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Micro Resp Exam I

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Title: Micro Resp Exam I


1
Micro Resp Exam I
2
  • Pharyngitis sore throat ID important
  • True Strep Throat Group A strep / strep pyogenes
  • Croup larynx, children
  • can lead to laryngitis or hoarseness, even
    obstrxn
  • Tracheal bronchitis
  • below larynx, into trachea, into bronchi, cough
    most important sign, can have with cold
  • Infxn tracheal, bronchial mucosa, Viral or
    bacterial
  • Bronchiolitis
  • bronchial tree, resp tree branching - finer ?
    bronchioles.
  • serious LRT disease infants w/ dyspnea, fever
  • Resp Syncytial Virus (RSV) and parainfluenza
  • RSV yearly epidemic serious in children 1 to 2
    years old.
  • Acute Resp Disease military term Cold lt ARD lt
    Flu
  • Influenzal Syndrome
  • severe malaise, muscle aches, prostration
  • Pneumonia infxn lung parenchyma, alveoli

3
Common Cold
  • Rhinovirus
  • Coronavirus
  • RSV
  • Myxovirus orthomyxovirus, paramyxovirus
  • Adenovirus

4
  • Common Cold
  • Mild, SL, catarrhal syndrome
  • Cx sinusitis, pharyngitis, LRTI
  • Major cause school absenteeism
  • Rhinovirus most - ssRNA (picorna)
  • Small RNA virus related to poliovirus
  • Picorna smallest viruses capable infecting
    animals
  • 110 Ag different types
  • Optimum growth 33 degrees nasal mucosa
  • Multiplies in cytoplasm

5
  • Common cold
  • Transmission main source kids
  • Direct contact
  • Infectious droplet nuclei
  • Epidemiology world wide, person-person,
  • Adults 2-4 colds per year kids 6-8
  • Clinical incubation 48-72h
  • Nasal discharge, nasal obstrxn, sneezing,
    scratchy throat, cough, anorexia, slight fever
  • 5-10 days,
  • Complications rare sinusitis, otitis media,
    bronchitis
  • No way to differentiate different agents

6
  • Coronavirus ssRNA
  • Round, petal shaped projections
  • Lipid envelopes, labile ether/chloroform
  • Difficult to isolate and grow
  • SARs new coronavirus
  • RSV by age 4
  • Infants and children gt adults
  • Bronchopneumonia or bronchitis
  • Paramyxovirus
  • RNA
  • Enveloped

7
  • Myxoviruses
  • Orthomyxoviruses influenza virus A,B,C
  • Paramyxoviruses 4, env, ssRNA
  • Children croup, bronchitis, pneu
  • Occasionally adult resp dz
  • Adenoviruses
  • 47 serological, few cause dz
  • Military recruits

8
  • Sinusitis acute, inflam paranasal sinuses
  • Etio
  • Directly contiguous to, communicate with URT
  • Acute sinusitis follows rhinitis
  • Nasal polyps, deviation nasal septum, tumors,
    FBs, trauma, abrupt change pressure, cystic
    fibrosis, purulent sinusitis
  • Bact agents acute sinusitis
  • Strep pneu, Hemop influenza
  • S. aureus, strep pyogenes
  • Chronic anerobic bact combined with aerobes
  • Dental anerobic strep, coliform bacilli

9
  • Pathogenesis Sinusitis
  • Obstrxn paranasal sinusal ostia impedes drainage
  • Mucous accumulation mucopus irritates mucosa
    edema, aggravates obstrxn
  • Epidemiology Adultsgtchildren
  • .5 URTI acute sinusitis
  • Fall, winter, spring summer swimming
  • Clinical Rinsing nose NOT reliable
  • Hx URTI, allergic rhinitis, tenderness over
    sinus, purulent discharge
  • Dx acute only by culture exudate or rinse sinus
    puncture and aspiration
  • TX acute antimicrobial tx - empirical

10
  • Pharyngitis acute inflam sx of pharynx
  • Most viral mild rhinovirus, coronavirus
  • Severe adenovirus, herpes simplex
  • S.pyogenes 15-30
  • UK 30
  • Normal throat flora alpha hemolytic greenish,
    opaque hemolysis
  • DANGER beta hemolysis clears agar blood
  • Group A beta hemolytic strep
  • Lancefield Grp A Ag, bacitracin senstive, beta
    hemolysis
  • Winter months
  • Rhinovirus annual peaks
  • Streptococcal resp dz season
  • Human reservoir

