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Diseases of Cardiovacular and Lymphatic Systems

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Title: Diseases of Cardiovacular and Lymphatic Systems


1
Diseases of Cardiovacular and Lymphatic Systems
2
Sepsis
  • Septicemia, bacteremia, bacteria in the
  • blood
  • 500M cases in United States/annum
  • 25 mortality rate
  • 10 of patients with sepsis die of
  • underlying disease or comorbidity
  • 13th leading cause of death in the United
  • States
  • Cost 5-10 billion in annual healthcare
  • expenditures

3
Sepsis
4
Sepsis
  • 50 of all cases of sepsis are caused by gram
    negative rods
  • other etiologies include
  • CNS
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Enterococcus sp
  • Fungi (yeast)
  • The numbers of sepsis are predicted to
  • increase
  • larger numbers of immunocompromised patients
  • more frequent use of invasive procedures or
    devices
  • greater availability of life-sustaining
    technology
  • higher infection rates of antibiotic resistant
    bacteria
  • increase proportion of patients at the extremes
    of age

5
Bacterial Sepsis
  • Among hospitalized in non-coronary intensive
  • care units, sepsis has been reported to be the
  • most common cause of death.
  • The term systemic inflammatory response
  • syndrome (SIRS)was developed to imply a
  • clinical response from a non-specific etiology.
  • SIRS is defined as two or more of the following
  • temperature above 38 C or below 36 C
  • heart rate above 90 beats/minute
  • respiratory rate above 20/minute P CO2 less than
    32 mm Hg
  • white blood count above 12M or below 4M
    cells/mm3
  • presence of more than 10 immature neutrophils

6
Gas Gangrene
  • A severe form of gangrene (tissue
  • death) usually caused by Clostridium
  • perfringens (see also necrotizing
  • subcutaneous infection). It can also be
  • from Group A Streptococcus.
  • Staphlyococcus aureus and Vibrio
  • vulnificus can also cause similar
  • infections.
  • Gas gangrene occurs as a result of
  • infection by Clostridium bacteria.
  • Under anaerobic (low oxygen)
  • conditions, produce toxins that cause
  • the tissue death and associated
  • symptoms.

7
Gas Gangrene
  • Gas gangrene generally occurs
  • at the site of trauma or a recent
  • surgical wound.
  • Symptoms   
  • moderate to severe pain around a skin injury
  • progressive swelling around a skin injury
  • moderate to high fever
  • skin color initially pale, later dusky
    progressing to dark red or purple
  • Vesicle (blister) formation, coalescent (combine
    into large blisters)
  • blisters filled with brown-red fluid
  • drainage from the tissues, foul-smelling
    brown-red or bloody fluid (serosanguineous
    discharge)
  • increased heart rate (tachycardia)
  • sweating
  • subcutaneous emphysema (air under the skin)

8
Gas Gangrene
  • Treatment   
  • Prompt surgical removal of dead, damaged, and
    infected tissue (debridement) is necessary.
    Amputation of an arm or leg may be indicated to
    control the spread of infection.
  • Antibiotics, preferably penicillin-type, should
    be given. Initially, this is given intravenously
    (through a vein). Analgesics may be required to
    control pain. Hyperbaric oxygen has been tried
    with varying degrees of success.
  • Hyperbaric treatment
  • Prognosis   
  • Gas gangrene is progressive and often lethal.
    Immediate medical attention is required.

9
Plague
  • Yersina pestis is the causative
  • agent.
  • Three clinical manifestations
  • Pneumonic
  • Septicemic
  • Bubonic
  • In early stages of bubonic there is
  • fever, delirium, and swelling of
  • lymph nodes. Septicemia develops
  • and cause hemorragic blackened
  • lesion therefore black death

10
Plague
  • Plague is transmitted among
  • rodents and to humans by flea bite
  • or ingestion of the feces of fleas.
  • It can also be transmitted human
  • to human when a plague victim
  • develops pneumonia and spreads
  • infected droplets by coughing.
  • An epidemic may be started this
  • way.

