RTI Clinical Flashcards

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1
Q

Lobar pneumonia

A

Lobar: Streptococcus pneumoniae

Physical exam

  • Bronchial breath sounds
  • Tactile fremitus
  • Dullness to percussion
  • Consolidation
  • Effusion
  • Rust-colored sputum
  • “hepatization”
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2
Q

Interstitial (“atypical”) pneumonia

A
  • Viral
  • Legionella
  • Mycoplasma
  • Chlamydia

Physical exam

  • Crackles
  • Wheezes
  • may not reveal consolidation

Sx

  • Young, healthy patients
  • Gradual in onset with constitutional symptoms:
  • Malaise, fatigue, myalgia, headache
  • Non-productive cough
  • Fever
  • Self-resolving; rarely needs treatment

Dx: X-ray presents a diffuse pattern

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3
Q

COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED (CA) PNEUMONIA

A

CA-pneumonia in Ambulatory Pt:

  • M. pneumoniae
  • Respiratory virus
  • S. pneumoniae

CA-pneumonia in Hospitalized Pt

  • S. pneumoniae
  • Legionella
  • GNB
  • MRSA
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4
Q

Lung Abscess

A
  • Usually polymicrobial
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Aerobic and anaerobic Streptococci
  • Aerobic gram negative rods
  • Anaerobic gram negative rods: Bacteroides,Fusobacterium,Peptostreptococcus
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5
Q

Legionella

A
  • Gram-ve but better visualised w silver stain
  • Oxidase +

Clinical presentation Legionnaire’s disease

  • Productive cough
  • Purulent sputum
  • No organisms on gram stain
  • Systemic illness Triad: GI, neuro, resp
  • GI-diarrhea
  • Neurologic: headache, confusion, delirium
  • Pulm: patchy infiltrate w consolidation on 1 lobe
  • Hyponatremia
  • high fever

Clinical presentation Pontiac fever

  • fever & malaise

Risk factors

  • Smoking
  • COPD
  • ↑ age
  • ETOH
  • Exposure to environmental water sources

Dx:

  • Culture – Buffered charcoal yeast extract (BCYE) agar
  • Growth requires iron & cysteine
  • Urine antigen rapid
  • Reportable: Yes
  • Human-to-human transmission: No

Rx:

  • Macroglide
  • Fluoroquinolones
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6
Q

BORDETELLA PERTUSSIS

A

Small gram negative aerobic coccobacillus

  • Spread by aerosolized droplets – highly infectious, may cause outbreaks
  • Attaches to and grows on ciliated respiratory epithelium
  • Virulence factors
    • Filamentous hemagglutinin –> attachment
    • Adenylate cyclase toxin –>ribosylates & inhibits Gi -> incr cAMP -> inhibits phagocyte function
    • Lipopolysaccharide
    • Pertussis toxin
    • Tracheal cytotoxin –> interferes with ciliary function

Sx:

  • Catarrhal phase: Rhinorrhea – 1-2 weeks
  • Paroxysmal cough “whoop” – 2-3 months
  • Convalescent – 1-2 weeks

Dx:

  • ​Nasopharyngeal swab
    • Regan-Lowe or Bordet-Gengou medium
    • PCR
  • Lymphocytosis in serum

Rx: Macroglide

Prevention: Acellular vaccine

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7
Q

HAEMOPHILUS INFLUENZAE

A
  • Small, encapsulated, gram negative coccobacilli
  • Fastidious
  • Chocolate agar with factors V (NAD+) and X (hematin)
  • Transmission: aerosol
  • Produces IgA protease

Sx: HaEMOPhilius Influenzae

  • Epiglotitis
    • HiB
    • Tripod posture
    • Stridor
    • thumbprint sign: thickening of epiglottis on lateral Xray
  • Meningitis: Type B capsule c
  • Otitis media
  • Pneumonia

Major risk factor:

  • Smoking
  • EtOH
  • Splenectomy
  • Sickle cell

Rx:

  • Ceftrixone for meningitis or systemic disease
  • Rifampin for close contacts

Prevention:

  • vaccine for H. flu type B
  • vaccine conjugated to Diphtheriae toxin
  • given bw 2 to 18 mo
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