11
  • Pharyngitis Clinical
  • Mild moderate no discomfort 3-4d dur
  • No exudates, no LA
  • Pharynx normal, mild erythema
  • Rhinorrhea, PND present
  • With Influenza 3-4d dur
  • Sore throat major complaint, coryza
  • Temp elev children, adults
  • Edema, erythema NOT marked
  • NO exudates, painful cervical adenopathy

12
  • Pharyngocongunctival Fever
  • Adenovirus more severe major agent
  • DNA viruses stable 47 Ag distinct types
  • Acute, febrile, SL
  • Pharyngoconjunctival
  • Pertussis-like Sx similar to B.pertussis
  • Marked sore throat
  • Temp elev 5-6 days
  • 1/3 ½ confjunctivities bilateral,
    follicular
  • ARD cough, hoarseness, substernal pain
  • Military recruits
  • Other dz epidemic deratoconjunctivities,
    hemorrhagic cystitis, gastroenteritis, rashes

13
  • Acute Herpetic Pharyngitis
  • HSV 1ary infxn may have acute pharis
  • Large DNA virus, humans/animals
  • Lipid-containing capsids inactivated by ether
  • Eosinophillic intranuclear inclusion bodies
  • Recurrent fever blisters
  • Mimics strep pharis
  • Vesicles, shallow ulcers on palate herpes
  • Gingivostomatis on labial, buccal mucosa

14
  • Herpangina uncommon pharyngitis
  • Coxsackieviruses - cause
  • Small vesicles soft palate, uvula, anterior
    tonsillar pillars
  • Primarily children severe, febrile illness,
    sore throat, dysphagia (difficulty swallowing)
  • Coxsackieviruses Picornaviruses
  • Aseptic meningitis, myocarditis, URTI
  • Herpangina 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10
  • Grp A, type 10 summer febrile dz kids
  • Acute lymphonodular pharyngitis

15
  • Infectious Mononucleosis - Exudative tonsillitis
    or pharis - Nearly 50 cases
  • Fever, cervical adenopathy
  • Enlargement of spleen about ½ cases
  • Epstein Barr Virus (Board Review)
  • 1st human virus related to malignancy
  • Burkitts lymphoma in children
  • EBV in saliva ? infxn oropharynx epi cells
  • Pharyngitis, shedding virus in saliva
  • Infxn B-cells ? B-cell proliferation
  • Heterophile Ab (agglutinates sheep/horse RBCs)
  • Expression EBV early proteins ?T-cell activation
    ? atypical lymphocytes, enlargement spleen,
    liver, LNs

16
  • Streptococcal Pharyngitis - Severe cases
  • marked phayrngeal pain, dysphagia, Tempgt39.4 C
  • Pharnygeal membrane fiery red
  • Thick exudate posterior pharynx, tonsillar area
  • Uvula pronounced edema
  • Tender, enlarged cervical nodes
  • Leukocyte count gt 12,000/mm3 acute suppurative
    bacterial infxn
  • S. pyogenes Gram positive, non-motile cocci
  • most virulent of Grp A, beta hemolytic
    streptococci
  • small, opaque colonies - large zone of beta
    hemolysis
  • Highly sensitive to bacitracin
  • Non-immunogenic cell wall
  • SPEs strep pyrogenic exotoxins, A, B, C - rash
    of scarlet fever
  • Cytolytic toxins, exoenzymes
  • Streptolysin O Oxygen labile, damages mammalian
    cells, ASO test for Rheumatic Fever
  • Streptolysin S Oxygen Stable lyses
    erythrocytes culture hemolysis

17
  • Anaerobic Pharyngitis
  • (Vincents Angina/Peritonsillitis/Peritonsillar
    Abecces Quinsy)
  • Pharyngeal and tonsillar infxn
  • Mixture anaerobic bacteria/spirochetes
  • Purulent exudate coats membrane
  • Foul odor to breath
  • Abscess severe pain, dysphagia
  • Usually unilateral, when biliateral partial
    obstrxn pharynx