11
Plague
  • Symptoms 
  •   
  • Sudden onset of high fever
  • Chills
  • General discomfort, uneasiness, or ill feeling
    (malaise)
  • Muscular pains
  • Severe headache
  • Smooth, oval, reddened, painful swellings of
    swollen lymph glands called buboes in the groin,
    armpits, neck, or elsewhere in the body. Pain may
    occur in the area before the swelling the most
    common area is in the groin
  • Seizures

12
Plague
  • Treatment   
  • Immediate treatment with antibiotics such as
    streptomycin, chloramphenicol, or tetracycline is
    indicated. Oxygen, intravenous fluids, and
    respiratory support are additional treatments.
  • Patients with pneumonic plague are strictly
    isolated from other patients.
  • People who have had contact with anyone infected
    by pneumonic plague are observed closely and are
    given antibiotics as a preventive measure.

13
Plague
  • Prognosis   
  • Half of bubonic plague victims die if not
    treated, and almost all victims of pneumonic
    plague die if not treated. Treatment reduces the
    death rate to 5

14
Art Appreciation
15
Art Appreciation
16
Lyme Disease
  • Borrelia burgdorferi is a species of Gram
    negative
  • bacteria of the spirochete class of the genus
  • Borrelia. B. burgdorferi is predominant in North
  • America, but also exists in Europe, and
  • is the agent of Lyme disease.
  • It is a zoonotic, vector-borne disease
    transmitted
  • by ticks and is named after the researcher Willy
  • Burgdorfer who first isolated the bacterium in
  • 1982.
  • B. burgdorferi is one of the few pathogenic
  • bacteria that can survive without iron, having
  • replaced all of its iron-sulfur cluster enzymes
    with
  • enzymes that use manganese, thus avoiding the
  • problem many pathogenic bacteria face in
  • acquiring iron.

17
Lyme Disease
  • Borrelia burgdorferi infections have been
  • linked to non-Hodgkin lymphomas.
  • Lyme disease is diagnosed based on
  • symptoms, objective physical findings
  • (such as erythema migrans, facial palsy,
  • or arthritis), and a history of possible
  • exposure to ticks. Validated laboratory
  • tests can be very helpful but are not
  • generally recommended when a patient
  • has erythema migrans.

18
Lyme Disease
  • The Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia
  • burgdorferi, normally lives in mice,
  • squirrels and other small animals.
  • It is transmitted among these animals
  • and to humans through the bites of
  • certain species of ticks. In the
  • northeastern and north-central
  • United States, the black-legged tick
  • (or deer tick, Ixodes scapularis)
  • transmits Lyme disease.

19
Lyme Disease
  • Antibiotics commonly used for oral treatment
  • include doxycycline, amoxicillin, or cefuroxime
  • axetil. Patients with certain neurological or
  • cardiac forms of illness may require intravenous
  • treatment with drugs such as ceftriaxone or
  • penicillin.
  • Patients treated with antibiotics in the early
    stages
  • of the infection usually recover rapidly and
  • completely.
  • A few patients, particularly those diagnosed with
  • later stages of disease, may have persistent or
  • recurrent symptoms.
  • Scientists have concluded that longer courses of
  • antibiotic treatment are not beneficial.

20
Brucellosis
  • Brucellosis is an infectious disease caused
  • by the bacteria of the genus Brucella.
  • These bacteria are primarily passed among
  • animals, and they cause disease in many
  • different vertebrates.
  • Various Brucella species affect sheep, goats,
  • cattle, deer, elk, pigs, dogs, and several other
  • animals.
  • Humans become infected by coming in contact
  • with animals or animal products that are
  • contaminated with these bacteria.

21
Brucellosis
  • In humans brucellosis can cause a range of
  • symptoms that are similar to the flu and may
  • include fever, sweats, headaches, back pains, and
  • physical weakness.
  • Also known as undulating fever (higher at night),
  • muscle aches, enlarged spleen and lymph nodes
  • Severe infections of the central nervous systems
  • or lining of the heart may occur. Brucellosis can
  • also cause long-lasting or chronic symptoms that
  • include recurrent fevers, joint pain, and
    fatigue.

