Systems Review Combo – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
| Name the layers of infection from skin to bone. |
answer
| impetigo, erysipelas, cellulitis, fasciitis, myositis, osteomyelitis |
question
| 2 common causes of cellulitis? |
answer
| S. aureus and S. pyogenes (GAS) |
question
| Cause of cellulitis in pts with diabetes? |
answer
| GBS (maybe pseudomonas) |
question
| Who gets a pseudomonas cellulitis? |
answer
| netropenics, diabetics, steroid use, water exposure |
question
| Liver disease will make you susceptible to what kinds of infections? |
answer
| Neisseria b/c of complement deficiency and V. vulnificans because of increased iron |
question
| What mycobacterium is acquired from exposure to water? |
answer
| M. Marnium |
question
| T/F You can get toxic shock from a VZV infection. |
answer
| true |
question
| What are the endemic fungi that can cause ulcers? |
answer
| blastomyces, crytococcus, and histoplasma |
question
| Blood cultures are often contaminated with... |
answer
| coag. neg staph |
question
| Likely cause of celulitis d/t trauma in brakish water in the summertime? |
answer
| V. vulnificans |
question
| T/F Yersinia enterolytica is an iron lover. |
answer
| true |
question
| What is a cause of cellulitis in Crohn's disease? |
answer
| gram negative organisms and anaerobes |
question
| Lupus or complement deficiency can predispose you to a cellulitis caused by... |
answer
| S. pneumoniae (in lupus, necrotizing fasciitis is more common than S. pneumo) |
question
| IUD with chronic pelvic abscess is likely d/t... |
answer
| actinomycosis |
question
| Complement deficiency puts you at risk for infection with... |
answer
| neisseria and encapsulated bacteria |
question
| Sun burn rash is a ____ mediated phenomena. |
answer
| toxin |
question
| Exposure to conga drums put you at risk for... |
answer
| anthrax |
question
| Treat cellulitis empirically with.. |
answer
| vancomycin + clindamycin because vanc will increase the amount of toxin (Daptomycin or linezolid would work) |
question
| What are the pros and cons of treating cellulitis with TMP/SMX? |
answer
| can tx MRSA and MSSA but not strep |
question
| What is a D test for? |
answer
| determine susceptibility to clindamycin |
question
| Cellulitis is toxin mediated so you should treat it with antibioitcs that.. |
answer
| .inhibit ribosomes (clindamycin and linezolid) |
question
| Why is Daptomycin particularly good for cellulitis? |
answer
| kills organism quickly to decrease the amount of toxin produced |
question
| Staph can be differentiated from Strep infection clinically by... |
answer
| presence of abscesses is characteristic of staph infeciton |
question
| What is the gold standard treatment for strep cellulitis? |
answer
| Penicillin V or amoxicillin or 1st generationo cephalosporin (ceftalaxin + anti-MRSA) |
question
| Why is staph catalase +? |
answer
| prevents being killed by ROS |
question
| What is the most important mode of transmission for GAS? |
answer
| droplet transmission from nasopharnyx (also peuperal fever from not washing hands) |
question
| What type of pneumonia has a high incidence of peluritic chest pain? |
answer
| GAS |
question
| T/F Empyemas are common in GAS pneumonia. |
answer
| true |
question
| What is the MC GAS infection? |
answer
| pharyngitis |
question
| What is the most common precursor to GAS bacteremia? |
answer
| skin/soft tissue infection |
question
| What is the most common precursor to GAS bacteremia? |
answer
| skin/soft tissue infection |
question
| What is the most common precursor to GAS bacteremia? |
answer
| skin/soft tissue infection |
question
| What is the most common precursor to GAS bacteremia? |
answer
| skin/soft tissue infection |
question
| GAS in urine means the patient also has... |
answer
| bacteremia (hematogenous spread is the only way GAS gets to the UT) |
question
| What are the symptoms/signs associated with Scarlet fever? |
answer
| strawberry tongue, circumoral pallor, desquamation of skin during healing and sore throat |
question
| T/F Scarlet fever can present with a papulovesicular rash. |
answer
| false erythema marginatum is not vesicular |
question
| What type of GAS infection will more likely predispose you to PSGN over ARF? |
answer
| pyoderma |
question
| T?F Serious GAS infection should be treated with penicillin. |
answer
| false |
question
| T/F Doxycycline has poor strep coverage. |
answer
| true |
question
| Where is the most important reservoir for asymptomatic carriage of s. aureus? |
answer
| nasopharynx |
question
| What is the most important mode of transmission of S. aureus? |
answer
| direct person to person contact |
question
| What types of precautions must be taken with GAS to prevent transmission? |
answer
| droplet precaution |
question
| How is N. meningitidis transmitted? |
answer
| droplets |
question
