Diseases – Microbiology – Flashcards

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Structures of the Urinary System
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urethra, ureters, urinary bladder, kidneys
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kidneys
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produce urine and filter blood

-nephrons are its functional unit, they are located in the renal pyramids of the kidneys

-appox. 1.25 million nephrons per organ

-contains glomerular (leaky capillaries)

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urethra
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what takes urine out of the body

- much longer in males, 3x longer than in females

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structures of the female repoductive system
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      Urinary and reproductive systems are distinct, no shared organs

          Normally urine and urinary tract above bladder are sterile

        Urethra contains normal resident flora

 

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normal resident flora of female reproductive tract
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steptococcus, staphylococcus, cornyebacterium, lactobacillus

- normal flora varies in female repoductive tract dependent upon hormones (lactobacillus)

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non-venereal diseases of the reproductive tract
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-affect both men and women

-urinary tract infections

-Leptospirosis

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urinary tract infections
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          8 million cases annually in US

        600,000 nosocomial 

        Primary ascending infection, pathogens enter in through the urethra and continue up to other organs

        May include any or all of the organs

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urethritis
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inflammation of the urethra
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cystits
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inflammation of the urinary bladder
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ureteritis
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inflammation of the ureter
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pyelonephritis
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inflammation of the kidneys
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urinary tract infections causitive agents
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        Usually intestinal flora

          E. coli – most common, about 70% of urinary tract infections

          Proteus and Klebsiella

          Pseudomonas

        Typically nosocomial 

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pseudomonas
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associated with nosocomial infections because it causes urinary tract infections from catheters
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urinary tract infections signs and sympotoms

 

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        Dysuria; cloudy urine with foul odor; may have pale red color from blood being lost in the urine, pain when urinating

        Tenderness of pelvic area,   May have slight fever 

        Pathogens typically ascend urethra and attach to receptors on bladder lining

        May form biofilm

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Pyelonephritis
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        when urinary tract infection makes it to the kidneys, which makes it likely for the infection to make it into the bloodstream 

          Sudden elevation of temperature, chills, vomiting and back pain, bacteremia

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urinary tract infection epidemiology
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        Typically results from auto-inoculation

        30% of women develop at least one UTI

        Risk factors include: short urethra; sex (males are less susceptible to UTIs); use of diaphragm; pregnancy, catheterization; women more predisposed for getting urinary tract infections

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prostatitis
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inflammation of the prostate, when this becomes inflammed it blockes the ureters and causes a urinary tract infection in men
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urinary tract infection prevention
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        Adequate fluid intake 

        Cranberry juice may help prevent attachment

        Void urine immediately after sex

        Proper personal hygiene

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urinary tract infection treatment
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        Sulfonamides or cephalosporins, sulfa drugs

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Leptospirosis
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-zoonotic disease

 

          Hard to stain, hard to grow, have a hook on the end that makes them more recognizable

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Leptospirosis causative agent
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  Leptospira interrogans

          Gram -, Spirochete

          Double axial filaments making them very efficient at swimming and crawling

          Over 200 antigenic types

          Begins in kidneys because it comes from the bloodstream

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Leptospriosis signs and symptoms
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        Abrupt onset of headache, spiking fever, chills and severe myalgia

        Eye redness which is directly related to the vessels that feed the eye become very dilated causing major redness.  

- ½ of patients develop nausea, vomiting and diarrhea

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leptospirosis characteristics
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-          Requires direct contact with urine or urine contaminated waters or soil

-          Bacteria enter body through mucous membranes and breaks in skin, eventually colonizes in the kidneys

-          Organism multiplies and travels to kidneys in blood stream

        Rarely fatal, if fatal its due to renal failure or meningitis, can cause meningitis if it contacts the meninges

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Leptospirosis Epidemiology
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        Worldwide distribution, all types of animals