22
Brucellosis
  • Mainly an infection of livestock.
  • Human cases are reported as
  • 60 butchers, meat packers
  • 30 ranchers and hunters
  • 10 people who consume unpasteurized dairy
    products

23
Brucellosis
  • Brucellosis is diagnosed in a
  • laboratory by finding Brucella
  • organisms in samples of
  • blood or bone marrow.
  • Also, blood tests can be done to
  • detect antibodies against the
  • bacteria.
  • If this method is used, two blood
  • samples should be collected 2 weeks
  • apart.

24
Brucellosis
  • Treatment can be difficult. Doctors can
  • prescribe effective antibiotics.
  • Usually, doxycycline and rifampin are used
  • in combination for 6 weeks to prevent
  • reoccuring infection.
  • Depending on the timing of treatment and
  • severity of illness, recovery may take a few
  • weeks to several months.
  • Mortality is low (lt2), and is usually associated
  • with endocarditis.

25
Tularemia
  • Francisella tularensis, the organism
  • that causes tularemia, is one of the
  • most infectious pathogenic
  • bacteria known, requiring
  • inoculation or inhalation of as few
  • as 10 organisms to cause disease.
  • It is considered to be a dangerous
  • potential biological weapon because of
  • its extreme infectivity, ease of
  • dissemination, and substantial capacity
  • to cause illness and death.
  • Francisella tularensis is a hardy non-
  • spore forming organism that is capable
  • of surviving for weeks at low
  • temperatures in water, moist soil, hay,
  • straw or decaying animal carcasses.

26
Tularemia
  • Tularemia is a zoonosis. Natural reservoirs
  • include small mammals such as voles,
  • mice, water rats, squirrels, rabbits and
  • hares.
  • Naturally acquired human infection occurs
  • through a variety of mechanisms such as
  • bites of infected arthropods handling
  • infectious animal tissues or fluids direct
  • contact or ingestion of contaminated
  • water, food, or soil and inhalation of
  • infective aerosols.

27
Tularemia
  • F. tularensis is so infective that examining an
    open culture plate can cause infection.
  • Humans can contract tularemia in the following
    ways
  • direct contact with an infected animal or carcass
    via broken skin
  • the bite of an infected flea, deer fly, or tick
  • ingesting infected meat (rare)

28
Tularemia Sx
  •  
  • red spot on the skin, enlarging to an ulcer
  • enlarged lymph nodes of groin or armpits
  • headache
  • muscle pains
  • possible conjunctivitis
  • shortness of breath
  • fever
  • chills
  • sweating
  • weight loss
  • joint stiffness

29
Tularemia Tx
  •  
  • The goal of treatment is to eliminate the
    infection with antibiotic therapy. Streptomycin
    and tetracycline are commonly used in this
    infection.
  • Tularemia is fatal in about 5 of untreated cases
    and in less than 1 with treatment.
  • Complications   
  • meningitis
  • pneumonia
  • pericarditis

30
Cat-Scratch Disease
  • Cat scratch disease is an infectious illness
    caused by the bacteria Bartonella, believed to be
    transmitted by cat scratches, bites, or exposure
    to cat saliva.
  • More than 40,000 cases occur annually in the US

31
Cat-Scratch Disease
  • Symptoms   
  • A history of contact with a cat
  • Papule or pustule at site of injury
    (inoculation), usually the first sign
  • Swelling of the lymph nodes (adenopathy) occurs
    in the area near where the skin was infected
    (bitten, scratched, etc.)
  • Fever in approximately one third of patients
  • Fatigue
  • Malaise
  • Headache

32
Cat-Scratch Disease
  • Treatment   
  • Generally, cat scratch disease is not serious.
    Treatment, other than reassurance, is not usually
    recommended. However, in severe cases treatment
    with antibiotics can be helpful.

