighth cranial nerve.
Vestibular neuritis
Presents: acute vertigo with nausea, vomiting, and gait impairment.
Differential: includes brainstem, cerebellar stroke.
No confirmatory test for vestibular neuritis.
Prednisone taper
vestibular suppressants and antiemetics to limit symptoms in the first 24 to 48 hours (Grade 2C).
Stop acute symptomatic treatments within 48 hours if the patient’s symptoms allow (Grade 2C). Some data suggest that these medications interfere with central compensation and long-term recovery.
Vestibular rehabilitation program after acute symptoms subside
AFB Smear sensitivity, specificity
- Sensitivity: 40-60%,
- Specificity:90%
- PPV: 50-80%
All GABHS strains remain _ sensitive
penicillin
All sexually active women younger than _ years of age as well as older women at risk for chlamydia should be offered chlamydia screening _.
All sexually active women younger than 25 years of age as well as older women at risk for chlamydia should be offered chlamydia screening annually
angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia, Rx
Castleman’s disease
- HIV/HHV-8 negative, no organ failure: Immunotherapy (monoclonal antibody Rx)
- HIV/HHV-8 negative, indication of aggressive disease: R-CHOP
- HIV/HHV-8 positive: ganciclovir + rituximab, + etoposide if more aggressive disease
Antibacterial resistance among these organisms is increasingly common (>_% of H. influenzae and _% of M. catarrhalis are now β-lactamase producers, meaning they are resistant to amoxicillin);
40, 100
Antibiotic choices based on acute bronchitis categories
- G1: 2nd Macrolides, 2nd gen ceph., Bactrim, Amoxicillin, Doxy
- G2: Fluorquinolone, ß-lactam/β-lactamase inhibitor
- G3: Cipro to cover Pseudomonas
Significance
Risk of pandemic
Example of trigger
Atypical pneumonia: bacteria
Mycoplasma, Legionella,Chlamydia
Antigens? Why is it a cause of concern?
H5N1
similarity to 1918 influenza virulence
Avian influenza (H5N1) is a concern because of similarity to 1918 influenza severity; however, few cases to date in humans with limited human-to-human transmissibility.
Avoid Zanamavir in
COPD, asthma
COPD, asthma because it is inhaled; can cause bronchospasm
Preferred agent in contact lens wearer
Ofloxacin 0.3% ophthalmic drops
Bacterial conjunctivitis in contact lens wearers: cause of concern?
Higher rates of Pseudomonas infxn
Bacterial conjunctivitis: etiology
Staph, Strep, Haemophilus
BeforeChemo
Screen for Hepatitis B
Reactivation of Hepatitis B occurs in 10 to 15% of patients undergoing immunosuppressive or cancer chemotherapy.; particularly high dose steroids and rituximab.
Why is it effective in the treatment of drug induced parkinsonism?
centrally acting anticholinergic, also blocks the reuptake of dopamine
Both Chlamydia trachomatis and Chlamydia pneumoniae are Gram-_ , aerobic, intracellular pathogens. They are typically coccoid or rod-shaped.
Gram-negative
(or at least are classified as such, they are difficult to stain, but are more closely related to Gram-negative bacteria)
Castleman’s disease
heterogenous group of lymphoproliferative disorders associated with HIV and HHV-8.
- two distinct diseases (unicentric and multicentric) with very different prognoses.
MCD: presents in the fifth to sixth decade of life with peripheral lymphadenopathy and systemic symptoms including fever, night sweats, weight loss, and fatigue
Chancroid: Rx
Azithromycin or ceftriaxone or ciprofloxacin
Chlamydia is caused by the gram-_ bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis and is the .
Chlamydia is caused by the gram-negative bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis and is the most common infection reported in the United States, with more than 1.5 million cases reported in 2015.1
Chlamydia prophylaxis after sexual assault
azithromcyin
Chronic prostatitis: Rx
Quinolone: 4-6 weeks
Bactrim: 6-12 weeks
Chronic sinusitis is diagnosed after at least _ weeks of sinus symptoms and signs.
12
Cirrhosis: pain management
acetaminophen in limited doses, avoid opioids.
Eg: Acetaminophen, 500 mg orally every 8 hours as needed
Clinical presentation suggestive of Strep pharyngitis, negative rapid antigen test. Mx?
if (Throat_culture_positive): treat
CNS TB: Rx duration
9-12 months
Codeine: why is not effective in hepatic impairment?
Metabolized in the liver to morphine
so will not provide effective analgesia for patients with significant hepatic dysfunction.
Codeine should be avoided in patients with renal insufficiency: renally cleared
Common cause of hearing loss in elderly
Cerumen impaction
Particularly in those who use hearing aids
Commonest organism in COPD exacerbation (%)
H influenzae, ~ 22%
- H. influenzae is most common cause (~22%), particularly in smokers
- M. catarrhalis (9–15%)
- S. pneumoniae (10–12%)
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa or other gram-negative bacteria (up to 15%) - recent antibiotic use or hospitalizations or frequent flares
Complicated UTI is defined clinically by the presence of one of the following factors:
- immunosuppression
- Instrumentation,
- Stone or
- abnormal structural or functional abnormality
Which three are missing?
pregnancy, diabetes, male sex,
DDx influenza
Mycoplasma pneumoniae, adenoviruses, respiratory syncytial viruses, rhinoviruses, parainfluenza viruses, and Legionella spp
DDx: epididymitis
Testicular torsion
Rule out by Doppler ultrasound
Hyperactive delirium, hyperactivity and dilated pupils after surgery
Think of anticholinergic toxicity.
Dengue Differential
- influenza
- measles
- rubella
- malaria
- Zika virus
- Yellow fever.
Dengue: why should aspirin and NSAIDs be avoided?
Bleeding complications
Pustular acral skin lesions + asymmetric migratory polyarthralgia. Which STD?
Disseminated Gonoccal Infection
- dermatitis with petechial or pustular acral skin lesions,
- tenosynovitis, and
- asymmetrical migratory polyarthralgias
OR
Purulent arthritis without skin lesions
Describe condyloma acuminata: causative organism
Exophytic verrucous white or pigmented lesions
HPV
Types 16, 18, 31, 33, and 35 have been strongly associated with cervical neoplasia. HPV types 6 and 11 are rarely associated with neoplasia but cause ~90% of warts
Describe this rash which ocurred after amoxicillin was given for suspected Strep. pharyngitis. What is the diagnosis?

Generalized erythematous papular eruption
of infectious mononucleosis precipitated by oral penicillin intake.
(From Shah BR, Laude TA: Atlas of pediatric clinical diagnosis, Philadelphia, WB Saunders, 2000, Fig. 3-32.)
Difference between DRESS and LCV
DRESS LCV Rash Morbiliform Purpura Location Diffuse Extremities sparing hands, feet
Difference between RCA and failure modes and effects analysis
RCA is retrospective, FMA is prospective
RCA is a retrospective and systematic investigation of a specific near-miss or adverse event. The goal of a root cause analysis is to identify underlying system defects, known as root causes, that contributed to the adverse event or near-miss and to develop corrective actions for each root cause.
A failure modes and effects analysis (Answer A) is a prospective—not retrospective—systematic technique designed to identify the severity and likelihood of error-prone situations, known as failure modes, within a system and process. As a result of a failure modes and effects analysis, systems and processes can be improved before implementation of a new process
Difference: LCR and PCR
LCR PCR Method Amplifies Probe Polymerizes nucleotides
PCR carries out the amplification by polymerizing nucleotides, LCR instead amplifies the nucleic acid used as the probe.
For each of the two DNA strands, two partial probes are ligated to form the actual one; thus, LCR uses two enzymes: a DNA polymerase (used for initial template amplification and then inactivated) and a thermostable DNA ligase.
Each cycle results in a doubling of the target nucleic acid molecule. A key advantage of LCR is greater specificity as compared to PCR.
Differential GABS pharyngitis
EBV pharyngitis
Differential malaria
Dengue
Differentiate viral from GAS pharyngitis
GAS Viral Onset Sudden -- Cough - + Hoarseness - + Fever + - Abd sx + - Rash + - Ant adenop + - Conjunct - + Ulcers - +
Disseminated histoplasma skin lesions localize to:
face, chest and upper arms
papules to plaques
Dix-Hallpike
Nystagmus: beating upward and torsionally, with the upper poles of the eyes beating toward the ground
DRESS vs TEN
- TEN: mucocutaneous involvement
- DRESS: eosinophilia
Drug induced LCV: Leukocytoclastic vasculitis, sometimes referred to as hypersensitivity vasculitis, often presents _ to _ weeks after starting the offending agent.
Drug induced LCV: Leukocytoclastic vasculitis, sometimes referred to as hypersensitivity vasculitis, often presents 1 to 3 weeks after starting the offending agent.
Drug induced Parkinsonism: Rx
Anticholinergics (benztropine) if the offending agent cannot be discontinued.
Drug-susceptible TB: Rx
- 2 months: INH + rifampin + pyrazinamide + ( ethambutol (commonly used) or streptomycin (not commonly used)
- 4 months: INH + Rifampin
DVT prophylaxis after hip surgery: oral alternative
Low dose Rivaroxaban: 10 mg daily, while in the hospital and extended after discharge for a total of 2 weeks
HIV: eclipse phase lasts
7 to 21 days
A 24-year-old heterosexual man with no prior history of sexually transmitted infections has been informed that a recent sexual partner has been diagnosed with gonorrhea. He is asymptomatic. On examination, there are no penile lesions or urethral discharge. Gram stain of a urethral swab is negative for gonorrhea and chlamydia. Urinalysis shows 0 to 1 white blood cell (WBC) per high-power field. A rapid plasma reagin (RPR) and a fluorescent treponemal antibody (FTA) test performed on the same visit are both positive, with an RPR titer of 1:32. Appropriate treatment includes
Benzathine penicillin weekly x 3
+
Ceftriaxone 250 mg x 1
+
Azithromycin 1 g po
Epididymitis : cause
In men younger than 35 years,: N. gonorrhoeae (30%) or C. trachomatis (70%)
In men older than 35 years, non–sexually transmitted epididymitis is more commonly caused by gram-negative enteric organisms
Epistaxis + warfarin
if INR is thereapeutic, do not stop warfarin
Patients with high blood pressure on admission need assessment by their general practitioner after discharge from hospital. Patient medication, especially anticoagulants, raise concerns in management; although a prospective study showed warfarin does not need to be stopped if its levels are within therapeutic range.23 Aspirin medication has been shown to be independently associated with epistaxis hospitalisation.24 However, cessation of aspirin therapy should be weighed up against thromboembolic complications and the time delay between stopping aspirin and the return of normal platelet function.
Epistaxis: choice of packing
- RhinoRocket
- Merecel
Anterior nasal packing is used for epistaxis that originates in Kiesselbach’s area and is refractory to the above treatments. Traditional packing products consist of nondegradable materials, such as gauze coated with petroleum jelly, a sponge composed of hydroxylated polyvinyl acetate that expands when wet (Merocel, Medtronic), and an inflatable pack with hydrocolloid coating that remains in contact with mucosa after the center of the pack has been deflated and removed (Rapid Rhino, ArthroCare). These packs are left in place for 1 to 3 days before removal. In randomized, controlled trials, their use stopped bleeding in approximately 60 to 80% of cases refractory to vasoconstrictors and pressure.
Insertion and removal of these packs can result in mucosal trauma, which may lead to recurrent bleeding or pain. In a randomized trial comparing Merocel and Rapid Rhino, there was no significant difference in the rates at which epistaxis was controlled, but both patients and physicians found Rapid Rhino easier to insert and remove.
Epistaxis: immediate Mx
- Pinch nose for 15 minutes
- Position: whatever is comfortable
- Oxymetazoline locally
- Avoid swallowing or aspirating blood
pinching the anterior aspect of the nose for 15 minutes, which provides tamponade for the anterior septal vessels. The patient should relax, if possible. The head position can be either forward or backward, whichever is more comfortable, but it is important for the patient to avoid swallowing or aspirating any blood that may be draining posteriorly into the pharynx.
A common mistake is for the patient to attempt to compress the area along the nasal bones. Pressure should be applied more distally by compressing the nasal ala against the septum. In addition to pressure, topical oxymetazoline spray may be useful. In one study, oxymetazoline spray stopped the bleeding in 65% of consecutive patients with epistaxis who were being seen in an emergency room.14
Epistaxis: rationale for anterior pack only as first step
- > 90% causes is in the anterior nasal septum
- Easier
- Less risk of damaging nasal septum
are due to failure to perform tasks that are done in a routine or automatic fashion and are often related to failure of monitoring. Technique errors during procedures fit into this category, such as neglecting to replace the stylet into a lumbar puncture needle before removal, thereby increasing the risk of spinal headache.
Skill error
Erythema multiforme vs SJS
EM: papular, target lesions, centripetal spread, no systemic fx
SJS: macular, centrifugal spread, + systemic fx
Examination for condyloma acuminata should include
anoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, colposcopy, and/or vulvovaginal examination
Filariasis is caused by _ transmitted by _ vectors; humans are definitive hosts.
Filariasis is caused by nematodes transmitted by mosquito vectors; humans are definitive hosts.
Difference in organisms
Filaria: nematode
Malaria:protozoan
First line rx for ABS?
amoxicillin
Fitz-Hugh-Curtis: sensitivity for PID
10%
Right upper quadrant tenderness from perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh–Curtis syndrome) is seen in 10%
Fixed drug reaction
Recurs in the same locations upon reexposure
sulfonamides, antibiotics, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, analgesics, and hypnotics
solitary round to oval, dusky red to brown/black macules that may evolve into edematous plaques or bullae
- lips, genitalia, perianal area, and extremities.