18
  • Gonococcal Pharyngitis
  • Most infxn Asymptomatic
  • Occasional mild pharyngitis
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae

19
  • Diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheria)
  • Unvaccinated populations in US
  • Low-grade fever
  • Tonsillar, pharygeal pseudomembrane
  • Light to dark gray
  • Firmly attached to tonsil, pharyngeal mucosa
  • DO NOT REMOVE
  • Board Notes

20
  • Mycoplasma pneumoniae
  • Mild pharyngitis
  • Bronchitis
  • Primary atypical pneumonia

21
  • Resp Airway Infxn
  • laryngitis, epiglottitis, laryngotracheobronchtis
  • Acute inflam dz upper airway
  • Danger obstrxn airway
  • Bacteria/viruses, individually, in combo
  • Haemophilus influenzae
  • Corynebacterium diphtheriae
  • Bordetella pertussis
  • Strep pneu
  • Parainfluenza viruses
  • Influenza viruses
  • RSV

22
  • HaEMOPhilus influenzae
  • Gram negative, non-motile, rod
  • 6 antigenic types capsular polysacs, a-f
  • Type b serious infxn humans
  • 1987 Vaccine
  • Requires
  • X factor protoporphyrin
  • V factor pyridine nucleotide causes
  • Epiglottitis, Meningitis, Otitis Media, Pneu
  • TX
  • Chloramphenicol, ampicillin, penicillin G,
    tetracycline, sulfonamides

23
  • Corynebacterium diphtheriae
  • Gram positive rod
  • Granules Chinese letters
  • Larynx, pharynx classic sites
  • Pseudomembrane phyryngitis
  • Streptococcous Pneumonia
  • Major cause bacterial pneumonia adults and
    children

24
  • Bordetella pertussis
  • Gram negative rod
  • Small, ovoid, non-motile, non-sporeforming
  • Freshly isolated phase I toxins
  • Only phase I vaccine new vaccine accellular
  • Lab smooth to rough transition Phase IV -
    pleomorphic, noncapsulated, avirulent
  • Special bronchitis
  • Un-immunized children
  • Destrxn ciliated epi cells ? ?clearance mucous
  • Virulence factors
  • FHA pilli rod
  • Toxin unlocks cell

25
  • Parainfluenza Viruses
  • Paramyxoviruses
  • RNA core, ether-sensitive envelope
  • Multiply in cytoplasm
  • Types 1, 2, 3, 4 infxn in humans
  • Antigenically stable, homogenous
  • Croup 1, 2, 3
  • Common cold 1, 3, 4
  • Pharyngitis 1, 3, 4
  • Bronchitis 1, 3
  • Bronchopneumonia 1, 3

26
  • Influenza Viruses
  • Typically cause LRTI adults, children
  • RSV
  • Can cause croup
  • Acute obstruction of upper airway in infants and
    children characterized by a barking cough with
    difficult and noisy respiration.
  • Laryngotracheobronchitis in infants and young
    children caused by parainfluenza viruses 1 and 2.
  • Usually causes bronchiolitis and
    bronchiopnuemonia in infants

27
  • Acute Laryngitis
  • Barking cough, hoarseness
  • Airway obstrxn young childrengtgt adults
  • Common cold and influenzal syndromes
  • All resp viruses cause hoarseness
  • DX exam larynx
  • TX
  • Resting the voice
  • Inhalation moistened air
  • NO value in antimicrobials

28
  • Epiglottitis - Acute rapidly progressive
    cellulitis of epiglottis, adjacent structures
  • Abrupt, complete airway obstrxn
  • Clinical
  • 2-4 yo child, 6-12 h hx fever, dysphagia
  • DX edematous cherry-red epiglottis
  • Lab leukocytosis, cultures blood and
    epiglottis, thumb sign, pneu on CXR
  • Haemophilus influenzae type b(Hib)
  • 100 children with epiglottitis
  • Pneumococci, staph, strep
  • TX adequate airway, control infxn
  • IV Antibiotic vs. H.flu
  • Immunity episode serum Abs to capsular polysac
  • Vaccine HITB