33
Typhus
  • Typhus is a rickettsial disease caused by one of
    two organisms, Rickettsia prowazekii (epidemic
    typhus and Brill disease) and Rickettsia typhi
    (murine or endemic typhus). Epidemic typhus and
    Brill disease are uncommon in the United States.
  • Murine typhus occurs in the southeastern and
    southern states. There are less than 100 cases
    per year. Murine typhus is a milder form and is
    seldom fatal (less than 2).
  • It is frequently seen in the summer and fall and
    typically lasts two to three weeks. Risk factors
    for murine typhus include exposure to rat fleas
    or rat feces, or exposure to other animals (such
    as cats, opossums, raccoons, skunks, and rats).

34
Typhus
  • Epidemic typhus occurs in poor hygienic
    conditions (which is why it is sometimes called
    "jail fever"), usually when the temperature is
    cold.
  • It is spread by lice. Although very rare in the
    United States, it has sometimes been spread by
    the lice and fleas of flying squirrels.

35
Symptoms Of Epidemic Typhus
  • severe headache
  • fever, high (104 degrees Fahrenheit)
  • cough in 70 of patients
  • arthralgia and myalgia, (muscle pain) severe
  • chills
  • falling blood pressure
  • stupor
  • delirium
  • rash that begins on chest and spreads to rest of
    trunk and extremities, but not to palms and soles
  • early rash is faint and rose colored and fades
    with pressure (Later the lesions become dull,
    red, and do not fade. People with severe typhus
    may also develop petechiae.)
  • lights appear very bright, and exposure to light
    may hurt the eyes

36
Typhus Treatment
  • Treatment   
  • The goal of treatment is to eliminate the
    infection and to treat the symptoms with
    antibiotics (such as tetracycline, doxycycline,
    or chloramphenicol). For epidemic typhus,
    intravenous fluids and oxygen may be necessary to
    help stabilize the patient.
  • Prognosis   
  • Without treatment death may occur in 10 to 60 of
    patients with epidemic typhus. Patients over the
    age of 60 have the highest risk of death. With
    timely antibiotic therapy, the affected person is
    expected to recover completely.
  • Less than 2 of untreated patients with murine
    typhus may die, and appropriate antibiotic
    therapy will cure virtually all patients.

37
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
  • An infectious disease caused
  • by Rickettsia rickettsii
  • transmitted to humans by the
  • bite of ticks.
  • Symptoms   
  • fever
  • chills
  • incubation period of 2 to 14 days
  • severe headache
  • muscle pain
  • mental confusion
  • rash, first appearing on wrists and ankles, then
    spreading to most of the body, usually starts a
    few days after fever starts up to 20 of people
    do not get a rash

38
Chagas Disease
  • Chagas disease is caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, a
    parasite related to the African trypanosome that
    causes sleeping sickness.
  • It is spread by reduvid bugs and is one of the
    major health problems in South America, where 20
    million people are infected.
  • Due to immigration, approximately 500,000 people
    in the United States are believed to be infected.

39
Chagas Disease
  • Chagas disease has two phases acute and
    chronic. The acute phase may have no symptoms or
    have very mild symptoms. Symptoms of the acute
    phase include swelling and reddening at the site
    of infection (where the blood-sucking insect
    caused the initial infection).
  • This may be followed by swelling of one eye.
    Lymph nodes that drain the area of the insect
    bite may become swollen. As the parasite spreads
    from the bite site, the patient develops fever,
    malaise, and generalized swelling of the lymph
    nodes. The liver and spleen may become enlarged.
  • The disease goes into remission after the acute
    phase and may become chronic with no further
    symptoms for many years. When symptoms finally
    develop, they appear as cardiac disease
    (cardiomyopathy) and digestive abnormalities.

40
Chagas Disease
  • Patients may develop
  • congestive heart failure.
  • Swallowing difficulties may
  • be the first symptom of
  • digestive disturbances and
  • may lead to malnutrition.
  • Patients who have parasitic
  • infection of the colon may
  • experience abdominal pain and
  • constipation. Death is usually
  • caused by heart disease.