- 30 minutes to 8 hours after drug
- resolve spontaneously in 7 to 10 days, leaving a persistent gray/brown or slate gray hyperpigmentation
Fresh water exposure in sub-Saharan Africa followed by fevers and cough.
Schistosomiasis
Fungal pulmonary infection + Mississipi valley
Histoplasmosis
Painless papule or nodule erodes into beefy-red granulomatous ulcer with rolled edges. Spread of granulomas into the groin results in edema or pseudobuboes
Rare in the United States
Donovanosis or granuloma inguinale
Klebsiella granulomatis
Donovan bodies on biopsy
Rx: Doxycycline or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole
Treat at least 3 wk
Painful ulcer
Tender inguinal adenopathy
Hallmark is suppurative adenopathy
Occurs in outbreaks
Chancroid
Painless genital ulcer; painful inguinal lymphadenopathy (with groove sign); proctitis
Lymphogranuloma venereum
Chlamydia trachomatis serovar L1, L2, or L3
Cluster of vesicles on erythematous base
Painful and pruritic
Dysuria
Tender lymphadenopathy
Genital Herpes
HSV-2 > HSV-1
Tzanck preparation, multinucleated giant cells
Acyclovir or famciclovir or valacyclovi
Genital warts: Rx
Surgery, cryotherapy, or topical therapy with podophyllin, imiquimod, or trichloroacetic acid
Gonorrhea: Rx
ceftriaxone + azithromycin
Gonorrhea, Chlamydia: DxTrigger
Refer sexual partners
- sexual partners in the last 60 days or
- the last sexual partner
Gonorrhea: alternative to cephalosporin
Azithromycin 2g
Azithromycin monotherapy at 2-g dosing is effective for both gonorrheal infections and chlamydial infections, but its use is limited by GI distress; this is the only available alternate agent if cephalosporins cannot be used to treat gonorrhea
- Incubation: _ to _ days
- Symptoms: _ to _ days after exposure
- Incubation: 3 to 7 days
- Symptoms: 10 to 14 days after exposure
Gonorrhea: Rx
A third-generation cephalosporin plus 1-g of oral azithromycin
intramuscular ceftriaxone has excellent activity against genital and extragenital infections; oral cephalosporins are approved alternate agents but these may have lower activity against pharyngeal gonorrhea
Gram-+ve rods of medical importance
A. Aerobes:
- Bacillus anthracis*
- Bacillus cereus*
B. Anaerobes
- Clostridium perfringens -Gas gangrene
- Clostrium difficile -
- Clostrium tetani Tetanus /lockjaw
- Clostridium botulinum
II. Gram Positive Regular Non-Spore-forming Rods
Lactobacillus, Listeria, Erysipelothrix, Kurthia, Caryophanon, Bronchothrix, Renibacterium
Describe the image

Gram negative intra-cellular diplococci
Gram stain of Neisseria gonorrhoeae in urethral exudate.
Uptodate
Gram-negative.rod
+ pulmonary infiltrates, associated with cooling towers
Legionella pneumophilia
A young man presents with intermittent epigastric discomfort, without weight loss or evidence of gastrointestinal bleeding.
No use of aspirin or nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). + Epigastric tenderness. A serologic test for Helicobacter pylori is positive
Treated with 10-day course of triple therapy (omeprazole, amoxicillin, and clarithromycin). Six weeks later, he returns with the same symptoms. How should his case be further evaluated and managed?
For both the breath and fecal antigen tests
- stop taking PPIs 2 weeks before testing,
- should stop tak- ing H2 receptor antagonists for 24 hours before testing
- No antimicrobial agents for 4 weeks before testing, since these medications may suppress the infection and re- duce the sensitivity of testing.
H pylori duodenal ulcer: Pathogenesis
- Infection is preferentially in the antrum.
- Causes inflammation which stimulates release of gastrin.
- Gastrin stimulates acid secretion from fundus.
- Acid damages duodenal mucosa, causing ulceration and gastric metaplasia.
- The metaplastic mucosa becomes colonized by H. pylori
H pylori infections associated with
- Duodenal or gastric ulcers (1 to 10% )
- Gastric cancer (in 0.1 to 3%)
- MALT lymphoma (in <0.01%).
H. pylori: non-endoscopic test with highest PPV, NPV and useful both before and after treatment?
Urea breath test
H. pylori: Rx
PPI +clarithromycin + amoxicillin, each given twice per day for 7 to 14 days.
Metronidazole is used in place of amoxicillin if penicillin allergy.
Duration: 10 to 14 days in the United States and 7 days in Europe.
H. pylori: Rx, failure of eradication after first try
(levofloxacin or rifabutin) + (PPI + amoxicillin),
has been associated with high rates of eradication
Features of 2009 H1N1 pandemic
- Similar to seasonal influenza
- children and young adults > customary elderly populations;
- increased mortality more often in those with comorbidities
Hep B e antigen: significance
- Marker of replication and infectivity in persistent infection
- Risk factor for HCC
Which is the first antigen to appear following Hep B infection and when?
HBsAg 4 to 10 weeks after infection
Note: less than 5% of exposures lead to infection
Hepatitis B sAg +; core Ag negative; about to start chemo. Mx?
Entecavir
Antiivral prophylaxis is necessary
Hepatitis B, acute infection: risk of liver failure, progression to chronic HBV
Risk liver failure: < 1 percent, and in immunocompetent adults, the likelihood of progression to chronic HBV infection is less than 5 percent.
Hepatitis B, acute: DxCritera/Mx
HBsAg + HBcAb-IgM
Mx: supportive
- DxCriteria acute HBV infection: hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and IgM antibody to hepatitis B core antigen.
- For most patients, treatment is supportive.
- Risk liver failure: < 1 percent, and in immunocompetent adults, the likelihood of progression to chronic HBV infection is less than 5 percent.
- Preventive measures (eg, hepatitis B immune globulin and hepatitis B vaccine) should be administered to all household and sexual contacts who are not known to be immune.
Complications of herpes include aseptic meningitis and
urinary retention
Herpes genitalis: cause
HSV-1 ~75%
HSV-2 ~25%
Herpes gladiotorum: Rx
HSV-1
High-level pneumococcal resistance to penicillin accounts for approximately _% of isolates in the United States.
4
Histoplasmosis: Rx
Amphotericin B
Histoplasma: biology
Dimorphic fungus
Ohio River Valley/
Why are they at 100x risk for SJS/TEN?
- alterations in drug metabolism
- epidermal immune dysregulation
that occurs with HIV infection.
Which of the following diagnostic test is most useful to detect herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) infection in a patient with recurrent genital ulcers who does not have active lesions at the time of presentation to the clinic?
- Culture
- Detection of antigen
- Tzanck smear
- Glycoprotein G–based serologic testing
Glycoprotein G–based serologic testing
human antibodies capable of binding to animal immunoglobulins and possibly of interfering with reaction of animal-derived antibodies and analyte.
Heterophile antibodies
Heterophile antibodies are produced in response to infectious mononucleosis. These are not directed against EBV but agglutinate either horse or sheep RBCs occurs in 90% of cases and is detected by Monospot.
IGFRA Tests and BCG vaccination
BCG vaccination has no effect.
Unlike TST where prior BCG will cause a false positive
Importance of differentiating different groups in acute bronchitis
Bacteriology changes
- Group 1: H influenzae, M catarrhalis, S pneumoniae
- Group 2: G1 + Klebsiella + Gram negs + higher prob of ß-lactam resitant organism
- Group 3: G1 + P aeruginosa + drug resistant Enterobacter
Indications for daptomycin
- Vancomycin intolerance or allergy
- High vancomycin MIC
Infectious cause of stroke
Late neurosyphilis, occurring many years after primary infection, may be meningovascular (presenting as stroke) or parenchymatous, manifesting as tabes dorsalis (electrical pains shooting down the legs) or general paresis (personality changes, hallucinations)
Infectious causes of acute pharyngitis
Organism Clinical Manifestations
Viruses
Rhinovirus Common cold
Coronavirus Common cold
Adenovirus Pharyngoconjunctival fever I
nfluenza virus Influenza
Parainfluenza virus Cold, croup
Coxsackievirus Herpangina, hand–foot–mouth disease
Herpes simplex virus Gingivostomatitis (primary infection) Epstein–Barr virus Infectious mononucleosis
Cytomegalovirus Mononucleosis-like syndrome
Human immunodeficiency virus Acute (primary) infection syndrome
Bacteria
Group A streptococci Pharyngitis, scarlet fever
Group C and group G streptococci Pharyngitis
Mixed anaerobes Vincent’s angina (necrotizing gingivostomatitis)
Fusobacterium necrophorum Lemierre’s syndrome (septic thrombophlebitis of the internal jugular vein)
Arcanobacterium haemolyticum Pharyngitis, scarlatiniform rash
Neisseria gonorrhoeae Pharyngitis
Treponema pallidum Secondary syphilis
Francisella tularensis Pharyngeal tularemia
Corynebacterium diphtheriae Diphtheria
Yersinia enterocolitica Pharyngitis, enterocolitis
Yersinia pestis Plague
Mycoplasma pneumoniae Bronchitis, pneumonia Chlamydophila pneumoniae Bronchitis, pneumonia Chlamydophila psittaci Psittacosis
Infectious exacerbation: bronchiectasis grows Pseudomonas: Rx
Switch from levofloxacin to ciprofloxacin
A 23-year-old man presents with near-syncope; longstanding Crohn disease moderately controlled. About 2 months ago, he started infliximab. The therapy initially worked well, but 10 days ago his watery diarrhea and low-grade fevers returned. He underwent outpatient colonoscopy yesterday and “has been light-headed.”
Moved to New Jersey from Ohio about 4 years ago. Current medications are sulfasalazine, prednisone, infliximab, and loperamide.
- tachycardic with dry oral mucosa. Lung sounds are diminished at both bases. Painful erythema over the left wrist and forearm. Scattered verrucous plaques with central ulceration on trunk and back. His axillary and inguinal lymph nodes are enlarged.
TST 3 months ago was negative. Induced sputum examination performed 1 week ago was negative for acid-fast bacillus. Yesterday’s colonoscopy describes “several colonic ulcers with heaped-up edges and necrotic centers concerning for uncontrolled Crohn disease.”
White blood cell count = 10,900/µL (reference range, 4500-10,000/µL) Hemoglobin = 10.6 g/dL (reference range, 13.8-17.2 g/dL) Platelet count = 130 × 103/µL (reference range, 150-450 × 103/µL) Creatinine = 1.2 mg/dL (reference range, 0.7-1.3 mg/dL) Aspartate aminotransferase = 473 U/L (reference range, 20-48 U/L) Alanine aminotransferase = 307 U/L (reference range, 10-40 U/L) Chest x-ray shows bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy. Peripheral blood smear is reported as showing “atypical leukocyte morphology”
Histoplasma capsulatum is a dimorphic fungus endemic in the Ohio River Valley and the mid-Atlantic.
Exposure to contaminated soil. Risk activities include cave exploring, cleaning chicken coops, and disturbing soil below bird-roosting sites.
Disseminated histoplasmosis causes multiorgan illness that mimics autoimmune disease or malignancy. Most patients experience fevers and malaise. Seventy to ninety percent of patients have diarrhea, colonic inflammation, or gastrointestinal hemorrhage.
Skin lesions range from papules to plaques and have a distinct tendency to localize to the face, upper chest, and arms.
Other potential signs include pulmonary infiltrates, oral mucosal ulcerations, hepatitis, and lymphadenopathy.
Peripheral blood smear or biopsy of involved tissues often shows Histoplasma-laden phagocytes.
Antigenic characteristics determined by surface-spike glycoproteins:
hemagglutinin activity (HA) or neuraminidase activity (NA)
_ attaches to erythrocytes and initiates infection; _ cleaves _ , allowing viral release from infected cells
Hemagglutinin
Neuraminidase
Seasonal influenza outbreaks typically in epidemic pattern, peaking at _ to _weeks after introduction and completed after _ to _ weeks in any given community
2, 3
5,6
Influenza RIDT sensitivity, specificity
- Sensitivities: 50-70%
- Specificities: 90-95%
Influenza symptoms
abrupt onset:
- fever,
- rigors,
- malaise,
- headache,
- myalgia
- arthralgia
Clinical presentation in an individual during community outbreak is _ % specific for influenza based on abrupt onset of cough and fever in an adult
70
Influenza: complications other than pneumonia
- rhabdomyolysis
- myocarditis,
- Guillain-Barré syndrome
Difference between drift and shift
Antigen-change Immunogenicity-change Drift Minor Minor Shift Major Major
Influenza: lab dx methods
- rapid antigen test (70% specific), 15 minutes
- PCR (90–100% specific) 20 minutes
- Immunofluorescence, Direct (DFA) or Indirect (IFA) Florescent Antibody Staining: 1-4 hours
- Culture (90–100% specific ), days
Influenza: major complication
Pneumonia
Why are neuramindase inhibitors preferred?
Since 2009 circulating strains have been resistant to amantadines.