29
  • Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis (croup)
  • Inflam subglottis area, young children
  • 3 mos 3 years peak year 2
  • Hoarseness, deep, non-prod, brassy-tone cough
  • Pair of barking seals
  • Parainfluenza - 1 cause
  • Adenovirus
  • Influenza A
  • Broader range, more hospital, tracheotomy
  • RSV
  • NB Mycoplasma
  • DX clinical picture

30
  • Bronchitis and bronchiolitis
  • Acute bronchitis
  • Common during flu epidemics, winter
  • Rhinoviruses important cause
  • Adenovirus military recruits
  • Severe myco pneu, B. pertussis
  • Clinical
  • Cough early, prominent cig smokers long
  • Temp elev flu, adenovirus, M.pneu
  • DX bronchitis is dx of exclusion
  • Hx exposure toxic substances, cig smoking
  • TX symptomatic

31
  • Chronic Bronchitis
  • Coughed up sputum most days during at least 3
    months in the past two years
  • Incessant cough advanced obese patient
  • Emphysema often present
  • Cough, XS mucous secretion tracheobronchial tree
  • Cig smoking, infxn, inhalation dust, fumes
  • Mengtwomen gt40yo 10-25 adults
  • Recurrent resp infxn immunocompromised
  • Bact not cause perpetuate dz,
  • H.flu, S. aureus, beta hemolytic strep

32
  • Bronchiolitis acute LRTI 1-2 yo
  • Starts with coryza (acute rhinitis)
  • Dehydration poor oral intake, paroxysms of
    cough vomiting resp distress, lethargy
  • 3-4 day improvement, 1-2 week recovery
  • Viruses, M. pneu
  • 87 RSV, PIV 1, 3, adenoviruses, rhinoviruses,
    M. pneu
  • RSV hospitalized cases
  • Mirrors seasonal pattern of RSV
  • DX clinical findings, nasal wash
  • TX no Vx, O2 admin, careful supp care
  • Aerosolized ribavirin severe bronchiolitis -
    RSV

33
  • Influenza RNA, env, orthomyxo
  • Acute, febrile, fever, malaise, HA, myalgia
  • 8 pieces RNA 8mRNAs 8 proteins
  • Ag type/Place/Year/Strain/Surface Ag
  • A/Texas/77/H3N2
  • A - Pandemic
  • B localized epidemic
  • C sporadic
  • Glycoprotiens spikes
  • H will bind to RBC clumps - hemagglutin
  • Major Ag, most Ag variation, Site attachment
    virus - host cell
  • Abs to Hag prevent infxn, hemagglutination
  • N neuraminidases less important
  • Cleaves end off sugar, releases virus from debris

34
  • Influenza - Ag Variation change surface Ag
  • A gt B gt C HA gt N, HA most imp
  • Ag drift minor, over time, H1, H2, H3, N1, N2
  • Ag Shift - Abrupt Pandemic devastating
  • Clinical 1-3 incub abrupt fever 39-40C
  • Extreme prostation, myalgia, cough
  • Infants mild, like cold
  • Elderly, COPD, DM, Pregnancy course worsens
  • Pneu 2ary S.aureus, H.flu, S.pneu, S.pyogenes
  • Immunity IgA, IFN improvement
  • HAI complement fixing Abs in serum years to
    decline
  • Virus-specific, HLA-restricted cytotoxic T
    lymphos recovery
  • Complications myocarditis, severe myositis,
    myoglobinuria, encephalopathy, post-flu asthenia,
    Reyes
  • DX four-fold rise HI Ab titer
  • Prvn Vx killed Ags attenuated can get virus

35
  • Pneumonia
  • Inflam dz pulm parenchyma, bronchial, alveolar
    spaces, abnormal density CXR
  • Nearly 50 LRTI bact origin
  • Flu ? S. areus pneu
  • COPD ? pneumococci, H.flu
  • CF ? pseudomonas, staph
  • AIDS ? pneumocystis carinii

36
  • Acute Pneu
  • Common bact S.pneu, S.aureus, H.flu,
  • Mixed anearobe bacteroides, fusobacterium,
    peptostreptococus, peotococcus
  • Enterobacteriace E.coli, K.pneu, enterobacter
  • Kleb Pneu currant Jelly sputum, dark
  • Pseudomonas, legionella
  • Fungal Aspergillus, Candida, Coccidiodes,
    histoplasma capsulatum,
  • Viral Children RSV, Para, Flu-A adults Flu A,
    Flu B, adenovirus
  • Rickettsial coxiella burnetti, rickettsia
    rickettsia
  • PMNs acute infxn transtracheal aspiration dx,
    gram stain, mucopurulent spututm