41
Chagas Disease Sx
  •   
  • history of exposure in an area where Chagas
    disease is known to occur
  • swollen red area at site of previous insect bite
  • enlarged lymph nodes
  • swelling of one eye
  • fever
  • irregular heartbeat (arrhythmia)
  • rapid heartbeat (tachycardia)
  • swallowing difficulties

42
Chagas Disease
  • Treatment   
  • The acute phase should be treated. Benznidazole
    has been shown to be effective. Experimental
    treatment may include nifurtimox. Treating the
    chronic phase with antibiotics is not helpful.
    Instead, the symptoms of heart and intestinal
    disease should be treated.
  • Prognosis   
  • Approximately 30 of infected and untreated
    people will develop chronic or symptomatic Chagas
    disease. It may take more than twenty years from
    the time of the original infection to develop
    heart or digestive problems.
  • Abnormal heart rhythms (arrythmias, ventricular
    tachycardia) may cause sudden death. Once
    congestive heart failure develops, death usually
    occurs within several years.

43
Leishmaniasis
  • Leishmania are tiny protozoa. Their
  • parasitic life cycle includes the
  • sandfly and an appropriate host.
  • Humans are one of those hosts.
  • Leishmania infection can cause
  • skin disease (called cutaneous
  • leishmaniasis).
  • It can affect the mucous membranes
  • with a wide range of appearance, most
  • frequently ulcers. It may cause skin
  • lesions that resemble those of other
  • diseases including cutaneous
  • tuberculosis, syphilis, leprosy, skin
  • cancer (basal cell carcinoma), and
  • fungus infections.

44
Leishmaniasis
  • Symptoms   
  • history of exposure to the bite of sandflies
  • history in being in an area known for
    leishmaniasis
  • Systemic illness (visceral leishmaniasis)
  • fever, persistent, long duration (weeks), may
    cycle irregularly
  • night sweats
  • fatigue
  • weakness
  • appetite loss (anorexia)
  • weight loss
  • abdominal discomfort, vague
  • vomiting (children)
  • diarrhea (children)
  • cough (children)
  • skin, scaly
  • skin, gray, dark, ashen
  • hair, thinning

45
Leishmaniasis
  • Skin disease (cutaneous leishmaniasis) Symptoms
    on the skin include
  • macule or papule, erythematous
  • skin ulcer, forms at site of original lesion
  • ulcer heals very slowly over a matter of months
  • smaller lesions may form around the ulcer
    (satellite lesions)

46
Leishmaniasis
  • Treatment   
  • Antimony-containing compounds are the principal
    medications used to treat leishmaniasis. These
    include
  • meglumine antimonate
  • sodium stibogluconate
  • Other drugs that may be used include
  • pentamidine
  • amphotericin B
  • Miltefosine
  • Plastic surgery may be required to correct
    disfigurement by destructive facial lesions
    (mucocutaneous leishmaniasis). Removal of the
    spleen (splenectomy) may be required in
    drug-resistant cases (visceral leishmaniasis).

47
Schistosomiasis
  • Causes and risks   
  • Schistosoma infections are contracted through
    contact with contaminated water. The parasite in
    its infective stages is called a cercaria. It
    swims freely in open bodies of water.
  • On contact with humans, the parasite burrows into
    the skin, matures into another larval stage
    (schistosomula), then migrates to the lungs and
    liver (where it matures into the adult form).
  • The adult worm then migrates to the anatomic area
    of its preference, depending on which species is
    involved. Likely areas include the bladder,
    rectum, intestines, liver, portal venous system,
    spleen, and lungs.
  • Schistosomiasis is not usually found in the
    United States. However, it is prevalent in many
    tropical or subtropical areas, and it is a common
    illness thought to affect more than 200 million
    people.

48
Schistosomiasis
  • Symptoms   
  • Symptoms vary with the species of worm and the
    phase of infection.
  • Initial invasion of the skin may cause itching
    and a rash (swimmer's itch).
  • Heavy infestation may cause fever, chills, lymph
    node enlargement, and liver and spleen
    enlargement.
  • Urinary symptoms may include frequency, painful
    urination (dysuria), and blood in urine
    (hematuria).
  • Intestinal symptoms include abdominal pain and
    diarrhea (which may be bloody).

