URTIs Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the common cold (acute coryza) aetiology?

A

Usually caused by rhinovirus infection

Spread by droplets and close personal contact

Incubation period= 12hours- 5 days

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2
Q

Symptoms of common cold?

A

Malaise
Slight pyrexia
Sore throat
watery nasal discharge- becomes mucopurulent after a few days

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3
Q

Differential diagnosis of common cold is from rhinitis. How is common cold treated?

A

Symptomatic

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4
Q

What is sinusitis?

A

Infection of paranasal sinuses

Is often accompanied by allergic rhinitis or an URTI due to mucosal oedema

Commonly caused by streptococcus pneumoniae or haemophillus influenzae

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5
Q

Symptoms of sinusitis? (diagnosis is clinical)

A

Frontal headache
Nasal discharge
Facial pain and tenderness

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6
Q

Treatment for sinusitis?

A

Broad spectrum antibiotics (co-amoxiclav)

Topical corticosteroids to reduce local mucosal swelling
fluticasone propionate nasal spray

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7
Q

What is rhinitis?

A

inflammation of the mucous membrane of the nose, caused by a virus infection (e.g. the common cold) or by an allergic reaction (e.g. hay fever).

Sneezing attacks, nasal blockage or nasal discharge occurring for over 1 our on most days

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8
Q

Seasonal rhinitis is also known as hay fever
What causes this?
How does it present?

A

Allergy to grass and tree pollen, and a variety of mould spores (e.g. Aspergillus fumigatus) which grow on cultivated plants

Nasal symptoms + itching of eyes and soft palate

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9
Q

Describe perennial rhinitis

A

May be allergic – allergens similar to those of asthma
Or non-allergic – triggered by cold air, smoke and perfume
Symptoms rarely affect eyes or soft palate
Nasal polyps may develop – nasal obstruction

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10
Q

Diagnosis of rhinitis?

A

Clinical

Skin-prick testing and RAST tests (measuring serum IgE antibody against the antigen) to identify causal agents

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11
Q

Management of rhinitis?

A

Avoid allergens

Antihistamines: cetirizine or loratidine tablets

Topical decongestant steroids (beclametasone spray)

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12
Q

How do anti-histamines work?

A

Antagonist of H1 receptor

prevents IgE binding causing release of histamine

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13
Q

What is acute pharyngitis aetiology?

A

Usually viral- adenoviruses

Bacterial causes are more severe

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14
Q

How does acute pharyngitis present?

A

Sore throat and fever – self-limiting, rarely require symptomatic treatment

More persistent and severe pharyngitis implies bacterial infection – haemolytic Strep, Haemophilus influenza, staphylococcus aureus. Requires treatment with penicillin

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15
Q

If a patient with bacterial acute pharyngitis is allergic to penicillin what can be used instead?

A

erythromycin

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16
Q

Describe acute laryngotracheobronchitis?

A

Infection with a parainfluenza virus or a measles virus

Symptoms are most severe when under 3 years old

Inflammatory oedema involving the larynx= hoarse voice, barking cough (croup) and stridor (high pitched wheezing sound)

Tracheitis= burning retrosternal pain

17
Q

Treatment of acute laryngotracheobronchitis?

A

Oxygen
Oral or IM corticosteroids
Nebulised adrenaline