Respiratory Tract Infections Flashcards
The common cold
5/7x per year in children, and 2/3x per year in adults.
Colds account for 40% of lost work time.
>200 viral subtypes associated - rhinoviruses are the most common - causes 30-50%.
Human coronaviruses cause 10-15% of common colds.
Transmission: hand contact, droplet transmission
IP 2-3 days; symptoms last 3-10 days & up to 2 weeks in 25%
Causes of Symptoms
Bradykinin: intranasal administration of bradykinin causes a sore throat and nasal congestion, due to vasodilation.
Sneezing: mediated by stimulation of trigeminal sensory nerves - histamine mediated.
Nasal discharge: changes colour with increasing number of neutrophils (white->yellow->green) due to myeloperoxidase.
Cough mediated by Vagus nerve - inflammation must extend to larynx to trigger this.
Cytokines responsible for systemic symptoms.
Difference between cold and flu
Onset: appears quickly/gradually Location: nose and throat/whole body Sense: feel unwell/feel so unwell you can't carry on Fever: no fever/high fever flu may have lower resp tract features
Influenza
Caused by Influenza A or B.
Swaps hemispheres seasonally.
Uncomplicated - 1-4 days, fever (38-41), cough, myalgia, malaise.
Acutely debilitating
Risk Groups and Complications
At risk: immunosuppressed/chronic medical conditions; pregnancy or 2 weeks postpartum; age <2 or >65; BMI: >40
Complications: primary viral pneumonia/secondary bacterial pneumonia, CNS disease, death
Pathology of Influenza
The influenza virus haemagglutitin surface protein binds sialic acid on cell surface glycoprotiens/lipids in resp tract.
This allows influenza virus to enter the cell.
The neutaminidase (N_ on the surface of the virus allows the virus to escape by cleaving sialic acid bonds or escaping virions clump together.
The influenza virus has a segmented genome (8 parts) so can reassort if 2 different viruses infect the same cell.
Options for treamtent and prevention
Active immunisation - against haemagglutinin and neuraminidase components.
Hand hygiene and droplet precaution.
Tamiflu = oseltamivir - a neuraminidase inhibitor.
Pneumonia
Infection of lung parenchyma.
Alveoli full of inflammation - blocks O2 transfer.
Fever, breathlessness, cough, sputum production, hypoxia, increased resp rate, pleuritic chest pain, spesis
Pneumonia Radiology
Diagnosis requires infiltrates on CXR.
Consolidation - alveoli and bronchioles completely filled with inflammation - debris/pus/pathogens.
Heart borders of diaphragm obscured (loss of solid-gas interface).
Air bronchograms - air in larger bronchi outlined by surrounding consolidations
Streptococcus pneumonia
Most common organism overall.
Gram positive.
Risk factors - alcoholics, resp. disease, smokers, HIV, hyposplenism, CHD.
Acquired in nasopharynx.
Asymptomatic carriage in 40% - smokers > non-smokers.
Prevention: vaccine
Treatment: penicillin
Mycoplasma pneumonia
Most common cause of ambulatory atypical pneumonia.
Classically young patient, lasts several weeks.
Extrapulmonary symptoms very common.
Lacks cell wall - penicillin-resistant - can’t grow on lab plates.
Diagnosis by PCR on throat swabs.
Treat with macrolides or tetracyclines).
Legionella pneumonia
Sporadic infection or outbreaks associated with contaminated water (nosomical/travel).
Uncommon 350 cases/year in England and Wales.
Can cause severe, life-threatening infection.
Risk Factors: smoking, chronic lung disease.
Diagnosis: don’t grow on routine culture - need specific conditions & longer to grow.
Treatment: macrolides or quinolones.
Health care associated pneumonia
New onset at least > 48 hours since admission.
Hospitalisation patients become colonised with hospital bacteria.
May be intrinsically more resistant to antibiotics. Broad spectrum antibiotics used empirically.
TB facts and figures
2017: 8 countries accounted for 2/3 of TB.
WHO 2017 estimates 10 million new cases and 1.6 million deaths world-wide.
1/4 world’s population has latent TB.
In UK: 71% cases born outside UK, rates 13x higher than if born in UK; 12% have a social risk factor and 2.5% coinfected with HIV
Microbiology of TB
Aerobic bacillus.
Divides every 16-20 hours (slow) - lab extends culture to 56 days.
Cell wall present, but lacks phospholipid outer membrane, so does not stain strongly with Gram stain (weakly positive) - retains stains after treatment with acid.
Referred to as fast bacillus (AFB).
Special stains - Ziehl-Neelsen or auramine rhodamine.