49
Schistosomiasis
  • Treatment   
  • Praziquantel
  • With acute infection, corticosteroids may be
    given
  • Prognosis   
  • Treatment before significant damage or severe
    complications usually produces good results.

50
Toxoplasmosis
  • Toxoplasmosis is caused by the protozoan parasite
    Toxoplasma gondii. In the United States it is
    estimated that 22.5 of the population 12 years
    and older have been infected with Toxoplasma.
  • In various places throughout the world, it has
    been shown that up to 95 of some populations
    have been infected with Toxoplasma. Infection is
    often highest in areas of the world that have
    hot, humid climates and lower altitudes.

51
Toxoplasmosis
  • Toxoplasmosis is not passed from
    person-to-person, except in instances of
    mother-to-child (congenital) transmission and
    blood transfusion or organ transplantation.
    People typically become infected by three
    principal routes of transmission.

52
Toxoplasmosis
  • Foodborne transmission
  • The tissue form of the parasite (a microscopic
    cyst consisting of bradyzoites) can be
    transmitted to humans by food. People become
    infected by
  • Eating undercooked, contaminated meat (especially
    pork, lamb, and venison)
  • Accidental ingestion of undercooked, contaminated
    meat after handling it and not washing hands
    thoroughly (Toxoplasma cannot be absorbed through
    intact skin)
  • Eating food that was contaminated by knives,
    utensils, cutting boards, or other foods that had
    contact with raw, contaminated meat

53
Toxoplasmosis
  • Cats play an important role in the spread of
    toxoplasmosis. They become infected by eating
    infected rodents, birds, or other small animals.
    The parasite is then passed in the cat's feces in
    an oocyst form, which is microscopic.
  • Kittens and cats can shed millions of oocysts in
    their feces for as long as 3 weeks after
    infection. Mature cats are less likely to shed
    Toxoplasma if they have been previously infected.
    A Toxoplasma-infected cat that is shedding the
    parasite in its feces contaminates the litter
    box. If the cat is allowed outside, it can
    contaminate the soil or water in the environment
    as well.
  • People can accidentally swallow the oocyst form
    of the parasite. People can be infected by
  • Accidental ingestion of oocysts after cleaning a
    cat's litter box when the cat has shed Toxoplasma
    in its feces
  • Accidental ingestion of oocysts after touching or
    ingesting anything that has come into contact
    with a cat's feces that contain Toxoplasma
  • Accidental ingestion of oocysts in contaminated
    soil (e.g., not washing hands after gardening or
    eating unwashed fruits or vegetables from a
    garden)
  • Drinking water contaminated with the Toxoplasma
    parasite

54
Toxoplasmosis
  • People can accidentally swallow the
  • oocyst form of the parasite. People
  • can be infected by
  • Accidental ingestion of oocysts after cleaning a
    cat's litter box when the cat has shed Toxoplasma
    in its feces
  • Accidental ingestion of oocysts after touching or
    ingesting anything that has come into contact
    with a cat's feces that contain Toxoplasma
  • Accidental ingestion of oocysts in contaminated
    soil (e.g., not washing hands after gardening or
    eating unwashed fruits or vegetables from a
    garden)
  • Drinking water contaminated with the Toxoplasma
    parasite

55
Toxoplasmosis
  • Most healthy people recover from toxoplasmosis
    without treatment. Persons who are ill can be
    treated with a combination of drugs such as
    pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine, plus folinic
    acid.
  • Pregnant women, newborns, and infants can be
    treated, although the parasite is not eliminated
    completely. The parasites can remain within
    tissue cells in a less active phase their
    location makes it difficult for the medication to
    completely eliminate them.

56
Toxoplasmosis
  • Persons with ocular toxoplasmosis are sometimes
    prescribed medicine to treat active disease by
    their ophthalmologist. Whether or not medication
    is recommended depends on the size of the eye
    lesion, the location, and the characteristics of
    the lesion (acute active, versus chronic not
    progressing).
  • Persons with compromised immune systems need to
    be treated until they have improvement in their
    condition. For AIDS patients, continuation of
    medication for the rest of their lives may be
    necessary, or for as long as they are
    immunosuppressed.

57
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