37
  • Acute Community Acquired Pneumonia
  • 50s, winter, early spring,
  • 50-90
  • S. pneu
  • L. pneumophilia
  • H. flu
  • S. aureus
  • Aspiration Pneumonia
  • Altered conciousness, No gag/swallowing reflexes
  • Anaerobic bacteria 45-58
  • Aerobes, facultativess 41-46
  • Atypical Pneumonia walking pneu
  • Child gt 5yo, young adult
  • Mycoplasma most common cause
  • Others Para, EBV, RSV, Adeno, Coxiella (Q
    Fever), Chlam pneu, Chlam psittaci,
  • Chronic pneu weeks to months, infx agent,
    abnormal CXR
  • Elderly patient higher risk, DM, COPD,

38
  • Legionnaires Dz -1976 devastating outbreak
  • Discrete outbreaks or sporadic cases
  • Legionella pneumophilia
  • Fastidious, filamentous, flagellated gram
  • Parasitize ameobas, MPs, 9 serogroups, SG1
    clinical isolates
  • Inhalation aerosols contam w orgs, no
    person-person
  • Risk elderly, Chronic lung dz, malignant, renal
    failure
  • 2-10 d incub, 1 day prodrome myalgias, malaise,
    HA
  • Acute onset high fever, shaking chills, non-prod
    cough, pleuritic pain, Abdominal pain, vomiting,
    diarrhea
  • NO meningitis
  • Common CNS, GI, Renal
  • DX transtracheal aspriates, Ags in urine,
  • Indirect immunofluorescence anti-Leg Ab pt serum
    4x rise
  • TX erythromycin DOC
  • Hyperchlorination doesnt work, superheat and
    flush, no Vx

39
  • Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
  • 1993 Feltons first year New Mexico
  • Deer mice
  • Sin Nombre
  • Prior Korean hemorrhagic fever
  • Fever, hemorrhages, kidney failure
  • Febrile prodrome
  • Pulmonary edema, fluid in alveoli
  • Resp distress, hyptension, shock

40
  • Severe Acute Resp Syndrome (SARS)
  • Fever, resp illness, recent travel affected area,
    contact suspected SARS patient
  • 2003 originated China
  • 8100 infected/774 killed (9.5)
  • SARS-CoV, animal origin,
  • high fever
  • Cough
  • Resp distress w/ hypoxia
  • Diarrhea 10-20
  • Close person-person contact
  • Coughing, sneezing, contaminated objects
  • Serological test for SARS-CoV Abs
  • RT-PCR clinical specimens
  • Viral culture

41
  • Lung Abcesses/necrotizing pneu
  • PF, causative agents
  • Similar to Asp Pneu risks
  • Mixed anaerobic bac Fusobacterium nucleatum,
    Bacteroides melaninogenicus, peptostreptococci,
    microaerophilic strep
  • Cough present in all
  • Abcess drains in bronchial tree copious,
    foul-smelling sputum
  • Chest pain
  • DX examination of sputum

42
  • Empyema pus in pleural space
  • Prurulent inflam exudate pleural cavity, acute or
    chronic
  • Direct spread of bronchopulm infxn
  • Complication thoracic surgery
  • S. aureus most common, Pseud, Kleb pneu, E.coli
    next, mixed
  • Dx aspiration pleural fluid, gram stain
  • TX get pus out so Ab works

43
  • Tuberculosis (mostly Puentes)
  • 1980s - good control
  • 1990s rise immunocompromised, bad economy,
    lost control
  • By 2000 control again negative slope of curve
    when he got involved.
  • Active Cases TB 2002
  • LA County 1,025, 1/3
  • CA 3,169
  • US 15,075
  • Some states, only 30-40 cases

44
  • Goal of CDC for US 1/100,000. Right now
    5.6/100,000
  • CA 10/100,000. Max cases was 91-92.
  • LA 9 million goes towards TB. HIV 100
    million.
  • Race, ethnicity Asian, Latinos more cases.
  • know statistics of where you practice.
  • TB impacts all ages, both genders equally.
  • To measure control, look at young, look at old.
  • NBs under five - came out dz-free, was
    exposed,dev disease.
  • 2.5/5 will be over 55.
  • Middle aged most TB cases.
  • TB always in foreign born. About 2/3 of TB
    cases.
  • Ask when arrived important how?
  • Naturalization process helps screening.
  • Undocumented time of coming in is key
  • at risk of breaking down in two years.

