Principles of Infectious Disease I Exam 1 – Flashcards

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question
What steps lead to covert or overt disease?
answer
Infection leads to colonization by parasite leads to overt/covert disease
question

What are some sources of novel infectious agents?

Why do they spread?

answer

zoonotic-evolution from an animal pathogen to be able to spread amongst humans

 

some old IDs that have reappeared with antibiotic resistance traits

 

human population must be sufficient to maintain spread of disease

 

Can spread due to environmental factors such as climate change, poverty, malnutrition, sociopolitical causes

 

extended contact with animals (i.e. livestock, habitat encroachment)

question
What does our microbiome do for us?
answer

Protection from pathogenic microorganisms

energy production-breaks down complex carbs

makes vitamins

modulates immune system

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Where do we get our microbiome?
answer
amniotic fluid, birth, food, breastmilk, environment
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Why are infectious diseases important still (despite causing fewer deaths than in 1900?)
answer
Although not listed on death certificates, IDs are important sequelae to events like heart attack, stoke, and diabetes that can be the actual proximal cause of death
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How do you measure the burden of disease?
answer
Years of Life Lost (YLL)+ Years Lived with disability (YLD)= Disability adjusted life years (DALY) lost due to disease
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What are the 4 approaches to proving that an organism is the cause of an infectious disease?
answer

Koch-Henle postulates

Bradford Hill criteria

Evan's Immunological Proof of Disease Causation

Epidemiologic evidence of causality

question
What are three situations in which the Koch-Henle postulates cannot be satisfied?
answer

1. organism cannot be cultured in vitro

2. no animal model exists

3. the organism cannot be cultured period.

question
Why is Evan's Immunological Proof of Disease Causation problematic for many infections?
answer

The presence of antibody does not always confer resistance to a disease (and lack of antibody does not necessarily confer suceptibility)

 

You can mount an antibody response without becoming ill (meaning that antibody doesn't appear during an overt disease)

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How would you go about proving epidemiologic evidence of causality?
answer

1. Identify the organism associated with disease in an outbreak

2. identify organism in multiple outbreaks of same disease in different locations/times

3. study endemic manifestations of the same disease and show that the same organism is associated with the disease

4. Show that there is a common risk factor associated with infection with the organism in question

question
Name the 4 Major categories of diarrheal diseases
answer

Secretory diarrhea (cholera)

Invasive/inflammatory diarrhea (salmonellosis)

Persistent diarrhea

Attatching/effacing lesion producing diarrhea (eg EPEC)

question
Why does diarrhea occur?
answer

Disruption in net fluid output or absorption along GI tract

 

more fluid going into the intestine can be a factor

poor reabsorption can also be a factor

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What are the 3 kinds of reservoirs for enteric pathogens?
answer

Humans are sole reservoir

nonhuman animal reservoir

non-animal and non-human reservoir

question
What are the risk factors for diarrheal diseases in developed vs developing nations?
answer

Developing nations-Poverty, poor sanitation, poor nutrition

 

endemicity of diarrhea causing pathogens

 

Developed nations-food animal reservoir, centralization of food production, food distribution networks

question
What is different when culturing Shigella sp. vs E. coli?
answer
Shigella tends to be lactose negative, while most E. coli are lactose positive (except EIEC, which is sometimes lactose negative)
question

What are the classic agents of:

1. Secretory diarrhea

2. invasive/inflammatory diarrhea

3. persistent diarrhea

4. attaching/effacing leision producing diarrhea (disruption of the mucosal surface)

answer

1. Cholera!

2. Salmonella typhimurium, enteriditis; Shigella; Bacillary dysentery (Salmonella dysenteriae)

2. Enteroaggregative E. coli (EaggEC)

4. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)

question
What are antibiotics vs. antimicrobials vs. anti-infectives vs. antiseptics?
answer

Antibiotics: made by bacteria/fungi that suppress growth or kill other microorganisms

 

Antimicrobial agents: anti-infective drugs made from ANY source including synthetics (used to treat bacterial and fungal infections)

 

Anti-infectives: treat any kind of infection (fungal, viral, bacterial, protozoan/helminths)

 

Antiseptics: disifect contaminated objects in the environment

question
What are some general mechanisms of drug resistance?
answer
  1. Alter drug target (eg penicillin binding proteins)
  2. inactivate/modify the drug (beta-lactamases)
  3. Induction of proteins that remove drug from organism (efflux pumps)
  4. Inativation/mutation of enzymes that activate the drug (M. tuberculosis catalases that activate isoniazid)
question

What are 5 major categories of antimicrobial agents?

answer

Beta-lactams (Cephalosporins/Carbapenams)

Aminoglycosides

Fluoroquinolones

Tetracyclines

Macrolides

Ant TB drugs

 

question
What is the difference between a minimal inhibitory concentration vs. a minimal bacteriocidal concentration?
answer

Inhibitory-stops bacterial growth

bacteriocidal-actively kills bacteria

question
What are 5 "serious" antibiotic resistant bacterial pathogens?
answer

MDR Acinetobacter (G+)

Drug resistant Campylobacter (G+)

Vancomycin Resistant enterococcus (GRAM -)

MDR Pseudomonas aeruginosa

DR Salmonella (non typhi), S. typhi

DR Shigella

MRSA

DR Strep pneumonia

DR tuberculosis

question
What are 3 urgent threats to antibiotic resistance?
answer

C. difficile

Carbapenem resistant enterobacteriaceae (CRE)

Drug resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae

 

question
2 major settings of drug resistant organism selection?
answer

Hospitals/healthcare centers

Community

Agricultural settings (i.e. food animal production)

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What are 2 ways clonal drug resistant bacterial pathogens are globally diseminated?
answer

International travel and "medical tourism"

global food trade

 

question
What are some examples of genetic mechanisms for drug resistance?
answer

Extrachromasomal elements:

plasmids

transposons

integrons/cassettes

movements from sp. to sp

 

Intraorganism:

point mutations/deletions

efflux pump gene expression

question
What are 4 phenotypic changes associated with drug resistance?
answer

Altering drug target

inactivating drug

induction of proteins that remove the drug

inactivation/mutation of enzymes that activate the drug

question

What are 3 pathogens associated with hospital/healthcare accquired infections?

