Interpretation Of Laboratory Tests Of Infectious Disease Flashcards
What is the common clinical presentation for mycoplasma, cytauxzoonosis, and babesia?
Anemia
What is a common clinical presentation for RMSF, Ehrlichia canis, and Anaplasma platys?
Thrombocytopenia
What is a common clinical presentation of Lyme, ehrlichia ewingii, anaplasma phagocytophilium, and bartonella?
Polyarthritis
What is a common clinical presentation of bartonella, fungal, mycobacterium, and FIP?
Pyogranulamatous
What is a common clinical presentation of RMSF, Ehrlichia canis, bartonella, leptospirosis, and FIP?
Vasculitis
What is a common clinical presentation fungal and parasites?
Pulmonary lesions or cough
What is a common clinical presentation of bartonella and chaga’s disease?
Endocarditis/myocarditis
What is a common clinical presentation of Lyme, ehrlichia, heartworms, and RMSF?
Glomerular disease with PLN
What is a common clinical presentation of leptospirosis, Lyme, ehrlichia, and RMSF?
AKI
What are two types of infectious disease testing that you can perform?
Blood smears and In house SNAP 4Dx Plus
(T/F) A positive SNAP test doesn’t mean current infection unless they are showing clinical signs because it could just be exposure
True
What infectious agents cause morula in neutrophils on a blood smear?
Ehrlichia ewingii and Anaplasma phagocytophilum
Why can a SNAP 4Dx Plus test be negative if a patient is infected?
- It is an acute infection
- There is not enough time for antibody production to occur
How do you confirm that an infectious organism is present?
PCR
(T/F) Quantitative C6 antibody - Lyme confirms infection
False, it only confirms exposure