45
  • Agents M.tb, M.bovis, M.africanum
  • M.tb obligate parasite
  • Aerobic, nonsporeforming, nonmotile bacillus
  • High lipid content
  • Resist to drying, acids, alkalis, NH4,
  • Slow growth 15-20 h generation
  • Sensitive UV light wont catch it outside
  • smears highly infxs
  • TB exposure TB infection latent or active?
  • 5-15 infected ? active dz
  • TB particle small enough to get into alveoli
    requires droplet nuclei 1-5microns in size.
    Small pox is small. Small is scary. Stay out of
    non-circulating air, or use mask.
  • Air-borne transmission, wont get from countertop
  • Droplet nuclei sneezing, couging speaking,
    singing, talk loud
  • Laryngeal TB who talks, TB who coughs
  • Exposure key one massive, chronic small

46
  • TB exposure leads to latency -
  • Targeted Tuberculin Testing Tine test no longer
    done (similar to smallpox vaccination, prongs)
    now we inject purified protein derivative,
    brought into tuberculin syringe, instill
    solution, subcutaneously intradermal.
  • Purpose of TARGETED testing
  • find person with LTBI who would benefit from tx
  • find person with TB dz who would benefit from TX
  • No routine test groups NOT high risk for TB
  • HCWs TX latent infxn bc stress increases risk
    of TB dz
  • homeless
  • malignancies TB test first thing you do
  • HIV
  • Latency treated with SINGLE drug
  • Dz txed with RIPE 4 drugs
  • Decision to test is decision to TREAT

47
  • TB people tested for LTBI
  • higher risk exposure/ infxn TB
  • close contacts with active TB
  • FB from area where TB common
  • Residents and employees of high-risk congregate
    settings dialysis units, jails, residents
  • HCWs who serve high-risk clients
  • Higher risk for TB disease once infected
  • HIV infection
  • recently infected with TB negative skin test
    with sx
  • medical conditions
  • inject illicit drugs
  • hx of inadequately txed with TB never finished
    tx

48
  • Who will become TB active
  • HIV big risk 76/100,000,
  • Silicosis 68/100,000 major problem, less now,
    due to laws protecting work force coal miners
  • CXR 2-13.6/100,000
  • DM 2-4/100,000 leads to immunodeficiency,
    dont activate Tcells places individual at risk
  • Gastrectomy 2-5 loss of acidity predisposes to
    TB swallowing phlegm good for you
  • Carcinoma of head or neck 16
  • Solid organ transplantation -
  • LTBI for HIV negative 5-15 LIFETIME
  • highest risk within 2 years.
  • HIV 8-10 latent to active PER YEAR
    important to screen for TB

49
  • Mantoux TB Test
  • .1 ml of 5TU PPD tuberculin
  • produce wheal 6mm to 10mm in diameter
  • UNIVERSAL PRCXNS DO NOT RE-CAP
  • Read 48-72 will stay positive 5-6 days.
  • Measure induration ONLY not erythema rubor,
    color, dolor, tumor(indurationwheal)
  • Anergy - probing IS to see if false
  • NOT DONE we only act on PST, not NST
  • Consider anergy HIV, overwhelming TB, severe or
    febrile, viral infections, live-virus infxs,
    immunosuppressive tx
  • Negative TST does not rule out dx of TB

50
  • Two steps in CA for positive LTBI dx
  • PST result gt or equal to 5mm
  • Regardless of age
  • HIV positive
  • Recent contacts of a TB case
  • Persons with fibrotic changes CXR consistent
    with old TB
  • Organ transplants immunocompromised host
  • PST equal or gt10
  • Recent arrivals
  • IV drug users
  • Children lt 4 or children and adolescents exposed
  • LTBI PST, NCXR, No SX
  • Person has to be susceptible host or massive
    expose