Influenza: types of pneumonia
- Viral: from influenza
- Post-infectious (following recovery) with S. pneumoniae, S. aureus, S. pyogenes, or H. influenzae
Itchy, raised patches with scaly borders and clear centers; Dx/Rx
Tinea corporis
Terbinafine
Griesofulvin if severe
Joint-Infections
RA+joint effusion+leukocytosis to 35K
Gram stain negative for organisms
Empiric antibiotics
Lady Windermere syndrome
Right middle lobe bronchiectasis and Mycobacterium avium complex infection with history of habitual suppression of cough
Lemiere syndrome: cause
Fusobacterium necrophorum
Lemierre syndrome
Jugular vein suppurative thrombophlebitis
frequently preceded by pharyngitis, usually in association with tonsil or peritonsillar involvement. Other antecedent conditions include primary dental infection or infectious mononucleosis
Leprosy: Rx
- Paucibacillary: Dapsone daily plus rifampin monthly for 6 months
- Multibacillary: Dapsone daily plus rifampin monthly plus clofazimine for 1 year
Less than _% of patients with COPD is caused by non-smoking etiologies (Eg occupational or environmental exposure)
10
LGV proctitis L2 serovar: Cause and Rx
Chlamydia trachomatis
Doxy x 3 weeks
LTBI: percent who progress to active TB
5%
LTBI: Rx
Preferred : INH 9 months; alternative: Rifampin 4 months
Why is hemodynamically stable complete heart block due to Lyme treated with ceftriaxone?
The CHB is reversed with antibiotic Rx
MDR-TB
Resistance to INH + Rifampin or more drugs
MDR-TB: Rx duration
18 to 24 months
Meperidine: why not in liver or renal dysfunction?
accumulation of metabolites: CNS toxicity, eg seizure.
Middle aged man with mono-like syndrome+ aseptic meningitis: why is this NOT EBV infection?
EBV infection rare in the middle aged, unlikely cause of aseptic meningitis
Miliary TB: nature of opacity
faint, reticulonodular infiltrate
- distributed uniformly
- apparent days or weeks after presentation
- nodular interstitial spread without significant alveolar involvement, although it has been demonstrated that, by the time the miliary nodules are large enough to be appreciated on a plain chest radiograph, they typically involve the adjacent alveoli.
Moderately severe diabetic foot infection without MRSA risk factors: Rx
Clindamycin + ciprofloxacin
Morphine: why avoid in cirrhosis?
markedly decreased clearance, increased bioavailability
- accumulation of morphine metabolites : seizures, encephalopathy, and myoclonus.
Most common infection reported in the United States, with more than 1.5 million cases reported in 2015
Chlamydia
MRSA bactermia: complicated and uncomplicated, duration
Vancomycin
Uncomplicated: at least 2 weeks
Complicated: 4 to 6 weeks
Mycobacteria: clinically important
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium leprae
- Mycobacterium avium complex
Non-endoscopic H pylori tests
- Serologic test
- Urea breath
- Fecal antigen test
Nearly _% of patients experience an adverse event within 3 weeks of discharge. Of these, _%are considered preventable and _% ameliorable.
Nearly _% of patients suffer an adverse event during hospitalization, of which more than _% are preventable.
Nearly 20% of patients experience an adverse event within 3 weeks of discharge. Of these, 33% are considered preventable and one-third ameliorable.
Nearly 10% of patients suffer an adverse event during hospitalization, of which more than 50% are preventable.
Most RCTs for H. pylori eradication in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia have shown _ significant benefit regarding symp- toms; a few have shown a _ benefit, but this can be explained by the _ of _ _.
Most RCTs for H. pylori eradication in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia have shown no significant benefit regarding symp- toms; a few have shown a marginal benefit, but this can be explained by the presence of unrecognized ulceration.
NSAID: safe in cirrhosis?
Relatively contraindicated
Risk of HRS, renal injury
occur when one fails to know proper rules or when one does not apply the rule he or she knows to be correct.
Rule-based errors
Organisms in prostatic abscess
E. coli and Staph aureus
Otitis media with effusion: indication for myringotomy
Air travel cannot be avoided; failure of fluid to resorb
Patient groups in acute bronchitis
- Group 1: no risk factors
- Group 2: + risk factors
- Group 3: chronic suppurative bronchitis
Pediculosis: what kind of organism causes it?
Wingless insects about 1.3 to 2 mm long
- Pthirus pubis (Crab louse)
- Pediculus humanus capitis
Both obligate ectoparasites which feed on human blood.
Pemphigus: biopsy
autoantibody deposition on DFA
Pemphigus: pathogenesis
autoantibodies that compromise keratinocyte adhesion.
Penicillin V dose for GAS pharyngitis
- 250 mg four times daily or 500 mg twice daily orally;
- long-acting intramuscular PCN given as one dose (1.2 million units benzathine ± procaine PCN G)
A 26-year-old man presents to the outpatient clinic with purulent penile discharge. Stain: Gram-negative intracellular diplococci. Recommended treatment does not include
- Cefixime 400 mg PO and azithromycin 1 g PO once
- Ceftriaxone 250 mg IM and azithromycin 1 g PO once
- Azithromycin 2 g PO once
- Ciprofloxacin 500 mg PO and azithromycin 1 g PO once
Ciprofloxacin is no longer recommended due to levels of resistance greater than 5% in the United States.
Azithromycin dosed at 1 g PO will not treat gonococcal infections effectively as a single agent, but will treat for coinfection with Chlamydia trachomatis.
Pertussis should be suspected if cough persists beyond _ weeks;
3
Pharyngeal Gonorrhea treated with oral cephalosporin: FollowupTrigger
Test-of-cure 2 to 3 weeks after therapy
Pharyngitis: Most common cause is __ in adults, with a much higher incidence of _ in children
Most common cause is viral in adults, with a much higher incidence of GAS in children
PID: Organisms
- N. gonorrhoeae
- C. trachomatis
- Anaerobes, gram-negative bacilli, streptococci, and mycoplasmas
PID: Rx
- (Cefotetan or cefoxitin) p+ doxycycline
- Clindamycin plus gentamicin
Pneumococcal vaccine: indications
- > 65
- Immunocompromised
- CSF leak
- Cochlear implant
- Nursing home resident of any age.
- Alcoholism
- Liver disease
- DM
- Chronic heart disease
- Chronic lung disease
- Smokers
Pneumococcal vaccine: types
PSV13 and PPSV23
Pneumonia is _ if vital signs and chest examination are normal
unlikely
Healthy patient presents with fever, dyspnea, and a productive cough is given empiric amoxicillin/clavulanic acid for audible pulmonary consolidation. He returns with:
Severe dyspnea
Persistent fever
New diarrhea
Confusion
pO2 < 60 mmHg
Serum Na < 140 mEq/dL
What is the diagnosis?
Legionella community-acquired pneumonia.
Explanation: Unresponsiveness to beta-lactams, confusion, hyponatremia, diarrhea, and pneumonia. In aggregate, these signs and symptoms = Legionella.
Dx: Legionella urinary antigen (diagnoses L. pneumophila type 1 infection = 90% of cases) + Legionella culture of respiratory specimens on buffered charcoal yeast extract agar (for subsequent epidemiologic investigation, if index case).
Rx: Azithromycin or respiratory quinolone (levofloxacin).
Leading causes
S. pneumoniae and Legionella pneumophila
Dilation of ureters, decreased ureteral peristalsis, and decreased bladder tone in pregnancy increases the risk of:
UTI
Primary syphilis: when does chancre appear?
2-3 weeks after innoculation
Proctitiis: Workup
- N. gonorrhoeae and C. trachomatis NAA tests highest sensitivity to detect
- HSV Culture
- Syphilis Serology
Prophylaxis after sexual assault
ceftriaxone+azithromycin+metronidazole+ Hep B Consider HIV post exposure prophylaxis
Prostatitis: Augmenting manouver for diagnosing
“Milking” the prostate by digital examination before voiding may induce pyuria
Protozan which causes vaginal discharge
Trichomonas vaginalis
Pseudomonas.VAP.Mx
Rx when a sensitive Pseudomonas is found
7 days cefepime
Double cover when suspected; narrow once sensitivities are available
Clin Infect Dis. 2016 Sep 1;63(5):e61-e111. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciw353. Epub 2016 Jul 14.
Management of Adults With Hospital-acquired and Ventilator-associated Pneumonia: 2016 Clinical Practice Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America and the American Thoracic Society.
A 50-year-old man presents to the hospital with a 2-day history of malaise, subjective fevers, joint pains, and a new purpuric rash over both lower extremities.
2 weeks ago, his primary care physician prescribed hydrochlorothiazide. His temperature is 100.6°F. His lower-extremity examination reveals bilateral edema and a purpuric rash; It is confined to the bilateral lower extremities and does not extend to the feet.
Cutaneous small vessel vasculitis (CSVV) is defined as a single-organ, skin-isolated leukocytoclastic vasculitis (LCV) or angiitis without systemic vasculitis or glomerulonephritis. (See ‘Definitions’ above.)
Pyelo: blood culture sensitivity
20%
About _% to _% of patients with untreated bacteriuria early in gestation progress to pyelonephritis later in pregnancy. Pyelonephritis has been associated with premature delivery.
20, 40
Diagnosis of pyelonephritis is supported by significant bacteriuria or greater than _ CFUs/mm3 and pyuria of more than _ WBCs/mm3
100000
10 WBCs/mm3
Rapid strep test: Sensitivity, specificit
Sensitivity: 80%
Specificity: 97%
Rare, serious complication of acute prostatitis
Prostatic Abscess
Rassmussen error classification
- Skill-based errors – slips and lapses – when the action made is not what was intended
- Rule-based mistakes – actions that match intentions but do not achieve their intended outcome due to incorrect application of a rule or inadequacy of the plan.
- Knowledge-based mistakes – actions which are intended but do not achieve the intended outcome due to knowledge deficits.
injury associated with a fall while being cared for in a health care setting.
Reportable
The National Quality Forum, a nonprofit organization known for endorsing quality and safety standards, has endorsed a list of serious reportable events, which were previously known as “never events.” Many states mandate reporting of serious reportable events to their respective departments of health .
Reserpine efficacy
- roughly to the same degree as other first-line antihypertensive drugs.
However, we could not make definite conclusions regarding the dose-response pattern because of the small number of included trials. More RCTs are needed to assess the effects of reserpine on blood pressure and to determine the dose-related safety profile before the role of this drug in the treatment of primary hypertension can be established.
Respiratory alkalosis and anion-gap metabolic acidosis. Secondary symptoms include tinnitus, gastrointestinal distress, and cardiac arrhythmias.
Aspirin toxicity
Rifampin _ cytochrome p450
Rifampin stimulates cytochrome P450
Drug levels reduced:
- warfarin
- OCP
- Methadone
- Most PIs
- Most NNRTIs non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
Rx for penicillin allergic ABS
Azithromycin, clarithromycin, doxycycline
Rx: cough in acute bronchitis
Albuterol inhalation
Exp: may decrease cough; most beneficial if reduced peak airflow
Rx: mild pyelonephritis
Oral quinolones for 1 week
TMP-SMX 2 week
Rx: penicilling allergy + GABS pharyngitis
Erythromycin 250 mg four times daily or 500 mg twice daily orally for PCN-allergic patients
Rx: UTI in a man
For complicated UTI, antibiotic selection is based on culture data and duration of therapy is generally 7 to 14 days depending on chosen antimicrobial agent
Second line rx for ABS?
Augmentin, cefuroxime, cefpodoxime
Time of appearance
2-8 weeks after chancre
- 2 to 8 weeks after appearance of chancre
- flu-like symptoms, generalized lymphadenopathy, and temporary patchy alopecia
- macular, maculopapular, papular, or pustular and may involve the whole body or palms and soles
- Condylomata lata appear as raised, painless, gray-white lesions; are highly infectious; and develop in intertriginous areas and on mucous membranes
Sensitivity and specificity of clinical presentation 50% to 75% for GABHS.
50 to 75%
Sensitivity in primary is _ %; in secondary syphilis is: _%
70, 100
Serotonin syndrome vs NMS
NMS: 1 to 2 weeks after starting drug
Serotonin syndrome: much sooner
NMS: high CK, high AST, and low serum iron levels.
For instance, potent agents with a relatively short half-life (such as paroxetine) are highly associated with a serotonin withdrawal toxidrome if the medication is abruptly discontinued. In contrast, agents with a longer half-life or active metabolites (such as fluoxetine) may cause a serotonin toxicity toxidrome even after ____ discontinuation.
4 to 5 weeks
Serotonin toxicodrome: causes
- SSRI
- selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors,
- serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors
- TCA
Serotonin washout period
2 weeks, 4 weeks if fluoxetine
After discontinuing SSRIs: “wash-out” period of at least 2 weeks before use of other serotonergic agents
If fluoxetine is discontinued, this wash-out period: at least 4 weeks
Serous otitis media: Rx
Observation
Severe candidemia: Rx
Echinocandin
- inhibit synthesis of glucan in the cell wall
Caspofungin, micafungin, and anidulafungin
Should sputum cultures be obtained in COPD exacerbations?
Helpful in severe cases
Single, painless papule at the site of inoculation
Erodes into clean base and raised, firm borders
Painless rubbery lymphadenopathy
Syphilis
SJS/TEN distinction
SJS: < 10% BSA
TEN: > 30% BSA
SJS/TEN “overlap”: 10% to 30%
SJS/TEN: causal drugs and temporality
- allopurinol,
- sulfonamides
- anticonvulsants
- “oxicam” NSAID.
Symptoms begin 4 to 21 days after exposure.
Less frequently:
- iodinated contrast,
- herbal medications,
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae or CMV infection
Strep pneumoniae: morphology and syndromes
Gram +ve diplococcus
- Pneumonia
- Bacteremia
- Meningitis
Stress ulcer prophylaxis: downsides
- H2-blockers and PPIs: risk for VAP.
- RCTs: conflicting results.
- No guideline currently recommends routine use of stress ulcer prophylaxis for all intubated patients.
