Infectious Exam 3 Answers – Flashcards

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question
Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-etiology
answer
GN rod; not coliform
only salmonella that is ENCAPSULATED, capsule designated antigen that is antiphagocytic; enables agent to survive in macrophages
-facultative intracellular pathogen
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-epidemiology
answer
reportable disease

rare in US but common worldwide because of sanitation

carrier is most important; excreted in feces, sometimes urine

transmission:
fecal oral route
high infective dose
vehicle is food, water contaminated with feces or urine from carrier or patient
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-pathogenesis
answer
inc period is 8-14 day long
agent multiplies in small intestine - peyers patches in ileum
agent disseminates via lymphatics and blood
agent multiplies intracellulary in macrophages
CMI required to control! esp activated macrophages
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-clinical manifestations; first week of disease
answer
onset insiduous
fever is high
headache
anorexia
lethargy
aches/pains
cough
CONSTIPATION not diarrhea
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-manifestations second week
answer
elevated temp
mental dullness
apathy
splenomegaly
rose spots maybe
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-manifesetations 3rd week
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no more fever; symptoms subside
relapses can occur

--ab treatable
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-manifestations
answer
chronic carriers develop in about 3% of cases; organisms nest in gall bladder
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-treatment
answer
chloramphenicol
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-prevention
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control by:
enforcing sanitation
education
uncontaminated water
good sewage disposal
prompt diagnosis and treatment of patients and carriers
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Typhoid Fever
-salmonella typhii
-vaccines
answer
for all endemic area travelers
1. vivotif: - oral; 3-4 enteric coated capsules given every other day
-give booster every 5 years
2. typhim Vi - parenteral; purified; single dose
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Bacillus Anthracis
Anthrax
-etiology
answer
GP
boxcar shape
encapsulated
spore forming rod
facultative intracellular pathogen with POLYGLUTAMIC acid
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Bacillus Anthracis
Anthrax
-epidemiology
answer
enzootic disease
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Bacillus Anthracis
Anthrax
-pathogenesis and manifestations
answer
multiply intracellularly in macrophages
all disease forms result in toxemia and bacteremia; then death
cutaneous anthrax
pulmonary anthrax (wool-sorters disease)
GI anthrax
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Bacillus Anthracis
Anthrax
-control
answer
subunit purified for humans
live attenuated for livestock
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Brucella
-infections it causes
answer
brucellosis
undulant fever
malta fever
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Brucella
-etiology
answer
GN rods
facultative intracellular pathogens
disease of animals; agent is shed in milk and placenta where it survives for months

species are associated with human infection:
b.abortus = cattle; pasteurization of milk kills agent
b.suis = swine
b.melitensis = goats and sheep
-causes most severe infections; associated with imported unpasteruized cheeses
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Brucella
-transmission
answer
-ingestion of undercooked, raw contaminated meat or unpasteurized milk
-direct contact of infected tissue, blood, etc with abrasions in skin -occupational hazard for vets, slaughter house workers, farmers
-inhalation of infected aerosols via RT
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Brucella
-pathogenesis
answer
inc period is long 2-3 wk
organisms spread via lymphatics while multiplying primarily in macrophages
immunity is CMI mediated
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Brucella
-manifestations
answer
acute phase is incapacitating; lasts several weeks or months

onset is insiduous:
malaise
undulant fever (aka periodic nocturnal fever; unknown origin)
weakness
joint pain
headache
night sweats
GI signs
enlarged lymph glands, liver, spleen
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Brucella
-treatment
answer
prolonged; 6 wk min
tetracycline with streptomycin
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Arthropod
-etiology
answer
Insects
note: ticks, flies, mosquitos, lice, etc are not the same! they are all unique arthropods
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Arthropod
-epidemiology
answer
dengue is most common vector borne viral disease in the world

lyme disease caused by borrelia burgdorferi is most common tick born disease in US
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Yersinia pestis
answer
The Plague
the Black Death
it didnt disappear; still endemic in animals
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Rickettsia
-etiology
answer
bacteria not virus; Ab works!!
small GN pleomorphic coccobacilli which are obligate intracellular parasites

infect endothelial cells (cells lining blood vessels)
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Rickettsia
-reservoirs
answer
mammans - humans are accidental hosts except for epidemic typhus

infected ticks via transovarial transmission
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Rickettsia
-vectors
answer
1. arthropods - ticks, lice
passed by arthropods but not arboviruses

2. ecology of vector is determining factor in disease prevealence
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Rickettsia
-transmission
answer
mostly through ticks
low infectious dose
parenteral; through bite of infected arthropod
direct human-to-human transmission does not occur
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Rickettsia
-pathology
answer
after entry, organisms multiple locally; spread to bloodstream; infect endothelial cells of small blood vessels
--can cause death because of this

endothelial cells enlarge; degenerate, resulting in vasculitis in any organ/tissue

microinfarcts (clots) can occur- DIC, damaging vasculature, resulting in fluid loss to tissues, producing edema, hypotensive shock

