Week 9 - Chronic disease and infections Flashcards
What bacterial infections are associated with COPD?
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
What viral infections are associated with COPD?
- Resp syncytial virus
- Rhinovirus
Why are people with diabetes mellitus more prone to infection?
- Hyperglycaemia and acidaemia impair humoral immunity and lymphocyte/neutropil function
- Poor tissue perfusion increases risk of infection
- Diabetic neuropathy decreases sensation resulting in greater damage to physical barriers
What ENT infections are associated with diabetes mellitus?
- Necrotising Otitis externa
- Rhinocerebral mucomyocosis
What is necrotising otitis externa?
-Infection of the external auditory canal which spreads toadjacent bone and soft tissue caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa
What causes rhinocerebral mucomyocosis?
-Mould colonising nose and paranasal sinuses causes soft tissue necrosis and bony erosion
Why are UTIs associated with diabetes mellitus?
-Neuropathy can lead to neurogenic bladder causing decreased emptying and increasing susceptibility to infection
What is cystic fibrosis?
- Autosomal recessive disease characterised by a defective/absent cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene producing defective/absent chloride channels in exocrine glands
- This produces viscous dehydrated mucus which is hard to clear and causes blockages in small ducts
Why do cystic fibrosis have unusual lung colonisation?
-Lung damage, recurring Abx and steroid treatment open a niche for unusual colonisation
Why is pseudomonas aeruginosa of particular significance in CF patients?
- Mucoid strain in CF patients produce a biofilm to aid colonisation
- Already have a defective muco-ciliary esculator so cannot be cleared and biofilm aids evasion of immune system
Describe a pneumonic for remembering categories of disease
- Vascular
- Infective
- Traumatic
- Autoimmune
- Metabolic
- Inflammatory
- Neoplastic
- Degenerative
- Idiopathic
- Congenital
- Environmental
Why do infections occur in chronic disease?
- Chronic disease changes structure and function of tissue/organ which predisposes to disease
- Altered presence of micro-organism can alter host interactions
- Consequences of treatment of chronic disease eg antibiotics, steroids