Suppressive therapy in genital herpes: does it stop shedding?
No
Suspected GAS pharyngitis work up
If(clinical\_suspicion\_is\_high): if(rapid\_strep\_positive): treat(); break(); if(throat\_culture\_positive): treat(); break();
Syphilis Rx in patient with pen allergy
Treat after desensitization
Syphilis testing: screening and confirmatory
Nontreponemal tests: RPR, VDRL
Because of low specificity, must be confirmed by a treponemal test
Treponemal tests:
- fluorescent treponemal antibody, absorbed (FTA-ABS)
- T. pallidum particle agglutination tests
TB: NAA detailed performance
Sens: 96%, Spec: 95% in Smear +ve
For 1861 (40.1%) of the 4642 patients whose specimens tested positive for AFB on smear, the NAA test had a sensitivity of 96.0%, a specificity of 95.3%, a PPV of 98.0%, and an NPV of 90.9%. For 158 patients whose specimens tested negative for AFB on smear, the NAA test had a sensitivity of 79.3%, a specificity of 80.3%, a PPV of 83.1%, and an NPV of 76.0%, respectively. For the 215 specimens that tested positive for AFB by smear, we found a sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV of 97.5%, 93.6%, 95.1%, and 96.8%, respectively
Sensitivity and Specificity of NAAs in TB
- Highly specific for M. tuberculosis
- Highly sensitive in AFB smear–positive patients; only 50% sensitive in AFB smear–negative patients
- If TB is suspected and NAA is negative, TB not excluded
Temporal pattern of influenza symptoms
Fever, rigors, and myalgia peak at _ days, after which cough and nasal congestion predominate
3
TEN vs Staph scalded skin
Mucosal involvement Epidermal inv TEN ++ upper layer SSS - All layers
SSSS presents with generalized erythema rapidly followed by the development of flaccid blisters and desquamation. The mucous membranes are not involved.
Sloughing of only the upper layers of the epidermis, in contrast with the subepidermal split with full thickness epidermal necrosis observed in SJS/TEN.
Gummatous syphilis results in skeletal, mucosal, ocular, and visceral lesions
Time of onset is _ to _ years after infection
4, 12
Tests for H. pylori are of which two types?
Endoscopic and non-endoscopic
Tetrabenazine
used for hyperkinetic movement disorders such as tardive dystonia and chorea
may worsen parkinsonism because it depletes dopamine.
The highest rates of chlamydial infection are among persons between _ and _ years of age
The highest rates of chlamydial infection are among persons between 15 and 24 years of age
The most common viral STD in the United States; most infections asymptomatic and self-limited
Condylomata Acuminata or Anogenital Warts
Tick-borne illnesses
- RMSF: Rickettsia rickettsii
- Ehrliochosis: Ehrlichia chaffeensis
- Anaplasmosis: Anaplasma phagocytophilum
- Babesiosis: Babesia microti
- Lyme: Borrelia burgdorferi
Tigecyline and linezolid: why not in MRSA bacteremia?
- Both bacteriostatic
- Tigecyline:does not achieve high blood concentrations
Toxic shock syndrome: Rx
Vanc + Zosyn + Clinda
Treatment difference between scabies and lice
- Lice: permethrin 1% cream
- Scabies: permethrin cream 5%
Both: oral ivermectin
Ivermectin and malathion are alternatives for drug resistant lice.
TST Induration Considered Positive: Ranges
5, 10, 15 mm
10 mm > TST > 5 mm is considered to be positive for:
- HIV infection
- Recent contacts of active TB patients
- Fibrotic changes on chest radiograph
- Immunosuppression
- Use of anti–tumor necrosis factor-α drugs
TST False positives: Cx
- NTM infection
- BCG vaccination
Uncomplicated cystitis: organisms
E. coli
Staphylococcus saprophyticus
Urine culture: male with UTI, should we get one?
Yes, because this is a complicated UTI by “definition.”
Urodynamic testing components
- cystometry (measuring bladder pressure during filling of the bladder)
- uroflowmetry (measuring urine flow over time)
- pressure-flow study (determining whether poor flow is due to obstruction or detrusor weakness)
- urethral pressure profile or leak point pressure (for diagnosis of intrinsic sphincter deficiency).
Urodynamic testing: utility
- diagnosis of lower urinary tract dysfunction is unclear
- objective findings do not correlate with symptoms
- Failure to improve with treatment
- surgical treatment is planned.
In areas where resistance to TMP-SMX is less than _%, this drug can be used twice daily for 3 days. Other agents include quinolone therapy for _ days or nitrofurantoin for _ days
In areas where resistance to TMP-SMX is less than 20%, this drug can be used twice daily for 3 days. Other agents include quinolone therapy for 3 days or nitrofurantoin for 5 days
Vaginal discharge: foul smelling, frothy, yellow. Dx and Rx.
Trichomoniasis
PCR
Single dose (2 g) oral metronizadole
Vaginal discharge: white, noninflammatory, coating
Bacterial vaginosis
- Replacement of normal Lactobacillus spp. with anaerobes
Vaginal discharge: Clue cells
Vaginal pH >4.5 + whiff test (fishy odor on addition of 10% KOH). Rx?
Twice daily metronidazole (500 mg) x 1 week
Bacterial vaginosis
Vaginal discharge: White, “cottage cheese”
Vulvovaginal candidiasis
Candida albicans
OTC: Clotrimazole 2% cream 5 g intravaginally daily for 3 days
Fluconazole 150 mg orally once
external dysuria and vulvar pruritus, pain, swelling, and redness. Vulvar edema, fissures, excoriations, and thick curdy vaginal discharge.
VAP prevention
ATS/IDSA and SHEA guidelines: intubated patients be semirecumbent.
SHEA: head of bed at 30 to 45 degrees
as an accepted VAP-decreasing measure.
VAP: bugs
- Aerobic gram-negative bacilli such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
- Klebsiella pneumonia,
- Acinetobacter species or
- gram-positive cocci such as Staphylococcus aureus, much of which is methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
- Legionella can be considered in the appropriate clinical scenario, but it is not common.
- Anaerobes and fungi are uncommon causes of VAP.
VAP: Rx
- Gram-negative bacilli: antipseudomonal cephalosporin (ie, ceftazidime) OR antipseudomonal carbapenem (ie, imipenem) OR b-lactam/b-lactamase inhibitor (ie, piperacillin/tazobactam)
- PLUS antipseudomonal fluoroquinolone (ie, levofloxacin) OR aminoglycoside (ie, tobramycin).
- Vancomycin or linezolid should also be included to cover methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
VAP: why is vancomycin + Zosyn inadequate?
Also needed: antipseudomonal fluoroquinolone OR aminoglycoside
Vestibular neuronitis: Rx
Meclizine
Viral-Hepatitis.Hepatitis-B.Mx
Chronic inactive Hep B
ALT Q6Month, Hep B DNA Q6-12Month
- occurs in about one-third of secondary syphilis patients
- painless, mucosal, and warty erosions
- flat, velvety, moist and broad base . They tend to develop in warm, moist sites of the genitals and perineum.
- highly infectious.
- Complete resolution is spontaneous and occurs after a few days to many weeks, where it is either resolved completely or enters the tertiary phase, defined by a latent state.[2]
Condylomata lata
Weber test
Laterazlizes to the side with conductive loss or opposite to the side with sensorineural loss.
Tuning for test
Heard equally in both sides: Normal
Lateralizes to good ear: Sensorineural loss in other ear
Lateralizes to bad ear: Conduction loss in bad ear
In an affected patient, if the defective ear hears the Weber tuning fork louder, the finding indicates a conductive hearing loss in the defective ear. In an affected patient, if the normal ear hears the tuning fork sound better, there is sensorineural hearing loss on the other (defective) ear.
However, the aforegoing presumes one knows in advance which ear is defective and which is normal (such as the patient telling the clinician that they cannot hear as well in one ear versus the other) and the testing is being done to characterize the type, conductive or sensorineural, of hearing loss that is occurring. In the case where the patient is unaware or has acclimated to their hearing loss, the clinician has to use the Rinne test in conjunction with the Weber to characterize and localize any deficits. That is, an abnormal Weber test is only able to tell the clinician that there is a conductive loss in the ear which hears better or that there is a sensorineural loss in the ear which does not hear as well.
For the Rinne test, a vibrating tuning fork (typically 512 Hz) is placed initially on the mastoid process behind each ear until sound is no longer heard. The fork is then immediately placed just outside the ear with the patient asked to report when the sound caused by the vibration is no longer heard. A normal or positive Rinne test is when the sound heard outside the ear (air conduction or AC) is louder than the initial sound heard when the tuning fork end is placed against the skin on top of the mastoid process behind the ear (bone conduction or BC). Therefore, AC > BC; which is how it is reported clinically for a normal or positive Rinne result. In conductive hearing loss, bone conduction is better than air or BC > AC, a negative Rinne.
Weeping patches which develop honey colored crusts
Impetigo
Staph. aureus
Which disease: egg deposition in the intestines, liver and GU tract?
Schistosomiasis
Which is worse: SJS or TEN?
TEN (more extensive)
Which organism can be treated with single dose metronidazole?
- Bacterial vaginosis
- Trichomoniasis
Trichomoniasis
Bacterial vaginosis: 1 week twice daily metronidazole (500 mg). Single dose (2 g) oral metronizadole is only recommended for the treatment of trichomoniasis and should not be used to treat bacterial vaginosis.
Which patients with acute bacterial sinusitis should be treated?
Moderate, Severe symptoms
White discoloration, crumbly debris from beneath the nail, and thickening of the nail: Dx/Rx
Tinea unguium (onychomycosis)
- Oral terbinafine or itraconazole for 6–12 wk
- Ciclopirox nail lacquer is effective in <10% of patients
Why do we treat pertussis?
For public health reasons
Azithromycin or tetracycline
Why is cefazolin not a good agent for MRSA?
No activity against MRSA
Why screen for chlamydia?
reduced incidence of PID (RCT data)
Winnipeg Criteria: basis
for Stratifying Severity of Acute Exacerbation of Chronic Bronchitis
(this is a bizarre system)
Symptoms
- Increasing dyspnea
- Increasing purulence of sputum
- Increasing volume of sputum
Classification
- Type 1: Severe, all three symptoms
- Type 2: Moderate, two or three symptoms
- Type 3: Mild, at least one symptom along with
- URTI within last 5 days
- Fever without other apparent cause
- Increased wheezing
- Increased nonproductive cough
- Increased respirations or pulse >20% over baseline
An 18-year-old woman presents with right knee pain that began 4 days ago. Her right ankle had hurt previously and she thinks she hurt the knee by favoring the ankle. She also notes some soreness in her left wrist when she lifts her infant. She does not use injection drugs.
Two bug bites on her palms. Pain over the radial aspect of the left wrist along the tendon sheath and has two small erythematous pustules on left palm.
Rright knee is painful on range of motion, but has no erythema, warmth, or tenderness.
Arthrocentesis reveals a white blood cell (WBC) count of 1000/mm3. No organisms are identified on Gram stain. Which of the following is appropriate?
DGI: tenosynovitis, dermatitis, and migratory polyarthralgia, or as a monoarticular septic arthritis.
Presentation here: left-wrist synovitis, acral lesions consistent with the pustular or vesicular lesions seen in DGI, and polyarthralgia.
Urogenital symptoms sensitivity for DGI: 25% in DGI.
Sensitivity of joint fluid culture: 50%
Rx: ceftriaxone and doxycycline for concomitant chlamydia.
Gram negative helical rod
H. pylori
Pneumonia.Causes
Most likely cause of a chronic pneumonia in a patient without TB exposure
Fungal
Blasto, Histo, coccidio
Cystic-fibrosis
Acute Pseudomonas infection in CF
IV ceftazidime + IV tobramycin
Hepatitis C: which malignancy is it associated with?
B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Limited data also suggest the possibility of beneficial effects on the natural history of lymphoma with antiviral treatment. In one case report, remission of follicular lymphoma occurred following successful direct-acting-antiviral treatment for underlying HCV infectio
Nocardiosis: most common extra-pulmonary dissemination site
CNS
Fluffy white necrotizing retinitis + chorioretinal scarring
Toxoplasma gondii
Meta: never seen a case
CMV does not cause vitreal inflammation
Serotonin syndrome: which antibiotic?
Linezolid
MRSA bacteremia: Rx
IV vancomycin for 6 weeks
Polymicrobial Gram negative infection + immunosuppresion: which intestinal parasite?
Strongyloides
Malaria prophylaxis: how long to continue after returning?
Doxy: 4 more weeks
Proguanil: 1 more week
Contrary to a common perception, antimalar ial agents such as chloroquine, mefloquine, and doxycycline do not prevent initial malaria infec- tion in humans; rather, they act later on parasites that infect erythrocytes once they have been re- leased from the initial maturation phase in the liver (Fig. 2). Therefore, these drugs must be con- tinued for 4 weeks after the last exposure to in- fective mosquitoes in order to eradicate any para- sites that may still be released from the liver in the next month. However, atovaquone–proguanil not only acts on these blood-stage parasites but also interferes with the development of actively replicating parasites in the liver (Fig. 2); there- fore, it can be discontinued 1 week after expo- sure ends.
lupus patient with h/o chronic prednisone use presents with weeks of:
Intermittent fevers
Headaches
Confusion
CSF: Opening pressure > 200 mm H20, 20–200 leukocytes/hpf (↑ monocytes), ↑ protein, ↓ glucose; Gram stain: No organisms
cryptococcal meningitis.
Explanation
The big clues are the history of chronic steroid use and the very high opening pressure in the CSF. Crypto is notorious for increasing CSF pressure in this manner.
