Infectious Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

What is bacteria

A
  • unicellular microorganism with shapes including curved rods, spheres, rods, and spirals
  • when bacteria form a parasitic association with other organisms, they are classified as pathogens.
    • pathogenic bacteria are a major cause for human death and disease
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2
Q

describe gram stain classification for bacteria

A

-developed by Hans Christian Gram, bacteria is characterized into the structural characteristics of their cell walls
Gram POSITIVE bacteria appear blue/violet
Gram NEGATIVE bacteria appear red/pink

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3
Q

By combining morphology (shape) and Gram staining, most bacteria can be classified into these four groups

A
  1. Gram Positive Cocci (round)
  2. Gram Positive Bacilli (rod-like)
  3. Gram Negative Cocci (round)
  4. Gram Negative Bacilli (rod-like)
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4
Q

Typical Gram positive infections

A

Staphylococcus aureus - skin infections
Streptococcus (razor blades in throat)
-Respiratory tract infections
-Strep throat
-Endocarditis (inflammation/infection of heart valves)
-Necrotizing fasciitis (“Flesh Eating” disease)

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5
Q

Typical Gram negative infections

A
  1. Neisseria - Meningitis, Gonorrhea
  2. Pseudomonas - Pneumonia
  3. Hemophilus - Pneumonia
  4. Escherichia coli (E.Coli) - Urinary Tract Infections
  5. Proteus - Bacteremia
  6. Bacteroides - Abdominal Infections
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6
Q

What is Methicillin Resistant Staph Aureus (MRSA) and how is it transmitted

A

Caused by staphylococcus aureus bacteria that thrives on human skin and mucus membranes. it can be carried by the host for a long time without causing clinical consequences

Transmitted: person-person contact, especially through hands of health care workers.

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7
Q

ways of transmitting/preventing MRSA

A

person to person contact
the nasal carriage is very common and may be due to nose/hand contact. carrier often contaminates own hands via nose/hand contact and spreads the organism in the course of routine activities.
PREVENTION: WASH YOUR HANDS!!!
A culture of nares, rectum, or skin can detect colonization

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8
Q

What is colonization of MRSA

A

indicates the presence of the organism without any symptoms of illness.

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9
Q

How can one be colonized with MRSA

A

Can occur in the nares, trachea, rectum, skin folds, or in an open wound. The Pt will not display symptoms once colonized.
20-30% of general population are colonized with MRSA
healthcare workers most likely high because increase exposure
-colonization is not an indication for hospital admission or prolonged hospitalization

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10
Q

what is infection of MRSA. signs/Sx

A

tissue invasion by S.Aureus with clinical symptoms.
infection can range from superficial skin lesions (boils) to deeper pneumonia, bacteremia (which can progress to death)
Sx: systemic diseases such as fever, malaise, leukocytosis

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11
Q

treatment for MRSA when admitted to hospital

A

Antibiotic options

  1. Vancomycin
  2. Clindamycin
  3. Linezolid
  4. Quinupristin/Dalfoprisitn
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