RTI Clinical Flashcards
1
Q
Lobar pneumonia
A
Lobar: Streptococcus pneumoniae
Physical exam
- Bronchial breath sounds
- Tactile fremitus
- Dullness to percussion
- Consolidation
- Effusion
- Rust-colored sputum
- “hepatization”
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
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
4
Q
Lung Abscess
A
- Usually polymicrobial
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Aerobic and anaerobic Streptococci
- Aerobic gram negative rods
- Anaerobic gram negative rods: Bacteroides,Fusobacterium,Peptostreptococcus
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
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
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