Dx: Serum crypto antigen + CSF opening pressure, crypto antigen, cell count, protein, glucose, and fungal culture.
Tx: Amphotericin B + flucytosine as induction, and then switch to fluconazole + keep ICP < 20 cm with repeated lumbar taps or insertion of ventriculoperitoneal shunt.
exually active patient presents with:
Fever
Headache
Myalgias
Scattered lymphadenopathy
Disseminated maculopapular rash, including the palms and soles ± wet-appearing, whitish plaques on the mouth and/or genital mucosa
secondary syphilis.
Explanation
If the script had not used the words “palms and soles,” you might have guessed a variety of answers, including influenza, mono, RMSF, meningococcemia, and primary HIV infection, etc. Questions about syphilis might describe the rash on the palms and soles as “nickel-and-dime lesions.” The whitish plaques are condyloma lata lesions that are manifestations of secondary syphilis.
Dx: Clinical + RPR or VDRL for screening + MHA-TP or FTA-ABS for confirmation of positive screening test
oung adult who did not receive childhood vaccines returns from a vacation to South America with:
Low-grade fever
Pharyngeal pain
Gray pharyngeal exudate
What is the diagnosis?
diphtheria.
Explanation
This diagnosis is pretty easy to remember, but the major cause of mortality from diphtheria (toxin-induced myocarditis) is not. Stridor and respiratory compromise also can occur if the membrane enlarges. The systemic toxicity is proportional to the size of the pharyngeal membrane.
Dx: Toxin assay + culture of organism from respiratory specimens.
Tx: Either erythromycin or penicillin G + antitoxin. Treat all cases.
Elderly, hospitalized, diabetic patient with h/o heart failure presents with:
Fever
Cough
Confusion
Hypoxemia
CXR: Lobar consolidation
Blood cultures: Gram-positive cocci in chains
Sputum Gram stain and culture: Gram-positive cocci in long chains
What is the etiology of the pneumonia?
roup B streptococci (S. agalactiae).
Explanation
GBS is now recognized as a bona fide etiology of severe pneumonia in the elderly. You should know its unique features: high rate of coexisting bacteremia, often causes confusion, and predilection for hospitalized patients with history of HF and/or diabetes. You might have guessed pneumococcus as the cause, but they are lancet-shaped diplococci and do not appear in long chains.
Dx: Cultures of respiratory samples or blood.
Tx: Intravenous PCN G or ampicillin.
24–48 hours after visiting Peru and eating raw oysters, patient presents with:
Profuse, watery diarrhea with flecks of mucus
± Watery vomiting
↓ BP
No fever
What is the diagnosis?
cholera.
Explanation
Watery diarrhea with flecks of mucus is often described as “rice water diarrhea” because of the appearance. The diarrhea from cholera is so profuse, it quickly distinguishes itself from other forms of self-limited gastroenteritis. Patients have so many watery stools that they can dehydrate within hours. Abdominal pain and fever are absent.
Dx: Stool for Gram stain and culture (“sheets of curved gram-negative rods”).
Tx: Aggressive volume resuscitation and replacement; patients can die within hours, so replacement should begin quickly, followed by antibiotics (doxycycline or quinolones).
Sexually active female at the end of her menstrual cycle presents with:
Diffuse arthralgias
Fever
Tenosynovitis of multiple fingers
A half-dozen pustular nodular skin lesions
What is the diagnosis?
disseminated gonorrhea.
Sexually active female presents with:
Thin, yellowish, vaginal discharge
Dysuria
Dyspareunia
Cervix: Punctate hemorrhages
Vaginal pH > 4.5
Wet mount: motile organisms
Trichomonas
Metronidazole
10 days after returning from a vacation to Austin, Texas, to watch the bats emerge from under the bridges, patient develops:
Fever and chills
Headache
Cough
Pulmonary rales
CXR: Hilar adenopathy and patchy interstitial infiltrates
What is the diagnosis?
pulmonary histoplasmosis.
Explanation
The exposure history is the key here. Think about histo with any of the following exposures: farm buildings, caves, bird-roosting locations, bat guano, and “spelunking” (cave exploration) with exposure to the Southeast and South Central U.S.
Dx: The sensitivity of the different tests for histo vary depending on the presentation of disease. The antigen tests are useful in patients with very severe disease. Diagnose pulmonary histo with fungal stains and cultures of sputum ± histo antigen on urine, blood, or bronchoalveolar lavage specimens in sick individuals + serum complement fixation antibody test.
Tx: Lipid amphotericin B preparations for very severe disease; itraconazole for less severe disease.
4 days after killing and skinning a rabbit, patient presents with:
Fever
Chills
Headaches
Erythematous papule on the hand
Axillary lymphadenopathy
tularemia.
Explanation
Tularemia is caused by Francisella tularensis, a small, gram-negative pleomorphic bacillus found in many animals, specifically rabbits.
Dx: 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers + Gram stain and culture of clinical specimens (usually difficult to demonstrate the organism) ± PCR in research setting.
Tx: Treat with streptomycin or gentamicin. Tetracycline can be used if the patient is not severel
SLE on chronic prednisone presents with prolonged:
Fevers
Dyspnea
Productive cough
Night sweats and weight loss
CXR: Multiple nodules and interstitial infiltrates
TB skin test: No induration
Sputum Gram stain: Filamentous, branching, gram-positive rods that are partially acid-fast
Head CT with contrast: Singular mass lesion
What is the diagnosis?
Nocardiosis
Patient with known hemochromatosis on chelation therapy ingested raw oysters from the Chesapeake Bay, then presented with:
Fever
↓ BP
Multiple hemorrhagic bullae
↓ Plt
↑ PT, PTT, fibrin degradation products, and ↓ fibrinogen
What is the diagnosis?
ibrio vulnificus septicemia.
Explanation
The association of iron overload, raw oysters, bullous skin lesions, and a sepsis syndrome is the key to recognizing V. vulnificus. Most cases are acquired in the Chesapeake Bay or on the U.S. Gulf Coast.
Dx: Bacterial cultures of clinical specimens (blood, wounds).
Tx: Supportive + doxy + either cefotaxime or ceftriaxone + surgical debridement.
weeks after returning from a missionary trip to Cameroon, Africa, patient presents with:
Fevers and chills
Malaise
Headaches
Nonspecific abdominal pain
Vomiting
Splenomegaly
↓ Hgb, Hct, and Plt
↑ Serum AST, ALT, and T. bili
± ↑ BUN and creatinine
Thin smears: Banana gametocytes
What is the diagnosis?
Plasmodium falciparum malaria.
Explanation
Any patient who returns from a malaria-endemic area with fevers and splenomegaly should be considered to have malaria until proven otherwise. This case also includes the buzz phrase “banana gametocyte.” When you see that, the diagnosis is P. falciparum malaria. Remember, malaria does not characteristically have a rash!
Dx: Thick and thin blood smears stained with Giemsa for identification of parasites (banana gametocytes and ring forms in P. falciparum) ± various rapid diagnostic test.
Tx depends on severity of disease and area of travel: Chloroquine-sensitive mild disease = chloroquine; chloroquine-resistant or unknown = artemisinin combination (artesunate or artemether + amodiaquine, atovaquone-proguanil, lumefantrine, clinda, doxy, and others), atovaquone-proguanil, quinine + pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine, doxy, or clinda, or mefloquine and d
Sexually active female presents with:
Thin vaginal discharge with a “fishy” odor
Vaginal pH > 4.5
+Whiff test
Wet mount: clue cells
bacterial vaginosis.
Explanation
“Clue cells” is your clue to this script, in addition to the high pH, fishy odor, and +whiff test. Trichomonas is the other organism that can cause a thin vaginal discharge, but it is visible on wet prep.
Dx: Vaginal pH > 4.5 + whiff test + wet mount (clue cells).
Tx: Oral or intravaginal metronidazole or clindamycin.
Bacterial vaginosis vs Trichomonas
Bacterial vaginosis: clue cells
Trichomonas: visible
The diagnosis of Trichomonas vaginalis is based on laboratory testing (motile trichomonads on wet mount, positive culture, positive nucleic acid amplification test, or positive rapid antigen or nucleic acid probe test). Because microscopy is a key step in the evaluation of vaginal discharge, it is often the first step in the diagnostic evaluation for trichomoniasis. Microscopy is convenient and low cost. Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT) can then be done for women with non-diagnostic (or negative) wet mounts. If NAAT is not available, rapid diagnostic kits or culture are then performed. The choice of test is based on availability.
As with other types of vaginitis, none of the clinical features of trichomoniasis is sufficiently sensitive or specific to allow a diagnosis based upon signs and symptoms alone (table 1) [38-40]. In one study, if the classic clinical features of trichomoniasis in women were used alone for diagnosis, 88 percent of infected women would not be diagnosed and 29 percent of uninfected women would be falsely diagnosed as infected [41].
Women undergoing testing for trichomoniasis are generally tested for chlamydia and gonorrhea infections as well. The diagnostic approach to women with vaginal discharge is reviewed separately. (See “Approach to women with symptoms of vaginitis” and “Screening for sexually transmitted infections”, section on ‘Screening recommendations’.)
Microscopy and pH — The presence of motile trichomonads on wet mount is diagnostic of infection, but they are identified in only 60 to 70 percent of culture-confirmed cases (picture 2) [40]. The motion is jerky and spinning (movie 1 and movie 2); organisms remain motile for 10 to 20 minutes after collection of the sample. Other findings that are almost invariably present with T. vaginalis infection, but nondiagnostic, include an elevated vaginal pH (>4.5) and an increase in polymorpho
lderly patient presents with acute onset:
Confusion and fever
↑ WBC
Differential: ↑ Neutrophils
CSF: ↑ Leukocytes > 100/hpf (polys, lymphs, and monos), ↑ protein, ↓ glucose, Gram stain: No organisms
Blood cultures: + Gram-positive diplococci
What is the diagnosis?
pneumococcal meningitis.
Explanation
Bacterial morphology always helps you make the diagnosis. Pneumococci are “lancet-shaped gram-positive diplococci.” The organisms are usually present on CSF Gram stain; however, a lack of organisms on Gram stain does not exclude bacteria as the cause.
Dx: CSF analysis for cell count, glucose, protein, Gram stain and bacterial culture + blood cultures ± urinary pneumococcal antigen.
Tx: Vancomycin + ceftriaxone, then narrow coverage based on susceptibility results.
Hunter from the Midwest presents with:
Fever
Headaches
Myalgias
Splenomegaly
Mild jaundice
↓ Hgb, Hct, and Plt
↑ Indirect bili, reticulocyte count, and ↓ haptoglobin
↑ Serum AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase, and LDH
Thin smears: Maltese cross merozoites
babesiosis.
Explanation
Dx: Thin blood smears stained with Giemsa to visualize parasites or PCR testing on peripheral blood in patients with negative thin smears ± IgG and IgM serum titer ≥ 1:64.
Tx:
For patients with mild B. microti infection, we recommend treatment with atovaquone-azithromycin (Grade 1B). For asymptomatic patients with babesiosis, we recommend not administering antibiotic therapy (Grade 1C). Treatment should be considered if parasites persist for ≥3 months. (See ‘Mild illness’ above.)
●For patients with severe B. microti infection, we suggest initial antimicrobial therapy with clindamycin plus quinine (Grade 2C). If quinine toxicity occurs, we suggest
Hiker from Arkansas presents with:
Fever
Headache
Myalgias
Maculopapular rash that becomes petechial on the wrists and ankles
↓ WBC, Hgb, Hct, and Plt
↓ Serum Na
↑ Serum AST and ALT
↑ PT and PTT
Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF).
Explanation
Look out for the history of exposure to ticks in endemic areas (especially Southeast and South Central U.S.) and the features of pancytopenia, hyponatremia, characteristic rash, and increased transaminases. Not all patients have all of the findings, but this is the classic script. Do not confuse this petechial rash (which is characteristically on the wrists and ankles) with petechiae/purpura due to DIC in patients with meningococcal sepsis (called “purpura fulminans”). Those patients have classic findings of DIC with increased D-dimer and PT and PTT. Ehrlichiosis appears very similar to RMSF, except usually without a rash. The other lab findings are nearly identical.
Dx: Clinical. Skin biopsy for immunofluorescence. 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers occurs, but treatment needs to be immediate.
Tx: Empiric oral or parenteral doxycycline in suspected cases; recognize that no diagnostic tests give immediate answers, so do not withhold antibiotics awaiting serology or biopsy findings.
Adolescent patient presents with fever, malaise, sore throat, and disseminated pruritic, vesicular rash that progresses to:
Cough and dyspnea
↓ BP
Hypoxemia
CXR: Diffuse bilateral infiltrates
varicella pneumonia.
Explanation
The clue is the development of pneumonia in the setting of an itchy vesicular rash.
Dx: PCR on clinical specimens (skin lesions) + viral culture on clinical specimens (skin lesions, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid) + serum varicella-zoster virus antibodies.
Tx: Oral acyclovir can be used in adults with mild disease; severe disease should be treated with high-dose intravenous acyclovir (10 mg/kg q 8 hours) + supportive care.
HIV/AIDS and CD4 count < 50/µL is hospitalized for:
Confusion
Fevers
Multiple erythematous skin papules that develop painless central ulcerations and necrosis
Blood cultures: Gram-negative rods
What is the diagnosis?
ecthyma gangrenosum and Pseudomonas bacteremia.