51
  • TB DZ worst case scenario
  • Think TB coughing blood, night sweats, fatigue,
    malaise, fever, persistent cough
  • Get med hx, listen for rales, wheezing,
    hoarseness, TST, lab ddx, CXR,
  • As dz progresses, granulomas on vocal cords.
  • TST useful only if POSITIVE.
  • NEGATIVE TEST DOES NOT EXCLUDE TB
  • negative TST with active dz due to weak IS.
  • LTBI PST, NCXR, No SX
  • W/ PST MUST R/O active B4 starting TX!!
  • LTBI just one Rx if active - RESISTANCE
  • Clinical presentation of pulm TB
  • Cough, prolonged gt3weeks, sputum productive later
    in course, pleuritic pain, hemoptysis
  • Systemic fever 65-85, chills, seats, fatigue,
    malaise, anorexia, weight loss
  • 10-20 patients ASx due to continuum

52
  • TX LTBI 9 months Isoniazid (INH)
  • 6-month regimen minimum immune-competent
  • HIV 9 months
  • NB 16-18years 9 month 270 doses in 12
    months
  • Cautionary word be careful
  • To shorten LBTI Rifampin and Pyrazinamide were
    used to shorten tx course no deaths or liver
    injuries, but have been reports of severe
    hepatitis.
  • CDC says to discontinue, limit to HIV, close
    supervision
  • If we find PST, we will treat, but we will
    exclude active dz with CXR.
  • Prior to TX LTBI, you get CXR, and if positive,
    you need to do something else.
  • Determine hx of tx for LTBI or dz

53
  • Try to prevent dissemination. Worst case
    scenario TB goes to brain FATAL.
  • Structures Potts dzbone TB, kidney, joints,
    lymph nodes.
  • Skin test will NOT induce CMI response. No
    memory cells produced.
  • CXR upper lobe, typically right. Dogma today
    exposed?latent?tx?lifelong immunity. BUT, with
    HIV , can lose immunity.
  • Once youve developed immune response, youre
    protected from developing active disease from
    further exposure.
  • Think of it as continuum.
  • Latent infection CXR???

54
  • M. tb classification
  • Runyon growth rate
  • I, II, III slow
  • IV fast
  • Pigment
  • I required light for color
  • II color w/o light
  • III less pigment, not hv related
  • M. avium farmers, silicosis, AIDS
  • M.scrofulaceum common LAis kids
  • M. kansasii most human mybocact
  • M. marinum swimming pool
  • M.fortuitum, M.chelonae fast growing
  • Diff from TB no human-human trx, more resistant
    to first line rx,
  • NST from M.tb

55
  • TB TX
  • LTBI TX w INH, 9 mos, most active vs TB
  • 6-month regimen minimum immune-competent
  • HIV 9 monhts
  • NB 16-18years 9 monht 270 doses in 12
    months
  • Cautionary word be careful
  • To shorten LBTI Rifampin, Pyrazinamide used
    shorten tx course no death, liver injuries, but
    reports of severe hepatitis.
  • CDC says to discontinue, limit to HIV, close
    supervision
  • TB difficult to TX
  • Slow growth, Abs better vs fast
  • Can lie dormant
  • Cell wall impermeable to most rx
  • Can be intracellular inside MPs
  • Develops resist to single rx tx lethal
  • Requires tx for gt 6 months

56
  • Isoniazid INH Iso-Nicotinic acid Hydraxzide
  • Single most active vs. TB
  • Effective vs intracell/extracell infx
  • MOA penetrates cell walls INH syn mycolic
    acid integral cs cell walls small amt for
    mycobacteria, large amts others
  • Mycolic acid acid fast
  • 1/106 mutations resistance
  • Hydrazine metab by acetylation - ½ people
    deficient
  • renal function toxic RX levels, also with
    hepatic insufficiency
  • SEFX
  • drug induced HEP can be fatal, age-dependent,
    more risk ROHism, preg, post-part
  • Peripheral neuritis slow acetylators, DM,
    malnourished
  • Pyridoxine deficiency rx forms cx, eliminates
    give vit b6
  • Rx-induced SLE reversible
  • Convulsions in epileptics
  • INH inhibits microsomal Rx metab increases
    levels/TOX other drugs Phenytoin,
    anticoagulants,