        Infects, many wild and domestic animals

          Asymptomatic carriers

        Organism is excreted in urine

          Survives in water for weeks, even extremely cold water

        Farmers, ranchers, butchers, vets at high risk

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Leptospirosis prevention
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        Avoid water contaminated with animal urine

        Maintain sanitary conditions for animals, try to prevent run off into water ways

        Vaccine available for livestock and pets

        Rodent control

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Leptospirosis treatment
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        Oral doxycycline, chloramphenicol, erythromycin

        IV penicillin in severe cases, usually if someone is having rare complications

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Toxic Shock Syndrome
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          May affect males (due to wounds in men) and females

        Bacterial Vaginosis

        Vaginal Candidiasis

          Staphylococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome

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Toxic Shock Syndrome causative agent
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          Causative agent: Staphylococcus aureus

          Virulent strains produce Toxic Shock Syndrome Toxin (TSST1 or TSST2), type 1 produces the majority of toxic shock syndrome cases

        binds cells of immune system and triggers excess immune related chemicals be released, many people carry this in their mucus membranes and on the skin 

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Toxic Shock Syndrome Signs and Symptoms
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        Sudden onset fever, chills, vomiting, diarrhea, extremely low blood pressure, mental confusion due to low blood pressure and a severe red rash

        50% mortality if untreated due to septic shock

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Toxic Shock Syndrome Characterisitics
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          Most cases involve menstruating women

        25% of cases involved wound infection

        New mothers and surgical patients also at risk

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Toxic Shock Syndrome Prevention
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        Avoid highly absorbent tampons, diaphragms, contraceptive sponges or use them for shorter periods of time, also change packing of a wound regularly

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Toxic Shock Syndrome Treatment
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        Remove foreign matter or drain infected wound immediately

        IV fluids to support blood pressure

        Vancomycin (gets rid of bacteria) and anti-TSST immunoglobulin (antitoxin)

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Bacterial Vaginosis
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no inflammation associated with it
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Bacterial Vaginosis causative agent
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        May be caused by multiple anaerobic bacteria

        Gardnerella vaginalis: not part of normal flora but is common in environment, cannot grow in pH lower than 5

          Change in vaginal flora

        pH increases and allows overgrowth of pathogen

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Bacterial Vaginosis signs and symptoms
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          Thin, grayish-white vaginal discharge due to anaerobic metabolism

          Can be slightly bubbly

          Pungent ‘fishy’ odor

          Some itching and irritation

          50% asymptomatic

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Bacterial Vaginosis prevention
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          No proven prevention

          Associated with multiple sexual partners, vaginal douching, anti-microbial therapy, however, all of which will alter pH; do not want vaginal pH to change

 

 

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Bacterial Vaginosis Treatment
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          Metronidazole: antiprotozoal drug that works on anaerobic bacterial infections, cannot be taken during pregnancy of breast feeding mothers so their only choice is vinegar douche

          Vinegar douche: this will drop the pH back where it should be

          Reestablishment of lactobacilli

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Vaginal Candidiasis
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multitude of fungal yeast infefctions, most common type of fungal infections in humans in general
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Vaginal Candidiasis causative agent
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          Candida albicans

          Normal flora for up to 80% of women

          Opportunistic pathogen

          Dimorphic: two different forms of growth

          Diagnosed by budding yeasts

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Vaginal Candidiasis signs and symptoms
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          White mucoid colonies on vaginal mucus membranes and labia 

          Severe itching and burning which will increase with urination

          White curd-like discharge like cottage cheese

          Can result in serious candidasis in someone who is immunosuppressed

 

 

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Vaginal Candidiasis Epidemiology
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          Can be spread person to person—mother to child which is rare within fungi

          Mother to newborn

          Rarely sexually transmitted

          Antibacterial medications increases risk

          Other risk factors include birth control, hormone therapy, AIDS, diabetes, invasive hospital procedures and cancers

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Vaginal Candidiasis characteristics
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          100% of AIDS patients get candidasis due to low immune system