Explanation
Any time you see disseminated skin lesions with central necrosis in an immunosuppressed person, think about Pseudomonas bacteremia, especially if the patient has an indwelling central catheter. You could have considered disseminated fungal infections, such as Candida, but those lesions generally do not develop central necrosis. You also might have thought of cutaneous anthrax, but those patients usually do not have multiple lesions and initially are not septic. The Gram stain of the blood definitively tells you what is going on with this script. Patients with HIV/AIDS and severe immunosuppression are at risk for spontaneous Pseudomonas bacteremia and pneumonia.
Dx: Culture.
Tx: 2 antipseudomonal drugs are combined with 1 from each of following categories: antipseudomonal beta-lactams (pip/tazo, ticarcillin/clav, cefepime, ceftazidime) + either aminoglycoside (gent or tobra) or quinolone (ciprofloxacin).
Nonvaccinated adolescent presents with:
Fevers
Cough
Coryza
Conjunctivitis
Bluish-white spots on the buccal mucosa
Diffuse, maculopapular rash, beginning on the face and moving downward
measles.
Explanation
Coryza is another term for a congested and runny nose. The bluish-white spots are “Koplik spots,” but you should definitely know what these are by description and not in name only. Cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, Koplik spots = measles.
Dx: 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers + viral culture of clinical specimens.
Tx: Supportive + measles vaccination (should have ≥ 2 doses).
1 week after eating meat from a local bear hunter, several patients develop abdominal pain and diarrhea that eventually progress to:
Myalgias, ocular pain, and muscle swelling
Lower extremity edema
Conjunctival and subungual hemorrhages
Periorbital edema
↑ WBC with differential: ↑ Eosinophilia
↑ Serum CPK
trichinellosis.
Explanation
You probably associate Trichinella spiralis more with undercooked pork, which is also true. The eosinophilia gives this diagnosis away and helps you exclude simple myositis as the cause.
Dx: T. spiralis antibody test ~ 3 weeks after infection + muscle biopsy (shows larvae).
Tx: Treat only symptomatic patients with albendazole.
Healthy, sexually active female presents with a recent onset:
Dysuria, urgency, and frequency
U/A: > 10 leukocytes/hpf, no casts; +leukocyte esterase and bacteria
Urine culture: gram-positive cocci in clusters that lab tells you are not S. aureus or S. epidermidis.
What is the diagnosis?
cystitis.
Explanation
Remember that Staphylococcus saprophyticus is a urinary pathogen in females, so do not automatically assume that a urine Gram stain with gram-positive cocci is contaminated.
Dx: Urinalysis ± urine culture or Gram stain of unspun urine.
Tx: Oral cephalosporin or amoxicillin-clavulanic acid
Diabetic with history of frequent episodes of ketoacidosis presents with:
Fever
Confusion
High anion gap metabolic acidosis
↑ Blood glucoses
Recent history of chronic, purulent, nasal discharge
A painless black lesion in the anterior nares
What is the diagnosis?
mucormycosis.
Explanation
Mucormycosis (a.k.a. zygomycosis) is caused by fungi in the order Mucorales. The fungi thrive in high glucose,high acid environments e.g. diabetic ketoacidosis. Disease can present as invasive rhinocerebral or invasive pulmonary infection. The black necrotitic lesion represents rhinocerebral involvement and can extend intracranially. The most common presentation is sinusitis in an uncontrolled diabetic.
Dx: Fungal stains and cultures of clinical specimens (tissue biopsies, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, sinus specimens).
Tx: Aggressive supportive care + surgical debridement + lipid amphotericin B.
Sexually active patient presents with:
Painless, small, firm, genital ulceration that remains present for 2–3 weeks
What is the diagnosis?
primary syphilis.
Explanation
You absolutely must know all about genital ulcerations for any comprehensive exam. It is safe to associate any painless genital ulcer with primary syphilis. Painful ulcers are usually herpes or chancroid; the former occurs after clustered vesicles rupture, and the latter is typically large and single. Painless genital ulcer in the U.S. = syphilis.
Dx: + RPR or VDRL for screening + MHA-TP or FTA-ABS for confirmation of positive screening test.
Tx: Single IM injection of PCN G; doxycycline is an alternative for penicillin-allergic patients with the exception of neurosyphilis and pregnant women.
2 weeks after cleaning a warehouse in New Mexico that contained rodent droppings, previously healthy patient presents with fever, malaise, myalgias, headaches, and decreased platelets, and rapidly develops:
Progressive bilateral pulmonary interstitial edema, leading to hypoxic respiratory failure
↑ Serum AST, ALT, LDH, and lactate
Prolonged PT and PTT with ↑ D-dimer, fibrin degradation products, and ↓ fibrinogen
What is the diagnosis?
hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.
Explanation
Always think about hantavirus when you see rodents in a clinical history. This is a very rapidly progressive syndrome, so patients with rodent exposure who develop cough should be taken very seriously. Sometimes the rodent history is hard to get (or is left out of an exam question), so think about hantavirus in a patient with a severe pneumonia and exposure to the Desert Southwest.
Dx: 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers (usually antibodies are present when patient is symptomatic) + PCR on clinical specimens (peripheral blood, serum).
Tx: Supportive.
6 hours after eating mashed potatoes with brown gravy at an office party, several workers develop:
Profuse watery diarrhea x hours
Crampy abdominal pain
No vomiting
What is the diagnosis?
lostridium perfringens food poisoning.
Explanation
Remember the key associations for C. perfringens food poisoning: watery diarrhea and crampy abdominal pain; brown gravy and meats; ingestion of large amounts of bacteria, which then form toxins in the intestine (symptoms occur later, after ingestion). You might have guessed Yersinia enterocolitica. The Yersinia association is with ingestion of chitterlings (pronounced “chitlins”). Yersinia diarrhea usually lasts much longer, however, and can be associated with significant morbidity including mesenteric adenitis.
Dx: Toxin assay of stool. Staphylococcal food poisoning has nausea.
Tx: Supportive ± antidiarrheal agent if the patient has no fever and nonbloody stools.
ay male presents with:
Chronic, “smelly” stools that float
Flatulence
“Sulfuric belching”
Weight loss
Negative stool O&P evaluation
What is the diagnosis?
giardiasis.
Explanation
The clinical scenario could include a hiker who drinks mountain water. Don’t let a negative O&P evaluation dissuade you from the diagnosis of Giardia because only ~ 50% of specimens are positive. Sulfuric belching is always a dead giveaway for Giardia—not much else does that. Remember the groups that are at increased risk: men who have sex with men, the immunosuppressed, and those who drink mountain water.
Dx: Stool ova and parasite evaluation + stool Giardia antigen ± duodenal biopsy.
Tx: Treat only symptomatic patients. Choices include metronidazole, tinidazole, or nitazoxanide.
Adolescent patient with no respiratory symptoms develops acute onset:
Pharyngeal pain with tonsillar swellings and exudate
Fever
Anterior cervical adenopathy
Heterophile antibody: Negative
What is the diagnosis?
group A streptococcal (S. pyogenes) pharyngitis.
Explanation
Viral pharyngitis is more often associated with respiratory symptoms of coryza and cough, where S. pyogenes pharyngitis rarely is. The 3 findings listed in this script (adenopathy, fever, exudative pharyngitis) are the most specific collection of findings for S. pyogenes. You might have guessed Arcanobacterium as a cause (and that would be reasonable), but
1 clue to this organism is an erythematous rash, which is not present in this patient. The heterophile antibody is the “monospot” test, which is (+) in 60–80% of EBV patients and makes the diagnosis of EBV less likely.
Dx: Rapid strep test; throat cultures are no longer recommended in adults, even when the rapid test is negative.
Tx: Oral penicillin V; amoxicillin, 1st generation cephalosporins, and IM PCN G are alterna
Nursing home patient develops:
Perpetual scratching buttocks
Multiple perianal excoriations
Bean-shaped eggs: “Scotch tape test”
What is the diagnosis?
pinworms (Enterobius vermicularis).
Explanation
The scotch tape test is only used to diagnose pinworms; you can safely make that association. Remember that pinworms are not diagnosed on O&P exams of the stool because eggs are not shed in the stool.
Dx: Scotch tape test (scotch tape pressed against perianal skin, then tape pressed onto slide and viewed under the microscope).
Tx: Albendazole.
Sexually active female presents with:
A mucopurulent vaginal discharge
A friable cervix with mucopurulent discharge at the cervical os
Wet prep: No organisms
What is the diagnosis?
gonorrhea cervicitis.
Previously healthy patient returns from Hawaii after participating in freshwater kayaking and swimming in local waterfalls. 1 week later, he develops:
Fever and headache
Myalgias
Conjunctival suffusion
± Abdominal pain and hepatosplenomegaly
Variable WBC and normal Plt
↓ Serum Na
± ↑ Serum AST, ALT, and CPK
± CSF: ↑ Leukocytes (differential: ↑ Polys or lymphocytes)
Severe cases: ↑ T. bili and ↓ albumin
What is the diagnosis?
eptospirosis.
Explanation
The big clue is the buzz phrase “conjunctival suffusion.” Few infectious diseases do this, and always consider lepto when you see it or see the buzz phrase. The association with Hawaii is important, as that state has the most lepto cases/year (~ 50% of all U.S. cases). Also, think about lepto if the case presents meningitis in a triathlete who swam in open water.
Dx: Culture of clinical specimens (blood, urine, CSF) + 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers.
Tx: PCN or doxycycline.
Healthy patient with 2–3 day h/o malaise, fever, and headache presents with rapidly progressive:
Cough and hypoxemia
Confusion
↓ BP, ↑ PR, ↑ RR
CXR: Widened mediastinum
CSF: ↑ Leukocytes and protein, ↓ glucose; Gram stain: Large gram-positive rods resembling “box cars”
What is the diagnosis?
inhalation anthrax.
Explanation
The initial pulmonary presentation followed by sepsis is consistent with any severe community-acquired pneumonia (such as Legionella, influenza with or without secondary bacterial pneumonia, tularemia, plague, or hantavirus). However, the widened mediastinum (enlarged mediastinal nodes) and subsequent meningitis are clues to inhalation anthrax.
Dx: Gram stain and culture of sputum, blood, pleural fluid CSF. PCR testing is also available.
Tx: Empiric because cultures take too long, and infection is deadly; intravenous ciprofloxacin + imipenem, rifampin, vancomycin, penicillin, ampicillin, chloramphenicol ± clindamycin.
Hunter from Illinois presents with:
Chronic cough productive of purulent sputum
Weight loss
CXR: Several nodular lesions
Sputum with normal flora on routine culture
What is the diagnosis?
lastomycosis.
Explanation
In this script, we left out the yeasts. The chronicity and the association with hunting and the Midwest are good clues to the diagnosis.
Dx: Identification of the yeast in clinical specimens + culture; serologic tests are not reliable.
Tx: Mild-to-moderate disease: Itraconazole; severe or CNS disease requires amphotericin B.
Several patients who swim at the same local swimming pool develop:
Acute, self-resolving, watery diarrhea
Crampy abdominal pain
Stool O&P: No ova or parasites
Stool modified acid-fast: 4–6 micrometer pink cysts
What is the diagnosis?
Cryptosporidium.
Explanation
The size of Cryptosporidium cysts are 4–6 micrometers on modified acid-fast stain. Patients with HIV/AIDS can have protracted diarrhea, weight loss, and biliary tract disease. But, immunocompetent patients who are exposed via contaminated water, such as in swimming pools, have self-limited disease.
Dx: Visualization of oocysts in clinical specimens (stool, tissue).
Tx: Treatment not necessary in immunocompetent hosts; antiretroviral treatment for HIV/AIDS patients. Nitazoxanide if requires therapy. Avoid public swimming for 2 weeks after resolution of diarrhea.
Patient who works in a textile factory presents with:
Upper extremity skin lesion that began as an itchy, erythematous papule → central vesicle → painless, black center with significant surrounding edema
What is the diagnosis?
cutaneous anthrax.
Explanation
The occupational exposure and painless nature are the clues to cutaneous anthrax. There are other lesions with necrotic centers. Ecthyma gangrenosum is caused by Pseudomonas, yet occurs in neutropenic or AIDS patients who are septic. Systemic endemic fungal infections can have necrotic lesions, but there is usually infection elsewhere, typically the lung.
Dx: Gram stain and culture of the lesion. PCR testing is also available.
Tx: Empiric because culture takes too long, and infection can become systemic and deadly. Oral ciprofloxacin or doxycycline for cutaneous disease is used empirically, then can be narrowed to penicillin V or amoxicillin if susceptible.
Adolescent patient presents with:
Fever
Pharyngeal pain ± tonsillar exudates
Marked fatigue
Anterior cervical lymphadenopathy
± Splenomegaly
↑ WBC (differential: ↑ Lymphocytes)
Peripheral smear: Atypical lymphocytes
↑ Serum AST and ALT
Heterophile antibody: Positive
What is the diagnosis? What is it due to?
infectious mononucleosis due to Epstein-Barr infection.
Explanation
Always think EBV mono when you see increased AST and ALT in a patient with exudative pharyngitis. Not too many other illnesses do this (Q fever does, but the case should have animal exposures). About 10% get a non-itchy maculopapular rash that lasts for ~ 1 week. Patients taking ampicillin or amoxicillin are very likely to get a morbilliform (measles-like) rash. It is fairly easy to distinguish EBV mono from GAS pharyngitis (no splenomegaly or transaminase elevation in the latter), but CMV is more difficult (less severe sore throat, but other manifestations are same; distinguished by absence of heterophile antibody and +CMV IgM serology). Primary HIV infection can look very similar to mono but would also be heterophile negative.
Dx: Clinical and of exclusion + heterophile antibody test (“monospot”) ± EBV antibodies.