| T/F It is possible to transmit S. Aureus via sexual intercourse. |
answer
| true |
question
| Does S. aureus cause pharyngitis? meningitis? |
answer
| NOT pharyngitis, meningitis is uncommon |
question
| 50% of osteomyelitis is caused by... |
answer
| S. aureus |
question
| What are the 2 MC organisms of IE? |
answer
| S. aureus and viridans strep |
question
| What are some symptoms of staph TSS? |
answer
| V/D at onset, desquamation of palms and soles, hyperemia of mucous membranes, thrombocytopenia |
question
| You are unlikely to have (+) blood cultures if you have ___ TSS. |
answer
| staph |
question
| What are the laboratory findings of staph TSS? |
answer
| azotemia, increased CK ( d/t rhabdomyolysis), pyuria and thrombocytopenia |
question
| Staph TSS disease is not invasive but causes systemic diases by the way of... |
answer
| toxemia |
question
| Can you get a positive blood culture in a patient with TSS? |
answer
| staph is usually negative (toxemia) but strep is usually positive (like in necrotizing fasciitis) |
question
| NBT test is used for. |
answer
| CGD |
question
| Agammaglobulinemia puts you at risk for infection with.. |
answer
| extracellular encapsulated bacteria |
question
| Hyper IgE (Job's syndrome) puts you at risk for what kind of infection? |
answer
| recurrent staph infection |
question
| What causes IE? |
answer
| S. viridans and S. aureus, S. lugdenensis, HACEK (haemophilus, aggregatibacter, cardiobacterium, Eikenella, Kingella) |
question
| What mycobacteria can cause IE? |
answer
| atypical and fast growing ones like M. fortuitum |
question
| What is the emperic treatment for IE? |
answer
| vancomycin for 4-6 weeks + aminoglycoside |
question
| What bacteria cause sinusitis? |
answer
| S. pneumo, H. flu, other haemophilus, M. Catarrhalis, GAS, S. aureus, anaerobes |
question
| What is pott's puffy tumor? |
answer
| pus infection breaks into orbit and eye pops out |
question
| When is it appropriate to use antibiotics for a respiratory tract infection? |
answer
| if symptoms last for more than 7 days you are increasing the cure rate from 60-80% |
question
| What antibiotics do you give for sinusitis? |
answer
| high doses of amoxicillin |
question
| What common organism is not covered by standard antibiotic tx for sinusitis? |
answer
| M. Catarrhalis (produces a beta lactamase) |
question
| If amoxicillin doesn't treat sinusitis switch to a... |
answer
| macrolide or beta lactam inhibitor combo like augmentin (amoxicillin + clavulanate) |
question
| What would you use for a pseudomonas sinusitis infection? |
answer
| piperacillin or tazobactam |
question
| Different microscopy of aspergillus and zygomyces? |
answer
| aspergillus= septate hyphae with acute angle branching (tx with voriconazole) zygomyces= nonseptate hyphae with 90 degree branching (Tx with amphotericin B) |
question
| Chronic means the infection has lasted for more than... |
answer
| 2 weeks |
question
| What causes a necrotizing pneumonia? |
answer
| pseudomonas, S. aureus, Klebsiella |
question
| What is farmer's lung? |
answer
| allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis |
question
| Bacteria from Winn DIxie produce misters= |
answer
| legionella |
question
| T/F COxiella is associated with a rash. |
answer
| true |
question
| What causes a pulmonary meningitis syndrome? |
answer
| S. pneumo, H. influenzae, and legionella |
question
| What is a major symptome of tularemia? |
answer
| weightloss |
question
| What are the most common causes of pneumonia? |
answer
| mycoplasma, chlamydia, S. pneumo, H. flu, M cat and legionella |
question
| What is the necrotizing pneumonia you get from eating raw crawfish? |
answer
| paragonimus |
question
| Proton pump inhibitor can increase you risk of what nonGI infection? |
answer
| pneumonia |
question
| Smokers have an increase risk of pneumonia by what specific organism/ |
answer
| S. pneumo |
question
| What are the causes of community acquired pneumonia? |
answer
| S. pneumo, mycoplasma, and chlamydia |
question
| How do you treat legionella? |
answer
| moxifloxacin IV, azithromycin + ceftriazone |
question
| What are bacterial causes of encephalitis? |
answer
| S. pneumo, H. influenzae, Listeria, N. meningitidis, gram negative enteric |
question
| What are the advantages to treating encephalitis with ceftriaxone? |
answer
| CSF penetration, covers H. flu, N. men and most penicillin resitant pneumococci (but NOT LISTERIA which is why you add amphicillin) Also could use vancomycin to cover penicillin resistant pneumococci |
question
| Which;organisms are common causes of diarrhea in HIV patients? |
answer
| cryptosporidium, salmonella |
question
| Name some toxin mediated causes of diarrhea? |
answer
| B. cereus, C. difficile, S. aureus |
question
| What are some causes of diarrhea that require the actuall presence of the bacteria (not just toxin)? |
answer