          Changes in vaginal flora and pH

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Vaginal Candidiasis Prevention
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minimizing risk factors
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Vaginal Candidasis treatment
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          Intra-vaginal treatment with nystatin and clotrimazole

          Cream azoles may weaken latex condoms by dissolving the latex

          Oral fluconazole especially used in immunosuppressed individuals

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Sexually transmitted diseases
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          Epidemic over last 50 years

        330 million annually worldwide

          Often asymptomatic in women

        Increased risk of pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage, birth defects, sterility and cervical cancer, damage to important female parts

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STD Prevention methods
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        Proven effective

          Sexual abstinence & mutual monogamy

        Somewhat effective

          proper, consistent condom use

          ~20% failure rate, do not prevent the spread of certain viruses

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Bacterial Discharge Diseases
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          bacterial diseases

        Increased fluid discharge for males and females

          Gonorrhea (clap)

          Chlamydia

          co-infections ~45% of cases, if you have one you have the other

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Bacterial Ulcerative Diseases
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        Lesions on genitals of males and females

          Syphilis

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Gonorrhea Causative agent
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        Neisseria gonorrhoeae

          Gram-negative; diplococci

          Fimbriae and capsule makes it easy for it to attach to reproductive tract, destroys your antibodies

          Low infecting dose, just a few cells is all it takes

          White blood cells full of Neisseria that are reproducing quickly: clinical sign of gonorrhea 

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Gonorrhea signs and symptoms
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      In men: Most men are symptomatic,    Pain on urination, discharge from penis

    In women:  Women more likely to be asymptomatic (50-80%),    Painful urination, mild discharge,  May be overlooked as UTI

    ~25% develop PID (Pelvic Inflammatory Disease)

        Less common manifestations:   Heart damage, arthritis, meningitis, UTI, pharyngitis 

 

 

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Antigenic Variation
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          antigens change so they are not attacked or recognized by immune system (antibodies)

        protects from antibodies

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Gonorrhea Characteristics
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          Opa proteins on fimbriae bind to T-cells

        Prevents activation of immune response

          IgA proteases

          Gonococci survive and multiply in WBCs

 

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Opthalmia neonatorum
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          when gonorrhea is passed to child during childbirth

        Gonococcal conjunctivitis of the newborn

        Acquired from infected birth canal

        Prevented with silver nitrate or erythromycin in eyes

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Gonorrhea Epidemiology
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        Humans only host

        Risk increases with number of sexual partners

          More common in blacks(4X) and males (slightly)

          Most cases involve adolescents with multiple partners

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factors that influence gonorrhea infection
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          Birth control pills: by changing hormone levels it makes mucus lining of reproductive tract more likely to contract infections

          Asymptomatic Carriers

          Lack of immunity: gonorrhea changes so much your body will never figure out how to fight it

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Gonorrhea treatment
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        No vaccine available

          Antigenic variation interferes with ability to make effective vaccine

        Doxycycline for co-infection, best choice because it treats both

        Broad spectrum cephalosporins

          Increasing number of strains resistant to numerous antibiotics

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Chlamydial Infections causative agent
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          Chlamydia trachomatis

          Non-motile; obligate intracellular pathogen

          Gram – with no PTG

          Non-gonococcal urethritis (7 strains)

          Lymphogranuloma venereum (3 strains)

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   Trachoma

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          Leading cause of preventable, non-traumatic blindness

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Trachoma signs and symptoms
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       In men: Most (75%) symptomatic, Thin grayish-white discharge from penis, Sometimes epididymitis or orchitis,  May lead to sterility

        In women:  Most (85%) asymptomatic,  Increased vaginal discharge, painful urination, Risk of PID and sterile,  Increased risk of cervical cancer for adolescents

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  Lymphogranuloma venereum

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        Severe chlamydial STD (LGV strains)