Tx: Supportive; avoid contact sports until ~ 3 weeks after improvement—or even longer for aggressive contact sports.
Show
Adolescent presents with the following:
Chronic anterior cervical lymph node swelling that eventually develops fluctuance ± draining sinus tract
TB skin test: > 15 mm induration
+ HIV
What is the diagnosis?
TB lymphadenitis (scrofula).
Explanation
Lymphadenitis due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis is historically called “scrofula.” Do not confuse that with infection with the atypical mycobacterium, M. scrofulaceum—which often causes lymphadenitis as well. Only the M. tuberculosis clinical presentation is termed “scrofula” despite the similar species name. Culture is necessary to distinguish between lymphadenitis due to TB and atypical TB, but 1 clue in this script is the induration of the TB skin test. Usually, atypical Mycobacteria do not cause positive TB skin tests, or they cause only slight induration (~ 5 mm). Most tuberculosis in HIV is reactivation of prior asymptomatic infection and occurs at the rate of 3–16% per year in patients coinfected with HIV and TB.
Dx: Excisional node biopsy with AFB smears, mycobacterial culture, and pathology (shows caseating granulomas) + CXR.
Tx: 4-drug antituberculous therapy (rifampin, INH, ethambutol, pyrazinamide) x 2 months, then 2 drugs x 4 months; duration 6–9 months.
Patient with known heme malignancy and a central venous catheter presents with:
Fever
Blood cultures from the catheter: Gram-positive rods, identified as Corynebacterium jeikeium
What drug should be prescribed?
s intravenous vancomycin.
Explanation
Know that C. jeikeium is an etiology of line-associated bacteremia and sepsis, especially in patients with heme malignancies. The only effective drug is vancomycin, and it should be started immediately when you suspect this organism. This gram-positive rod should never be viewed as a contaminant even if only 1 blood culture grows.
Hiker from Arkansas presents with:
Fever
Headache
Myalgias
↓ WBC, Hgb, Hct, and Plt
↓ Serum Na
↑ AST and ALT
What is the diagnosis?
ehrlichiosis.
Explanation
Think about Ehrlichia as “Rocky Mountain spotless fever” because of its similarity to RMSF, but only 30% have a rash. Like RMSF, ticks are the transmission vectors, and it predominantly occurs in the Eastern half of the U.S.
Dx: Intracytoplasmic inclusions in blood WBCs. For confirmation after treatment, 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers ≥ 2 weeks apart. PCR in research settings.
Tx: Empiric doxycycline; antibiotics should not await findings of laboratory tests.
ale patient, who lives on a goat farm, presents 2–3 weeks after assisting with the births of multiple goats with:
Fever
Headaches
Malaise
Myalgias
± Dyspnea and cough
± ↑ Serum AST and ALT
± CXR: Pulmonary infiltrates
What is the diagnosis?
Q fever.
Explanation
The history of exposure to birth products from livestock is your 1st clue. The organism responsible for disease is Coxiella burnetii. Know that Q fever presents with a flu-like prodrome followed by hepatitis, pneumonia, or both. Rare cases of endocarditis occur, so a clinical case could include the livestock history in a patient with culture-negative endocarditis. You might have guessed Brucella here, but remember that Brucella does not usually cause this rapid febrile response with a definite early hepatitis.
Dx: 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers ± PCR in research settings.
Tx: Moderate-to-severe disease = doxycycline; endocarditis = doxy + hydroxychloroquine x 18 months.
Patient with HIV/AIDS and a CD4 count < 100/µL presents with progressive:
Mild confusion
Right-sided motor weakness
Ataxia
Trouble initiating speech
MRI: Diffuse white matter demyelination, especially in periventricular and subcortical areas, without edema or contrast enhancement
CSF: + For JC virus by PCR
What is the diagnosis?
progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy.
Explanation
Know that some patients with a PML-type clinical picture have a negative CSF PCR for JC virus. If the clinical features of PML are present in an immunosuppressed host, then do not be afraid to make that diagnosis. Remember the more recent association between PML and the use of immunosuppressant medications, such as rituximab, efalizumab, fludarabine, and chronic corticosteroids.
Dx: CSF for opening pressure, cell count, glucose, protein, JC virus DNA by PCR ± brain biopsy.
Tx: No specific antiviral therapy is available.
Sometime after exposure to a flying bat in his camping trailer and 1 week of headaches and flu-like symptoms, a man presents with:
Anxiety and irritability
Fever
Refusal to drink water
Excessive salivation
Pharyngeal spasms in response to seeing water or feeling cold air
What is the diagnosis?
rabies.
Explanation
Be aware of the association of rabies with bat exposure, even if no bite was witnessed.
Dx: Immunofluorescence staining of tissue biopsy specimens + viral culture of clinical specimens (CSF, saliva, biopsies) + brain biopsy (usually postmortem).
Tx: Immediate vaccination and administration of human rabies immune globulin. Essentially 100% fatal once symptomatic.
Young patient who is fond of snakes develops:
Fever
Bloody diarrhea
Crampy abdominal pain
Fecal leukocytes
Negative Clostridium difficile toxin assay
What is the diagnosis?
nontyphoidal Salmonella gastroenteritis.
Explanation
Remember the association between reptiles and amphibians and Salmonella. Eggs and contaminated poultry are also important sources. S. typhimurium and S. enteritidis are the usual species isolated in these cases. Recall that typhoid is caused by S. typhi.
Dx: Stool cultures.
Tx: Supportive; only certain patient groups merit treatment and include patients at high risk for invasive disease (infants, patients with immunodeficiencies such as HIV/AIDS) and those with severe presentation (high fevers and lots of diarrhea requiring hospitalization for volume loss). Others should not be treated because treatment prolongs the carrier state, does not affect the duration of illness, and promotes resistance. If Rx is required, use ciprofloxacin, TMP/SMX, amoxicillin, ceftriaxone, or cefotaxime.
Patient, who did not receive any pretravel vaccinations, presents 30 days after returning from a visit to India with:
2 weeks of fever
Chills
Abdominal pain
Weight loss
Salmon-colored macular rash on the trunk
↓ HR when febrile
What is the diagnosis?
typhoid fever.
Explanation
The travel history, rash, and relative bradycardia are big clues to this diagnosis. The term for the rash is “rose spots,” but the script describes the rash to you instead of using the classic term. Be sure you know what rose spots look like.
Dx: Cultures of blood, stool, and rose spots. Bone marrow cultures have the highest yield. Cultures may require prolonged incubation. Susceptibility results are important.
Tx: Ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, or azithromycin; specific drug choice depends on extent of illness and local susceptibility patterns. Watch out for ileal perforation as a complication
Older man with a recent h/o cystoscopy presents with days to weeks of:
Fevers and chills
Arthralgias
Weight loss
New diastolic murmur, loudest at the upper right sternal border
Blood cultures: Gram-positive cocci in chains; sensitive to penicillin, ampicillin, vancomycin, and gentamicin
What is the diagnosis?
nterococcal endocarditis.
Explanation
Clues in this case are the history of genitourinary instrumentation and subacute presentation of bacteremia. If the gram-positive cocci in the blood were staph, the clinical presentation would be more fulminant. You might have guessed endocarditis due to viridans streptococci, but those organisms come from the mouth and are not associated with recent history of GU manipulation. Enterococcal isolates are generally tested for susceptibility to penicillin, ampicillin, vancomycin, and aminoglycosides only.
Dx: Revised Duke criteria, which includes bacteriologic + echocardiographic findings (in this case it would show a new regurgitant murmur).
Tx: Depends on susceptibility; gentamicin + penicillin G, ampicillin, or vancomycin x 4–6 weeks, depending on duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis.
24–48 hours after visiting the U.S. Gulf Coast and eating shrimp and crab, a patient presents with:
Fever
Bloody diarrhea
Crampy abdominal pain
What is the diagnosis?
ibrio parahaemolyticus.
Explanation
Vibrio parahaemolyticus is found in the same environment as other vibrios, but it presents differently from cholera, with a more inflammatory picture. Rarely, it can also cause skin and soft tissue infections, like Vibrio vulnificus.
Dx: Specialized stool cultures.
Tx: Supportive with aggressive volume resuscitation. Doxycycline or quinolones for severe disease.
A 40-year-old male cyclist presents with repeated bouts of:
Fever
Dysuria
Perineal aching
Lower abdominal pain
Urinary hesitancy
U/A: ↑ Leukocytes, +nitrites, +leukocyte esterase
What is the diagnosis?
acute prostatitis.
Explanation
If this case were presented in a female, the diagnosis would definitely be cystitis or pyelo. The most common cause of recurrent UTIs in men is a prostatic focus. Cycling is a risk factor for an inflamed prostate.
Dx: Prostate exam with gentle prostatic massage with Gram stain and culture of prostatic secretions.
Tx can be empiric or based on Gram stain results: Empiric = TMP/SMX or FQ; if GPC chains = amoxicillin or parenteral ampicillin; GPC clusters = cephalexin, dicloxacillin, or parenteral cefazolin or nafcillin.
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17th Ed. IM Core Curriculum : Book 1 : ID > Urinary Tract Infections > Prostatitis
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Known diabetic patient with poor dental hygiene presents with:
Chronic, painless swelling at the angle of the jaw that develops a draining sinus, extruding yellow, gritty material
Gram stain of gritty material: Branching, filamentous, gram-positive rods
What is the diagnosis?
Known diabetic patient with poor dental hygiene presents with:
Chronic, painless swelling at the angle of the jaw that develops a draining sinus, extruding yellow, gritty material
Gram stain of gritty material: Branching, filamentous, gram-positive rods
What is the diagnosis?
ervicofacial actinomycosis (“lumpy jaw”).
Explanation
When the presentation is early, before any fistulae form and before any sulfur granules (the gritty yellow exudate) are extruded, the diagnosis is sometimes difficult and is often misdiagnosed as a cellulitis. The disease is called lumpy jaw for a reason; always consider it in anybody who develops a lump in the jaw area. Pelvic and intraabdominal actinomycosis are associated with the use of IUDs, so think about actino in any IUD-related abdominopelvic presentation.
Dx: Gram stain and culture of clinical specimens + biopsies (inflammation, fibrosis, and sulfur granules). Actinomyces can be differentiated from Nocardia because Nocardia is partially acid-fast and an aerobe whereas Actinomyces is not acid-fast and is an anaerobe.
Tx: High-dose oral penicillin or ampicillin; 2nd choice is tetracycline.
Adolescent patient with no respiratory symptoms develops acute onset of:
Pharyngeal pain with tonsillar swellings and exudate
An erythematous, sandpaper-like, desquamating rash that spares a circular area around the mouth
Strawberry tongue
Petechial lines that concentrate in the antecubital fossa, axilla, and groin
What is the diagnosis?
carlet fever.
Explanation
Key words for scarlet fever are “circumoral pallor” (the pale area around the mouth), “Pastia lines” (petechial lines in the skin creases), and “desquamation.” Arcanobacterium pharyngitis can present with this same scarlatiniform rash but lacks Pastia lines and desquamation. Enteroviral pharyngitis may have a rash, but it is vesicular/pustular. EBV pharyngitis may have a diffuse rash but would not have Pastia lines.
Dx: Rapid strep test; throat cultures are no longer recommended in adults, even when the rapid test is negative.
Tx: Oral penicillin V; amoxicillin, 1st generation cephalosporins, and IM PCN G are alternatives.
Gardener presents with:
Chronic papulonodular skin lesion on the hand or forearm
Smaller papular lesions in proximal lymph channels
What is the diagnosis?
sporotrichosis.
Explanation
This diagnosis, in this current form, is probably too easy for an exam. However, remember that alcoholics, diabetics, and patients with HIV/AIDS may present with disseminated sporo that presents as hypotension and pneumonia.
Dx: Fungal stains and culture on clinical specimens (aspirates, tissue biopsies, body fluids) ± biopsy (may show small number of fungal organisms with special stains).
Tx depends on extent of disease: For disease limited to the lymph system and skin = oral itraconazole; severe disease = lipid amphotericin B then transition to itraconazole after improvement.
1 week after returning from a road trip through Arizona and New Mexico, a previously healthy female patient presents with:
Fatigue
Fevers
Cough
Arthralgias
Tender nodules across both shins
What is the diagnosis?
primary Coccidioides infection.
Explanation
The clues here: Arizona and description of erythema nodosum. This presentation is “Valley Fever.”
Dx: Fungal stains and culture of clinical specimens + IgG and IgM serum immunoassays.
Tx: No treatment required for mild disease; less severe illness, treat with fluconazole; severe illness, immunosuppression. Pregnant patients should be treated with amphotericin B.
Valley fever
Coccidio
Young patient who stepped on a nail while wearing tennis shoes presents with:
Fever
Extensive soft tissue pain and swelling at puncture site
↑ ESR
What is the diagnosis?
Pseudomonas aeruginosa cellulitis.
Explanation
P. aeruginosa survives in the moisture-absorbing middle layer of tennis shoes and can be inoculated into soft tissue or bone after stepping on nails.
Dx: Culture.
Tx: Oral or IV drug depends on extent of sickness and organism’s susceptibilities. The only oral drugs are quinolones; parenteral choices include ceftazidime, cefepime, imipenem, gentamicin, tobramycin, ciprofloxacin, aztreonam, piperacillin/tazobactam, or ticarcillin/clavulanic acid. For very sick individuals, typically 2 antipseudomonal drugs are used with 1 from each of following categories: antipseudomonal beta-lactams + either aminoglycoside or quinolone.
