Populations/Locations Flashcards
Nosocomial/hospital-acquired?
Enterococcus faecalis
E. Coli
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Acinetobacter baumanni
C. difficile
Asia?
Vibrio cholerae
Vibrio parahemolyticus
Haemophilus ducreyi
Elderly?
Strep pneumoniae (pneumonia)
HIB (fulminating meningitis)
Children?
1-strep. pneumoniae (pneumonia)
2-Shigella (account for 2/3 of cases)
3-HIB (fulminating meningitis/epiglottis, most in children under 3)
4-Moraxella catarrhalis
5-N. meningitis (school age to college)
6-Mycoplasma pneumonia (school age - young adults)
7-Staph A (Scalded Skin Syndrome - TENS)
8-Strep pyogenes (acute exudative pharyngitis
Older children up to college aged/young adults?
- Strep A (acute pharyngitis)
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae (primary atypical pneumonia)
- N. meningitidis
- Moraxella catarrhalis
Immunocompromised/HIV?
Kinda similar to nosocomial…
Pseudomonas aeruginosa (cystic fibrosis patients)
TB (AIDS/HIV)
children under 5 yr =
i. Initially a localized red rash, often following conjunctivitis or upper respiratory tract infection
ii. Followed by large flaccid bullae which rupture and sheets of epidermis peel off to reveal moist, red, “scalded” dermis
TENS (SSS) StaphA
Predominantly occurs in children 5-15 years of age and during the colder months (transmission easier due to the effect of crowding and to dry nasal passages)
Strep A - acute exudative pharyngitis
Causes 50-90% of pneumonias; esp. in children under 5 yr and elderly
Mortality: about 5-10%; esp. in children under 5 yr and elderly
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Children under 10 years of age account for over 2/3 of all cases
Shigella
(2) Infection unusual in the first 2 months of life – almost all cases occur in children under 2 years old (epiglottitis tends to present in slightly older children, 2-4 yrs)
Fulminating meningitis in unvaccinated children less than 3 years old & in elderly – Invades the submucosa of the nasopharynx and then systemically spread via the blood circulatory system
Epiglottitis & laryngitis in children
Haemophilus influenza
(1) Causes upper respiratory tract infections, especially including otitis media and sinusitis in children (3rd most common cause)
(2) Causes bronchitis or pneumonia in children and adults (in the top 3-4 of causes).
Moraxella catarrhalis
Meningitis
(2) Predominates (#1) in school-age children and college students; some epidemics in schools and day care centers
Neisseria meningitidis
Pneumonia
Epidemiology – occurs primarily in school age children and young adults, especially military (up to 50/1,000/year)
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
(4) Miscarriage, stillbirth, neonatal infection
Gram-positive bacillus, aerobic, non-sporeforming (NSF)
Listeria monocytogenes