        Strains tend to be isolated to the tropics

        Characterized by genital lesion at site of infection

        Followed by bubo in groin, fever, chills, myalgia and arthritis

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Trachoma characteristics
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          Trachoma strains multiply in cells of conjunctiva

        Kills cells and stimulates production of purulent discharge which scars conjunctiva

        Eyelids turn inward and eyelashes scar cornea

        Cornea fills with blood vessels and blindness results 

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Trachoma Epidemiology
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        Most common reportable STD in US

        500 million cases of trachoma worldwide

          Newborns infected at birth

          Direct, indirect and vector transmission also possible

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Trachoma Treatment
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        Azithromycin; tetracycline or erythromycin

        Doxycycline for co-infection with gonorrhea 

        Erythromycin cream in infant eyes for 10-14 days for trachoma

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Syphilis causative agent
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        Treponema pallidum

          Narrow Gram -, spirochete

          Axial filaments

          Can’t be cultivated in artificial media

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Syphilis Signs and symptoms
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        Occurs in numerous forms, Often confused with other diseases,    “great imitator”

       Manifestation occurs in three stages

          Primary stage

          Secondary stage

          Tertiary stage

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Syphilis Primary Stage
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          Characterized by hard, painless, red ulcer

        Chancre

        Appears at the site of infection

          Local lymph nodes become enlarged

          Spontaneous healing of chancre

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Syphilis Secondary Stage
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          Runny nose, watery eyes, sore throat, oral lesions, generalized aches and pains

          Non-itchy rash

        Usually on palms and soles of feet

          Spontaneous healing

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Syphilis tertiary stage
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          Characteristic lesions called gummas

          Infection attacks other organs

          Numerous nervous system disorders

          Blindness; metal illness; stroke

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Congenital Syphilis
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          Organism crosses placenta

          Nearly 40% result in miscarriage or stillbirth

          Begins as an early profuse nasal discharge

          Most children develop deformities

        Hutchinson’s teeth, saddle nose, sabre shins

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Congential Syphilis continued... 
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          Organism penetrates mucous membrane and broken skin

        Low infecting dose: Less than 100 organisms

        Organism multiplies in localized area

          Chancre caused by immune response

          Spreads to lymph nodes and bloodstream

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Congenital Syphilis Epidemiology
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        Human only host

        Transmitted via direct contact, blood transfusion, mother to fetus 

        12 million annual cases worldwide

        Maintain low incidence in US

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Congenital Syphilis Treatment
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        VDRL test used for diagnosis

        Primary, secondary and congenital stages effectively treated with penicillin

        No proven alternative for those with penicillin allergy

        Antibiotics not effective for tertiary

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Viral STDs
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        Herpes (viral ulcerative STD)

        Genital Warts

        AIDS

        Protozoal STD

        Trichomoniasis

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Genital Herpes Causitive agent
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        herpes-simplex virus type 1 & 2

        Enveloped DNA virus

        Latent virus

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genital herpes signs and symptoms
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        Genital itching and burning, fever, myalgia and malaise

        Numerous fluid filled blisters on genitals

          Burst and form lesions

        Lesions heal spontaneously

          Most patients will have recurrence

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genital herpes signs and symptoms continued...
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          Enveloped virus fuses with host cell membrane

        Genome enters cell and begins replication

        Viruses are released by budding and cell lysis

          Blisters form when epithelial cells are killed

        Rupture to produce painful ulcerations

        Releases millions of viral particles

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Neonatal Herpes
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        1 in 3 newborns affected if mother infected at birth

        Debilitating and potentially lethal

        Requires cesarean delivery

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Neonatal Herpes Epidemiology
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        4 billion infected worldwide

        No animal reservoir

        Non-sexual transmission may occur

        Transmission most likely occurs during first days illness

          Transmission can happen in absence of symptoms

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Neonatal Herpes Treatment
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        There is no cure for genital herpes

          Once infected there is lifelong risk of transmission

        Acyclovir and derivatives reduce severity

        Condoms may not be effective in prevention!!!