Previously healthy adolescent presents with the acute onset of:
Fever
Seizure
Confusion
CSF: ↑ Leukocytes (↑ lymphs),↑ RBCs, ↑ protein
MRI: Temporal lobe enhancement
What is the diagnosis?
erpes simplex encephalitis.
Explanation
The big clues to this case are: Bloody CSF and temporal lobe enhancement; both are cardinal features of HSV encephalitis. Other forms of encephalitis uncommonly present with the hemorrhagic component and the temporal lobe involvement.
Dx: Brain imaging + CSF for cell count, protein, glucose, HSV DNA by PCR (gold standard test), and viral culture ± brain biopsy for atypical cases.
Tx: Intravenous acyclovir x 14–21 days.
Patient with h/o acute leukemia, neutropenia, and fever has:
Persistent fever after empiric treatment with ceftazidime
Indwelling central venous catheter that appears uninfected
Blood cultures: Gram-positive cocci
What is the diagnosis?
staphylococcal bacteremia.
Explanation
The objective of this case is to suspect staphylococcal bacteremia in a patient with febrile neutropenia, a central line, and failure to respond to ceftazidime. Ceftazidime is less active than 1st or 2nd generation cephalosporins against MSSA and is inactive against MRSA. Other common gram-positive cocci (such as strep) are covered reasonably well by ceftazidime. Without specific clues, it is reasonable to assume that this neutropenic patient has 1 of the more common causes of fever; e.g., the venous catheter.
Dx: Blood cultures.
Tx: Vancomycin, then narrow coverage based on susceptibility test results.
Several months after a trip to Martha’s Vineyard, a patient presents with:
Chronic (weeks to months), mildly painful, very swollen knee
Large knee effusion
+Serum RPR
+B. burgdorferi IgG and IgM ELISA
+B. burgdorferi Western blot
Arthrocentesis: WBC < 25,000/mm3
What is the diagnosis?
Lyme arthritis.
Explanation
Positive antibody tests, in and of themselves, are not enough to make a diagnosis of Lyme disease. However, in the appropriate clinical context, order a Western blot test to confirm the ELISA results. Remember that Lyme can be associated with a false-positive RPR.
Dx: 2-stage Lyme testing (IgM and IgG ELISA or IFA screening with confirmation of positive tests using Western blot) ± PCR testing for B. burgdorferi on joint fluid.
Tx: Oral doxycycline or amoxicillin x 30 days; some patients with persistent symptoms require parenteral treatment with 30 days of ceftriaxone. After 30 days of parenteral treatment with ceftriaxone, manage symptoms with analgesics only.
Injection drug user, who mixes his heroin with prepackaged lemon juice from the grocery store, presents with:
Fevers
Decreased vision
Blood cultures: Yeast
What is the diagnosis?
Candida fungemia and endophthalmitis.
Explanation
Contaminated diluents have been associated with fungemia in injection drug users, especially the premade lemon juice available at the grocery store. Look for Candida fungemia in the patient with a history of a long-term indwelling central venous catheter, especially if also receiving TPN. Eye disease is a frequent complication of fungemia, and all patients with Candida fungemia should have funduscopy because eye disease affects the duration and type of treatment with antifungal drugs.
Dx: Clinical, including ophthalmologic exam + blood cultures ± fungal stain and cultures of vitreous ± β-d-glucan assay (most helpful in intraabdominal candidal infections that are associated with negative blood cultures).
Tx: Depends on species of Candida that is isolated and whether the species is susceptible to fluconazole; also depends on extent of ocular involvement. Agents used include amphotericin B, liposomal amphotericin, echinocandins, fluconazole, or voriconazole ± vitrectomy.
Elderly patient presents with acute onset:
Confusion
Fever
↑ WBC
CSF: ↑ Leukocytes > 100/hpf (polys, lymphs, and monos), ↑ protein, ↓ glucose, Gram stain: No organisms
Blood cultures: + Gram-positive rods
What is the diagnosis?
Listeria meningitis.
Explanation
Recognize that the CSF Gram stain often does not show organisms in patients with Listeria meningitis, but this script shows evidence of meningeal involvement because of the CSF pleocytosis and increased protein. The specific clues in this case are confusion, elderly person, and CSF pleocytosis. Remember that gram-positive rods comprise Listeria.
Dx: CSF for glucose, protein, cell count with differential + culture or organism from blood or CSF.
Tx: Either ampicillin or penicillin G. Gentamicin often added for synergy, but no studies available to assess additional efficacy.
Homeless person presents with:
Fever
Chills
Headache
Weakness
Dyspnea and cough
Pleuritic chest pain and hemoptysis
Confusion
Pain and swelling in an inguinal lymph node
CXR: Diffuse pulmonary infiltrates
What is the diagnosis?
pneumonic plague.
Explanation
The important fact to remember about pneumonic plague is that it is highly contagious, even though the bubonic form (from which this script developed) requires the vector for transmission. Make sure to recognize the bubo in the script!
Dx: Gram stain and culture of clinical specimens for Yersinia pestis (blood, sputum, CSF, lymph node aspirates) or Wright stain of peripheral blood (may show safety pin-shaped organisms) or 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers ± PCR or ELISA testing on specimens in research settings.
Tx: Streptomycin; 2nd line choices are tetracycline or quinolones + respiratory isolation.
atient with HIV/AIDS and a CD4 count < 100/µL presents with:
Headache
Vomiting
Seizure
Contrast head CT: Multiple ring-enhancing lesions and generalized edema
Serum toxo IgM negative, IgG positive
What is the diagnosis?
Diagnosis is cerebral toxoplasmosis.
Explanation
Remember that CNS toxo is usually a reactivation disease, so patients are usually positive for antitoxo IgG. But not always! If the patient has ring-enhancing brain lesions and immunosuppression (and no other obvious diagnosis), you can empirically diagnose toxo even if the serum IgG is negative. Remember that herpes encephalitis and brain abscesses usually result in only a single lesion, but toxo presents with multiple lesions.
Dx: Brain imaging + IgM and IgG toxo antibodies ± brain biopsy (shows organisms on special stains) ± CSF for PCR at research institutions.
Tx: Pyrimethamine + sulfadiazine + leucovorin.
Previously healthy menstruating female presents 3 days into her menstrual cycle with:
Fever and rigors
Headache
Diarrhea ± abdominal pain and vomiting
↓ BP
Mucosal hyperemia
Diffuse erythroderma
Nonpitting edema
↑ or ↓ WBC
Differential: ↑ Neutrophils and band forms
↓ Hgb, Hct, and Plt
± ↓ Serum Na, albumin, Ca, and PO4
± ↑ Serum AST and ALT, creatinine, and CPK
Blood cultures: No growth
What is the diagnosis?
staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome (TSS).
Explanation
Exam questions regarding TSS commonly present a patient with overwhelming sepsis in the context of a menstruating female or a postsurgical wound infection. The CDC definition of TSS is easy to remember and includes the triad of shock, fever, and rash, along with involvement of ≥ 3 organ systems. Blood cultures in staph TSS are usually negative, but positive in strep TSS. Epidemiology is important in making a diagnosis in this case. This is 1 of the few infections that will take a young person from healthy to deathly sick in only a couple of days. You might have suspected RMSF or meningococcemia, both of which can also cause severe disease in otherwise healthy young people, but neither presents with erythroderma. With RMSF, the history would include tick exposure and would describe a petechial rash. With meningococcemia, the history might include meningeal signs and describe petechiae and purpura. There is no special association between menstruation and RMSF or meningococcemia. You also might have suspected scarlet fever because you saw erythroderma. Recognize that scarlet fever is due to streptococcal pharyngitis, and this patient does not have a sore throat.
Dx: Clinical: CDC case definition of rash.
Tx: Supportive care + surgical drainage of pus if present + vancomycin and clindamycin.
omeless person presents with:
Fever
Chills
Headache
Weakness
Pain and swelling in an inguinal lymph node with overlying erythema
Nodal aspirate: Gram stain shows gram-negative bacilli and cocco-bacilli
What is the diagnosis?
bubonic plague.
Explanation
This form of plague is transmitted via rodent fleas, so patients who have exposure to rodents may become infected. The inguinal bubo, and its Gram stain, are the biggest clues to diagnosis in this case. Sometimes Yersinia may grow in blood cultures, and organisms may be described as having a “safety pin” appearance in addition to bacilli or cocco-bacilli.
Dx: Gram stain and culture of clinical specimens (blood, sputum, CSF, lymph node aspirates) or Wright stain of peripheral blood (may show safety pin-shaped organisms) or 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers ± PCR or ELISA testing on specimens in research settings.
Tx: Streptomycin; 2nd line choices are tetracycline or quinolones.
60-year-old East Texas patient sits for hours in his front yard in the summertime. He presents with fever, severe headache, and myalgias, then develops:
Confusion
Tremors of eyelids, tongue, lips, and extremities
Myoclonus
± Unilateral facial weakness
↑ Serum AST, ALT, and CPK
↓ Serum Na
CSF: ↑ Leukocytes (< 200 cells/mm3) with ↑ monocytes, mild ↑ protein, normal glucose; Gram stain: No organisms; –HSV PCR
MRI: No abnormalities
rbovirus encephalitis.
Explanation
This case would most likely be St. Louis encephalitis, but most of the etiologies have similar presentations. Think about arbovirus encephalitis when you see altered mental status with tremors and clonus. The epidemiologic clue is that the patient sits outside in the summer where mosquitos linger.
Dx: Clinical and of exclusion (especially exclude HSV with CSF PCR) + CSF opening pressure, cell count, protein, glucose, viral culture, PCR for arboviruses (gold standard test) + serum and CSF for arboviral antibodies.
Tx: Supportive.
Bovine rancher with a known bicuspid valve develops:
Prolonged fevers
Scattered lymphadenopathy
Hepatosplenomegaly
New diastolic murmur at the left upper sternal border
Increased CRP
Several sets of negative blood cultures
Echo: Aortic vegetation with regurgitation
Negative Coxiella serology
What is the diagnosi
rucella endocarditis.
Explanation
Brucella and Coxiella are both causes of culture-negative endocarditis.
Dx: Revised Duke Criteria, which includes bacteriologic (Gram stain and culture of clinical specimens [blood, valve, marrow aspirate, liver biopsy]) + echocardiographic findings. Brucella can be diagnosed by a 4-fold rise in acute and convalescent IgG and IgM serum titers ≥ 2 weeks apart or positive titer > 1:80 in nonendemic areas ± PCR in research settings. Coxiella causing chronic Q fever can be diagnosed by an IgG titer of > 1:800.
Tx: Doxycycline + streptomycin or gentamicin ± rifampin
Young patient with h/o splenectomy develops fever and:
Rigors and confusion
↓ BP and ↑ HR
Petechiae and purpura
↓ WBC, Hgb, Hct, and Plt
Differential: ↑ Neutrophils and band forms
Peripheral smear: Dohle bodies and toxic granulations
↑ AST, ALT, and serum creatinine
Prolonged PT and PTT
↑ D-dimer and fibrin degradation products with ↓ fibrinogen
Buffy coat: Gram-positive diplococci
What is the diagnosis?
pneumococcal sepsis.
Explanation
The history of splenectomy should cause you to consider encapsulated bacteria as a cause of sepsis. Fulminant pneumococcal disease is the most common cause of sepsis in the splenectomized patient, and it can present with DIC. Sometimes no source is obvious. The clinical scenario may or may not give you “gram-positive, lancet-shaped diplococci” as a clue.
Dx: Blood cultures ± urinary pneumococcal antigen.
Tx: Vancomycin (in splenectomy patient) + either ceftriaxone or cefotaxime, then narrow coverage based on susceptibility results.
Approximately 2–3 weeks after obtaining a new kitten, patient presents with:
Fever
Papular lesion on the forearm, present for ∼ 1 week
New painful axillary lymphadenopathy
What is the diagnosis?
cat scratch disease.
Explanation
Cat scratch disease is caused by Bartonella henselae. Bartonella species can cause systemic disease in patients with HIV/AIDS.
Dx: Clinical and of exclusion (exclude other bacterial causes of lymphadenitis, especially atypical mycobacteria and scrofula) + serologic test for B. henselae with ≥ 1:64 titer ± biopsy of lesions with granulomatous inflammation on pathology and organisms visible on Warthin-Starry stain.
Tx: Self-limited, so usually no treatment required, and antibiotic use in lymphadenitis is controversial; if prescribing, give azithromycin. Treat rare cases of dissemination to eye, liver, or CNS with azithromycin.
Elderly male with h/o BPH presents with:
Scrotal pain
Tenderness limited to the posterior side of the testis with epididymal induration
Intact cremasteric reflex
U/A: ↑ WBCs
Urine culture: + E. coli
What is the diagnosis?
infectious epididymitis.
Explanation
This diagnosis in an older male is more often caused by enteric gram-negative rods than by sexually transmitted infections, which is what you would consider if the patient were
< 40 years of age (gonorrhea and Chlamydia). This is not torsion because the presentation is subacute, the physical exam does not show pain across the entire testis, and the cremasteric reflex is present.
Dx: Urinalysis + urine culture ± urethral swab of Gram stain and gonorrhea culture and urine for nucleic acid amplification based on risks for STIs.
Tx: Ceftriaxone 250 mg IM + doxy + FQ if ≥ 35 years of age or if practices insertive anal intercourse; severe presentation should be referred to urologist immediately.
approximately _% of patients presenting to the emergency department with white-cell counts of 12,000 to 25,000 cells have noninfectious conditions
50
Lawrence YR, Raveh D, Rudensky B, Munter G. Extreme leukocytosis in the emergency department. QJM 2007;100:217-223.