type and species specific lasting immunity occurs after recovery
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Rickettsia
-manifestations
answer
TRIAD OF FEVER, HEADACHE, RASH
-rickettsemia occurs during febrile period
-hypotensive shock and failure in any organ due to DIC which produces ischemia due to poor tissue perfusions
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Rickettsia
-treatment
answer
tetracycline or chloramphenicol
-doxycycline for ehrlichia
-inhibit protein synthesis; no penicillin or cephalosporin
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R. Rickettsii
-Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
-epidemiology
answer
vector is tick, which is also principle reservoir
-dog tick dermacentor variabilis
-wood tick d. andersoni

mammalian reservoirs - wild animals and dogs

distribution: southeastern states

seasonality - spring and summer
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R. Rickettsii
-Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
-manifestations
answer
inc period is short - one week

prodrome:
first 3-5 days
high fever
chills
headache
myalgia
conjunctivitis - photophobia

sepsis and septic shock bc of vasculitis - meningitis like symptoms

blanching, macular rash bc of vasodilation; 3-5 d after fever on wrist and ankles; spreads to trunk and hands/feet
-if not treated, then rash becomes petechial, then purpuric lesions
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R. Rickettsii
-Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
-treatment
answer
early treatment with tetracycline or chloramphenicol is imperative before lab results are known
-mortality in untreated RMSF is high
-clinical response to treatment is rapid 1-2 days
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R. prowazekii
-louse-borne, epidemic typhus
-epidemiology
answer
vector is body louse - pediculus humanus

humans and body lice are natural hosts-humans are reservoir

occurs in crowded conditions - famine, war, concentration camps; natural disaster
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R. prowazekii
-louse-borne, epidemic typhus
-manifestations
answer
inc period is short, abt 2 wk

primary infection - abrupt onset of fever, headache, rash (4-7d after onset of S&S; spreads centrifugally sparing face, palms, and soles) rash can evolve to petechial

mortality without therapy is high
--DIC!
brill-zinsser diagnosis - recrudescent typhus; reactivation; milder
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Bartonella
-rochalimaea
-overview
answer
not like rickettsia

causes:
trench fever
cat scratch disease
bacillary angiomatosis and peliosis
bartonellosis
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Bartonella
-etiology
answer
fastidious GN rods which are facultative intracellular pathogens that target endothelial cells and RBCs
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Bartonella
-epidemiology
answer
one of most common causes of lymphdenopathy other than neoplasm, tb, and HIV that require urgent medical attention

patients with heart abnormalities or who are immunocompromised should be counseled to avoid cats
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R. prowazekii
-louse-borne, epidemic typhus
-immunity
answer
CMI
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R. prowazekii
-louse-borne, epidemic typhus
-patient management
answer
doxycylcine!

cat scratch disease: in immunocompetent patients is mainly supportive bc disease is self limited and resolves in 2-4 months; enlarged lymph nodes may need to be aspirated; cat scratch disease typically does not respond to ab therapy; thus, ab treatment usually not recommended for uncomplicated localized disease

bacillary angiomatosis and peliosis:
use doxycylcine with rifampin
-clarithromycin and azithromycin also show response

relapses in bone and skin happen if ab given for shorter period of time

immunocompromised patients may develop jarish-herxheimer reaction within hours of ab therapy; monitor carefully
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Trench Fever
-b. quintana
-etiology
answer
shinbone fever
incapacitating febrile syndrome
bartonella
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Trench Fever
-b. quintana
-epidemiology
answer
reservoir: humans and cats

spread by human louse or cat flea
no person to person spread

associated with: poor sanitation, poor hygien, malnutrition
more common in homeless
disease occurs in immunocompetent and compromised individuals
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Trench Fever
-b. quintana
-manifestations
answer
insiduous - sudden onset of symptoms 5-7 days; then they abate
but symptoms recur every 4-5 days
recurrences can continue for a year

symptoms:
fever
malaise
headache
night sweats
splenomegaly
bone pain - shinbone fever; becomes more severe each time
transient rash may appear
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Cat Scratch Disease
-b. henselae
-epidemiology
answer
affets compromised and immunocompetent pts

transmitted via cat bite/scratch or bite by infected cat flea

manifestations: regional lymphadenitis + FEVER after contact with cat
question
Borrelia burgdorferi
-lyme disease
-etiology
answer
most common tick borne disease in US

extracellular spirochete not observed after gram staining; need dark field microscopy - not seen on blood smear

agent of lyme disease in north america and europe
other species of borrelia are responsible in eurasia
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Borrelia burgdorferi
-lyme disease
-epidemiology
answer
incidence:
connecticut
rhode island
new york
new jersey
pennsylvania
wisconsin
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Borrelia burgdorferi
-lyme disease
-reservoirs
answer
small mammals (white footed mouse) and birds
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Borrelia burgdorferi
-lyme disease
-vector
answer
hard body ticks

4 stages in development:
egg, larva, nymph, adults

each stage feeds only once for several days

nymphs feed on and transmit infection to small mammals or humans
-NYMPHS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR MOST HUMAN INFECTIONS
only find adults in winter
-adults feed on and transmit agent to larger mammals

-not passed from mom to eggs; eggs release larvae that is unaffected; larvae becomes nymph; nymph becomes infected; gets into adult
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Borrelia burgdorferi
-lyme disease
-immunity
answer
Ab mediated
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Borrelia burgdorferi
-lyme disease
-pathogenesis
answer
everywhere
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