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Genital Warts (papillomas) causative agent

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          Human papillomaviruses

        30 different HPV strains cause warts

        Most common STD in US

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Genital Warts characteristics
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          Warts on genitals, vagina and cervix, Slight pain or itching may occur,  May form condylomata acuminata, Warts typically not dangerous 

        HPV linked to 99% of cervical cancers, May also cause anal, penile, vaginal and oral cancers

          HPV infects approximately 20 million people in the United States, ~ 6.2 million new cases each year,   Pap smears don’t detect HPV only abnormal cells

        DNA test is available that detects all 13 strains linked to cervical cancer

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Genital Warts treatment
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Removal of warts by freezing, laser or acid, Typically reoccur

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AIDS
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Acquired immunodifiency syndrome
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AIDS causative agent
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        Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)

          Most US cases causes by HIV-1

          Most African cases caused by HIV-2

        Enveloped, RNA retrovirus

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Signs and symptoms of AIDS (HIV disease)
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        Fever; head and muscle aches; enlarged lymph nodes; rash

        Some individuals are asymptomatic for years

          AIDS is characterized by the presence of several opportunistic or rare infections and a T cell count of lower than 200/µl

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Signs and Symptoms of AIDS continued...
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        HIV infects host cells

        RNA reverse transcribed to DNA

        DNA integrates as provirus in host chromosome

        Virus may leave genome and kill host cell

          Releases additional viruses

        Immune system becomes impaired

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AIDS Epidemiology
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        HIV is spread mainly through sexual contact, needles or from mother to newborn

        Global pandemic         40 million cases

        ~1/3 have developed AIDS

        Sexually transmitted, and transferred through any body fluid, can infect a fetus through the placenta

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Global Pandemic
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epidemic on more than one continent
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AIDS prevention
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        No vaccine available: because of so many antigenic strains due to so many changes in its DNA as it multiplies, Interruption of mother to child transmission via chemotherapy

   Needle exchange programs: you bring dirty needles in and can get clean needles

        Educational programs targeting at risk populations

        Treatment of other STDs to lessen risk

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AIDS Treatment
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        Designed to block replication and release of virus

          Generally with cocktail of medication (HAART): Highly active anti retro viral therapy

          Include reverse transcriptase inhibitors; protease inhibitors; and nucleotide analogs

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HAART
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Highly Active Anti Retro Viral Therapy; cocktail of medication
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Trichomoniasis causative agent
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protazoal

        Trichomonas vaginalis

        Flagellated leaf shaped protozoan with undulating membrane

        Anaerobic bacteria

 

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Trichamoniasis Signs and Symptoms
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        Most women symptomatic: Itching of vulva and inner thighs, Itching and burning of the vagina,  Frothy, odorous yellowish-green vaginal discharge

        Most men are asymptomatic: penile discharge, pain on urination, tender testes or prostatitis

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Pathogenesis of Trichimoniasis
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        No encysted stage so it can’t survive in environment

        Reproduces at pH of 5-6: associated with suppression of normal flora

        Reddening and swelling of vagina attributed to trauma of moving protozoan

        Frothy discharge most likely due to gas production by organism

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Epidemiology of Trichimoniasis
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        Humans are the only known host

        Sexually transmitted or through fomites

        Worldwide distribution:   170 new cases worldwide annually,  7.5 million in US

        Most common curable STD in women

        Transmission usually sexual contact; fomites; newborns infected in birth canal

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Treatment of Trichomoniasis
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        Single dose of metronidazole- pregnant women cannot use this because it passes thorugh breast milk and can affect the fetus

        Both partners should be treated to prevent re-infection

        Vinegar douche for pregnant or nursing women

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Central Nervous System (CNS)
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brain and spinal cord
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Encephalitis
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inflammation of neural tissue; associated with the brain
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Periperal Nervous System (PNS)
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        Bundles of thin extensions from nerve cells called axons