 

What are 3 pathogens associated with community infections?

 

answer

Hospital: 

Gram positives-MRSA, VRE, C. difficile (also appearing in community settings)

 

Gram neg: many sp. Enterobacteriaceae, glucose non fermenters (Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter)

 

Community:

E. coli, Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia, V. cholerae, Campy

E. coli UTIs, BSIs

 

 

question
What are some gram negative Enterobacteriaceae bacteria present in hospitals?
answer

E. coli

Klebsiella pneumonia

Enterobacter

Salmonella

 

question
What are the 2 main components of the immune system? How do they break down?
answer

Innate vs. Adaptive

Adaptive: humoral vs cell mediated

Cell mediated: CD8+ (cytotoxic T cells) vs CD4+ T helper cells

Th1 helper cells vs Th2 helper cells

 

question
What links the innate to the adaptive immune system?
answer

Antigen presenting cells (APCs): dendritic cells, macrophages

 

 

question
How can innate immunity be exploited to increase vaccine efficacy?
answer

Need to know which molecules will elicit the strongest innate immune response (i.e. which polysaccharide or hapten will activate PRRs)

 

which antigens should be made available to APC's to elicit a strong humoral response from adaptive immune system?

question
What does McConkey agar select for? What does it differentiate?
answer

Selects for gram positive vs. gram negative bacteria (gram negative grows on McConkey Agar)

 

Also differentiates between lactose fermenters and non lactose fermenters

question
What is used to detect E. coli O157:H7 in culture?
answer

SMAC (Sorbitol McConkey Agar culturing)

 

question
What is detected by SMAC?
answer
Detects fermentation of Sorbitol by bacteria with the ability to do so; non-sorbitol fermenters like E. coli O157:H7 do not activate the low pH color indicator (colonies remain colorless)
question
What percent of all human diseases and all emerging infections are zoonotic?
answer
60% of human disease, 75% of emerging diseases are zoonotic
question
What is the difference between opportunistic and primary pathogens?
answer
Opportunistic pathogens only cause disease if the host is compromise (breaching of normal barriers, decrease in immune function); primary pathogen exposure usually leads to infection and disease.
question
What is colonization? Infection?
answer

Infection-an organism establishes a relationship us (mutual, commensal, or parasitic)

 

Colonization: an organism not usually part of our normal flora becomes part of it (often transiently)

question

What are the definitions of:

Parasitism

Mutualism

Commensalism

answer

Parasitism (+/-) symbiotic relationship where the host is harmed and the colonizing organism benefits

 

Mutualism (+/_) colonizing organism benefits, host is neither harmed not helped

 

Commensalism (+/+) both host and colonizing organism benefit from the relationship

question
Who was the last person in the world to be naturally infected with smallpox?
answer
Ali Mao Maalin, Somalia 1997
question
What are 3 types of asymptomatic infection?
answer

Latent

Chronic

Convalescent

question
what are the host factors that influence disease outcome post exposure?
answer

host immunity/immune suppression

host genetics, age, sex

living conditions (poverty/slums)

question

Define:

Exotoxin

Enterotoxin

Endotoxin

answer

Exotoxin: secreted by bacteria; includes preformed toxins like Staphylotoxin A, TSS toxin, C. botulinum toxin

Enterotoxin: protein secreted by bacteria in vivo during infection (cholerotoxin, HS or HL toxin of E. coli)

Endotoxin: LPS (not a true toxin)

question
What are the 5 immunoglobulins and what do they do?
answer
  • IgG-protects against bacteria, viruses, toxins, increases phagocytosis, crosses placenta
  • IgA-protects against infection on mucous membranes
  • IgM-protects against early phase infection (innate)
  • IgD-receptors for activation of Bcells
  • IgE-allergic response, triggers histamine release
question
What virus family does each of the hepatitis viruses belong to ?
answer

A-Picornaviridae

B-Hepadnaviridae

C-Flaviviridae

D-Deltaviridae

E-Hepeviridae

question
What kind of nucleic acid is used by each hepatitis virus?
answer

A-RNA

B-DNA (partially circular)

C-RNA

D-circular RNA!

E-RNA

question
What hepatitis viruses are transmitted via fecal/oral pathways?
answer
A and E
question
What percent of neonates become asymptomatic chronic carriers of Hep B? What about adults?
answer

95% of babies become carriers, increased risk of liver damage and cancer

 

3-5% remain chronically infected if they get it as adults

question
Which hepatitis virus does not have hepatotropic tendencies?
answer

Hepatitis A

 

initially replicates in oropharynx and circulates before entering liver

question
What are the immunologic markers of Hepatitis B during prodrome and acute phase?
answer

Prodrome: HBsAf, HBcIgM Ab

 

Acute infection: HBcIgM Ab, HBsAg, HBeAg (correlates with high titer of HBV and high infectivity)

 

question
what are the immunologic markers of early and late convalescence in HB?
answer

early: HBcIgM Ab

 

Late: HBcIgM Ab, HBcAb IgG, HBsAb IgG

question
What is the difference in immune markers in people who have had a natural infection with HBV vs. those who have been vaccinated?
answer

Those with natural infection have HBsAb IgG AND HBcAb IgG

 

Those who have been vaccinated only have HBsAb IgG

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