57
  • Rifampin deriv rifamycin B - streptomyces
  • Effective vs G, G- E.coli, Pseuds, proteus,
    kleb, N.men, H.flu, S.aureus, chlam,
  • MOA binds DNA-dep RNA pase inh init RNA
    synthesis
  • CIDAL vs mycobacteria vs intra/extracell
  • Excreted mainly thru bile enterohep recirc
  • Parent and metab both active
  • Do not give less 2 weeks flu-like sx
  • Red-orange urine, feces, saliva, sweat, tears
  • Can stain soft contacts
  • Cross resistance other rifamycins rifabutin
  • Rifamate with INH
  • SEFX rash, F, V, V, GI d/c, jaundice, rare
    fatal
  • Liver dz, ROHism, age increase risk ENZ
    inducer

58
  • Rifapentine
  • MOA same as rifampin
  • Inh initiation RNA synthesis
  • Cidal vs. intracell and extracellular
  • Parent and metab active
  • Use only with other agents

59
  • Ethambutol static
  • MOA inh syn arabino galatance
  • Enhances pene lipophillic Rifampin and
    fluoroquinolones
  • Disrupts intracell metab/ cell replic
  • 50 excreted urine
  • 50 hepatobiliary excretion
  • Adjust dose
  • Do not use alone
  • SEFX retrobulbur neuritis loss acuity,
    red-green color blind, revers w d/c

60
  • Streptomycin
  • Aminoglycoside - Sugar w amino group
  • Cant get inside extracell ONLY
  • Deep IM pain, hot tender masses
  • MOA cidal
  • Block init protein synthesis
  • Can cause misreading
  • Faulty proteins insert into cell membrane,
    alter perm, increase RX transport into cell,
    leakage cell death
  • Resistance common in hospitals
  • SEFX (all aminoglycosides)
  • Ototoxic vestibular 20 - IRREV
  • Nephrotoxic 8-36 - reversible
  • Adjust dose renal fxn, optic nerve damage

61
  • Pyrazinamide cidal
  • Prodrug metab to pyrazinoic acid
  • Not effective neutral ph intracell only
  • MPs low pH
  • MOA UK
  • SEFX HEP-TOX, NVF, hyperuricemia

62
  • Alternative 2nd line agents
  • Less effective, more SEFX
  • Ethionamide inh mycolic acid syn (INH)
  • Paraaminosalicylic Acid (PAS) static
  • MOA competes with PABA no folate syn
  • Humans dont make folate get from diet
  • SEFX 10-30 - anorexia, NVD, epigastric pain,
    abdominal distress, fever, malaise, joint pain
  • Cycloserine inh alanine racemase
  • No l-alanine to d-alanine
  • ??CNS TOX HA, tremors, psychoses, conv
  • Not with streptomycin
  • Kanymcin, Amikacin aminoglycosides
  • Amikacin less toxic, low resist, same sefx
    oto/nephroTOX

63
  • 2nd lines TB
  • Capreomycin IM only PAIN!
  • Oto/nephro TOX, not with streptomycin
  • Ciprofloxasin fluoroquinolone cidal
  • Cartilage damage
  • Ofloxacin DNA gyrase inh
  • DNA gyrase inh like topoisomerase
  • Inhibits rejoining strand scission
  • Sefx N, HA, dizziness, rash

64
  • Rxs MAC - M.avium, M.intracellularis
  • pulm infxn similar to TB, elderly pre-exist dz
  • 15-40 AIDS disseminated
  • Most common cause systemic bact infxn
  • Rifabutin prvn dissem MAC advance HIV
  • MOA same as rifampin
  • Clarithromycin macrolide, pene tissue, BS
  • Azithromycin same, inc stability,
  • MOA inh transloc tRNA from acceptor to donor
    ribos.
  • Cipro - fluoroquinolone
  • Pentamidine
  • prophylaxis, TX Pneu carinii AIDS pneu
  • MOA inh topoisomerase
  • SEFX TOX in tx dose, hist release SOB,
    tachycard, HA, V, dizziness, fainting,
    pancreatitis, hyp/hyper glycemia, nephroTOX,
    thrombocytopenia, neutropenia aerosol cough,
    bronchospasms HIV patients
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