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2 basic cell types
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neuroglia and neurons
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neuroglia
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provide support, help out
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nephrons
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        Carry nerve impulses

        Nucleus in the cell body

        ganglion

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Nervous System Defenses
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-meninges

-cerebrospinal fluid

-bone casting

-blood-brain barrier

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meninges
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          protective covering of the brain and spinal cord, deramata (outer most layer), eranamater, piamata (cerous membrane that directly touches brain and spinal cord)

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meningitis
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inflammation of any of the layers of the meninges
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Cerebrospinal fluid
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fluid that fills ventricles inside the brains and is in spinal cord, it comes from the blood, it provides nuritiment
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Bone casting
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skull and vertebrae
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Blood-brain barrier
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physical barrier that allows very few pathogens to cross over and effect brain or spinal cord, many chemotherapeutic agents cannot cross
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structures of the brain and spinal cord
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cerebrum, brain stem
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Normal flora of the nervous system
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          None, Viruses can exist in a dormant state in the nervous system

        penetrate CNS by traveling up nerve bundles

        Herpes simplex and rabies viruses

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Nervous system bacterial diseases
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        Bacterial meningitis

        Tetanus

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Nervous system viral diseases
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        Rabies

        Viral encephalitis

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Streptococcus pneumoniae
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leading cause in adults; pathogen of nervous system
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      Neisseria meningitidis 

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     epidemic, fimbriae, capsule, and endotoxin

-pathogen of the nervous system 

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    Haemophilus influenzae

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 leading cause prior to vaccine, gram negative, high plamorphic (many shapes); pathogen of nervous system

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        Listeria monocytogenes

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 listeriosis in fetuses, pregnant women, and  immunocompromised individuals, gram positive, oval shaped (coxobacili), can contaminate dairy products, has enzymes that allow it to escape phagocytosis; pathogen of nervous system

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  Streptococcus agalactiae

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 causes most cases of newborn meningitis, some women carry this as the normal flora in their vagina; pathogen of nervous system

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Meningitis signs and symptoms
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        Acute high fever and severe meningeal inflammation

          Inflamed cranial meninges – severe headache, vomiting, pain

          Inflamed spinal meninges – stiff neck, altered muscle control

          Encephalitis may cause behavioral changes, coma, and death

          Petechiae may appear on skin, these are subdermal hemorrhages

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Meningitis Epidemiology
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          S. agalactiae acquired during birth because it is carried in vaginal flora

          Listeria transmitted via contaminated food

          S. pneumoniae, Neisseria & Haemophilus all transmitted via respiratory droplets

          S. pneumoniae present in throat of 75% of humans without causing harm

          Meningococcal meningitis is the only form that becomes epidemic

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Meningitis Diagnosis
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        Based on symptoms and culturing of bacteria in CSF from spinal tap and then culture the spinal tap

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Prevention of Meningitis
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-dependent on pathogen

          Vaccines available for S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, and N. meningitidis

          Individuals at risk for listeriosis should avoid high-risk foods (milk, cheeses, undercooked meat)

          Mass prophylaxis with ceftriaxone or rifampin helps control epidemics of meningococcal form

 

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Treatment of Meningitis
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          ceftriaxone or penicillin

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Tetanus Signs and Symptoms
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        Tightening of jaw and neck muscles

          difficulty swallowing and breathing

        Restlessness and irritability

        Increased contractions spreading to other muscles  

          Back spasms

          Difficulty breathing and death

        Prolonged contraction of diaphragm

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Tetanus continued...
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          Bacteria contained to anaerobic tissue around wound

          Tetanospasmin toxin moves to CNS and blocks inhibition of motor neurons causing paralysis, toxins that are bound to nerves remain bond and is permanent

          50-90% mortality rate in untreated cases

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Epidemiology of Tetanus
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        C. tetani found in dirt and dust and GI tract of humans and other animals