| V. choelra, shigella, salmonella, campylobacter, H. pylori, ETEC, EHEC; EIEC, EAggEC, MTB, MAC, Yersinia, Plesiomonas, aeromonas |
question
| How sensitive is the stool culture for routine pathogens? |
answer
| 30-50% |
question
| What are the GIroutine pathogens? |
answer
| shigella, salmonella, campylobacter, yersinia and EHEC |
question
| What treats C diff? |
answer
| metronidazole (vanc if severe) |
question
| What is the MC cause of diarrhea in day care workers? |
answer
| shigella (cryptosporidia, giardia and salmonella) |
question
| How do you test for EHEC? |
answer
| Shiga-like toxin ELISA |
question
| What is a complication of EHEC? |
answer
| Hemolytic Uremic synrome= anemia, thrombocytopenia and renal problems d/t endothelial injury, fibrin stranding, schistocytes |
question
| How do you get EHEC? |
answer
| cow manure, petting zoos, public pools |
question
| How do you treat EHEC? |
answer
| NO ANTIBIOTICS, supportive |
question
| What bacteria can cause hepatitis? |
answer
| leptospira, legionella, ricketsia, ehrlichia, salmonella |
question
| How do you treat most spirochetes? |
answer
| penicillin or doxy, watch out for jarisch herxheimer reaction |
question
| How do you prevent Hep B? |
answer
| HBIG or vaccination |
question
| Which hepatitis virus has HIV synergy? |
answer
| hep C |
question
| How do you treat hep C? |
answer
| pegylated IFN, ribavirin, protease inhibitor (boceprevir or telaprevir, esp if genotype I or AA) |
question
| How do you differentiate pyelonephritis from cystitis? |
answer
| flank pain and fever |
question
| Why is it important to distinguish whether a patient ahs cystitis or pyelonephritis? |
answer
| pyelo is treated longer and can lead to bacteremia |
question
| What allows ecoli to be a good UTI pathogen? |
answer
| motility and adhesion (EHEC, ETIC and most GI commensals do not cause UTIs because they do not have adhesions which is CRUCIAL to causing a UTI) |
question
| What are the UTI natural host defenses? |
answer
| acid, peristalsis, psuedovalves of ureter and flwo |
question
| What are the risk factors for UTI? |
answer
| female, sexual trama, not being hydrated, diaphragm use, urethral reflux, DM |
question
| What is the most resistant UTI pathogen? |
answer
| new delhi metallo-carbapenemase (NMD1) from pakistan |
question
| What is the #3 MC TB site? |
answer
| kidney |
question
| What is the significance of casts in urine? |
answer
| WBC casts implicate pyelonephritis, RBC casts indicate glomerularnephritis |
question
| What are the most common cuases of UTI? |
answer
| GN= Ecoli and Klebsiella pneumonia GP= Staph saprophyticus, beta hemolytic strep (strep agalactiae), alpha hemolytic strep, and gamma hemolytic strep (enterococcus faecalis), mycoplasma hominis |
question
| What Urinary pathogen can also cause IE? |
answer
| Strep agalactiae (GBS) |
question
| Whata re the pros and cons to using nitrofurantoin for UTI |
answer
| concentrates in urine (not suitible for systemic disease) proteas is resistant |
question
| What are the pros/cons to using fosfomycin to cover UTIs? |
answer
| covers everything but is expensive and induces vomiting |
question
| What is S. saprophyticus resistant to? |
answer
| very susceptible to everything |
question
| What is E coli resistant to? |
answer
| 60% to ampicillin, 20% to cefazolin 5% to genatmycin and 2% to ceftriazone |
question
| What are teh pros and cons to using ceftriaxone to treat a UTI? |
answer
| causes less GI changes and will cover Ecoli |
question
| Whata re the pros and cons of using gentamycin to treat ecoli UTI/ |
answer
| renal failure is a side effect |
question
| What is the best treatment for ecoli UTI? |
answer
| ceftriazone |
question
| When do you treat asymptomatic bacteruria? |
answer
| if pregnant |
question
| How long do you treat for UTI? |
answer
| if flouroquinolone susceptible you treat for 7 days if nonflouroquinolone suceptible you treat for 14 days |
question
| Why does pregnancy increase your risk of UTI? |
answer
| decrease flow because of mechanical pressure on ureters and increase estrogen which decreases peristalsis of the ureters |
question
| What MUST YOU NOT USE to treat asymptomatic bactiuria in a pregnant patient? |
answer
| TMP-SMX or cipro |
question
| What do you use to treat asymptomatic bactiuria during pregnancy? |
answer
| ampicillin, gentamycin, nitrofuratoin |
question
| UTI with kidney stones and high pH is likely d/t-> |
answer
| proteaus |
question
| Parasite Dracunculus medinensis is aka... |
answer
| guinea worm |
question
| What are the symptoms of sarcoidosis? |
answer
| skin lesion, arthritis, erythema nodosum and lung disease |
question
| What disease causes calcification of skin? |
answer
| dermatomyositis |
question
| What bacteria are common in the feces? (What bacteria were present in teh skin lesions of the 19 yo morman girl)? |
answer
| Ecoli, bacteroides, enterococcus, clostridium |