        Nearly half of infections result from puncture wounds including

          Body piercing, tattooing, animal bites, IV drugs

          Frequently fatal but rare in the developed world

        30 to 60 cases reported in US annually

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Prevention of Tetanus
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        Immunization with toxiod vaccine

          DTaP

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Treatment of tetanus
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        Thoroughly clean wound

          Remove all dead tissue and foreign material

        Penicillin to kill multiplying bacteria

          Will not destroy endospores

        Antitoxin

          Neutralizes only circulating toxin

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Rabies causative agent
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          Causative agent: Rabies virus

          Lyssavirus family

          Enveloped ssRNA

          Spiked bullet shaped virus due to envelope it is in with spikes that help it attach to host cells

        Virus multiplies in brain forming Negri bodies ( inclusions in the brain)

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Signs and Symptoms of Rabies
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        Pain and itching at site of infection

        Fever, headache, myalgia, sore throat, fatigue

        Progress rapidly to secondary symptoms

          Encephalitis, agitation, confusion, hallucinations, seizure, increased sensitivity to light and touch, coma

          Increased salivation and difficulty swallowing

        Results in frothing of mouth

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Rabies continued...
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          Hydrophobia occurs in 50% of cases, this is an extreme fear of water

          About 50% of patients die within 4 days

          Virus enters through bite of an animal

          Attaches to skeletal muscle cells triggering endocytosis

          Pathogen moves across neuromuscular junction into nerve cell and travels to CNS

          Slow moving so long incubation period

        1-2 months up to several years 

          Viruses travel back to the salivary glands and are secreted in saliva

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Epidemiology of rabies
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        Zoonotic: many animal carriers, due to vaccinations dogs are not that common

        Skunks, raccoons and bats considered chief reservoir

          75% of human cases linked to bat bites

        0 to 4 reported cases in US annually

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Prevention of Rabies
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        Vaccination of domestic animals and Vets

        Wash wound immediately and thoroughly

          apply antiseptic

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Treatment of rabies
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        Risk lowered if vaccine administered as soon as possible, must be vaccinated multiple times after the bite

        Interferon may be applied to wound

        No effective treatment for rabies

          Only six known survivors of disease

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Viral Encephalitis causative agent
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spread by arthropods, most commonly mosquitos

          Causative agent: Arboviruses

          mosquitoes

        Zoonotic diseases: Horses, birds and rodents 

        West Nile encephalitis, LaCrosse encephalitis, WEE, EEE, VEE, St. Louis encephalitis

        Named based on where they are found, like VEE: Venaswaline

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Signs and Symptoms of Viral Encephalities
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        3-7 day incubation period

        Characterized by mild flu-like symptoms

          Fever; headache; vomiting

          One or more nervous system abnormalities

        Disorientation, localized paralysis, deafness, seizures or coma

          Only minority infected develop encephalitis

          Others may develop viral meningitis

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Viral Encephalitis continued...
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          Most reported human cases in immunosuppressd individuals

        Elderly and very young

        Healthy immune system typically fights off virus with only mild flu-like symptoms

        Viruses multiply at site of bite and in local lymph nodes

          viremia

        Virus crosses blood-brain barrier

          Damages neurons

        Causes extensive damage to brain tissue in severe cases

        Progression of disease halted by neutralizing antibody

        Mortality ranges from 2% to 50% depending of type of infecting agent and host

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Viral Encephalitis Epidemiology
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        Disease are all zoonoses

          Maintained naturally in birds and rodents

        Humans are accidental hosts

        LaCrosse encephalitis usually causes most reported cases

        West Nile an emerging disease in US

          Appeared in New York in 1999

question
Viral encephalitis prevention
answer

        Eliminate vector habitat, eliminating mosquitoes

        Avoiding outdoor activities at night

        Windows and porches properly screened

        Use insect repellents and insecticides

        Vaccine available for horses

question
Viral Encephalities treatment
answer

        No proven antiviral therapy

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