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Influenza
» influenza is a negative-sense ssRNA virus with an envelope » A, B, C core types + H_N_ subtypes that undergo antigenic shift (reinfection) and drift (pandemic) » epithelial slough and damage unleashes secondary bacterial pneumonia
inhalation or contact with infected individual/contaminated object
negative ssRNA viral invasion of respiratory epithelia
epithelial apoptosis, necrosis, and sloughing
symptoms depend on age and secondary bacterial invasion
adults: fever, myalgia, fatigue
children: flu symptoms + increased GI issues
old and young: secondary bacterial pneumonia due to epithelial damage
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Polio picornavirus
» polio is a picornavirus » aseptic meningitis and poliomyelitis
oral ingestion and cellular entry via endocytosis
primary replication in lymphatic organs
lymphatic, hematogenous, and neural spread
secondary replication in motor neurons
primary replication: nonspecific flu-like sickness
lymph, blood, neural spread: aseptic meningitis
secondary replication: paralytic poliomyelitis
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Streptococcus Group B
» vagina-colonizing S. galactiae in pregnant women » FATAL pneumonia, sepsis, and meningitis in newborns
colonize vagina in pregnant individuals
bacterial passage through placenta or birth canal
migration to infant lungs without immune defense
symptoms vary by adult v. newborn
adult: mild illness symptoms
newborn: pneumonia, sepsis, meningitis
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Streptococcus Group A
» spread through infectious physical contact with secretions or lesions » scarlet fever, necrotizing fasciitis, multi-inflammatory rheumatic fever
contact with secretions or wounds of infected individual
superficial invasion to local tissue
with mucosal breakage, deep invasion to sterile sites
symptoms depend on depth of invasion and immune hypersensitivity
superficial invasion: cellulitis with fever (erysipelas), scarlet fever with strawberry tongue
deep, sterile invasion: necrotizing fasciitis, streptococcal toxic shock
immune hypersensitivity: cardiac/neural/joint rheumatic fever, acute glomerulonephritis
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Actinomyces
» occurs in men with poor dentition and anyone whose mucosal lining breaks » slow, aggressive invasion with sulfur granule drain
invades from endogenous mouth flora into mucosal breakages in any epithelial lining
slow, aggressive invasion, often polymicrobial
longstanding chronic lesions become hard, wooden, and sulfur granule-draining
symptoms occur in anyone with mucosal lining breakage
mouth mucosal breakage: "lumpy jaw" in submandibular region
thoracic mucosal breakage: chronic pneumonia or lung mass
abdominal/pelvic mucosal breakage: most aggressive progression; right ovary-targeted
IUD-mediated mucosal breakage: targets either ovary equally
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Nocardia
» found in soil and plant matter, not humans » pulmonary nocardiosis: necrotizing pneumonia and lung mass in T-cell immunocompromised individuals
inhalation from environment (not humans!)
intracellular transfer from cell to cell
dissemination to lung and CNS
multi-organ symptoms appear in T-cell immunocompromised individuals
pulmonary nocardiosis: necrotizing pneumonia and lung mass
CNS nocardiosis: brain abscess that progresses to hemiparesis and even coma
other: skin, kidney | endocarditis | mycetoma of the foot (Madura foot)
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Listeria monocytogenes
» contaminates processed meats, dairy products, soil » produces granulomatosis infantisepticum in infants » atypical meningitis and sepsis in T-cell-immunocompromised individuals
transmitted by ingestion into GI tract
intracellular actin filopod transfer from cell to cell
hematogenous dissemination with CNS and placental preference
symptoms depend on patient's immune system strength
fetus: disseminated multi-organ disease
immunocompromised: atypical sepsis and meningitis
healthy: mild fever, chills, back pain
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Echinococcus (hydatid cyst disease)
hydatid cyst disease
transmitted through exposure to dog feces
intermediate host: humans
other hosts: dogs, sheep, cattle
clinical manifestations: large, fluid-filled sacs in brain, lung, liver
treatment: albenazole
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Hookworm
anemia
transmission: skin invasion
clinical manifestations: anemia, pulmonary opacity, anorexia, abdominal pain, diarrhea
diagnosis: stool microscopy
treatment: albendazole
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Strongyloidiasis
autoinfection
Gram- bacterial pneumonia
transmission: skin invasion from soil
clinical manifestations: pneumonia Gram- superinfection, GI tract
pathogenesis: fecal-oral auto infection route » co-infection with Gram- bacterial pneumonia hosted by the worm
diagnosis: clinical presentation, eosinophilia, stool parasite
treatment: ivermectin
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Schistosomiasis
fluke in contaminated water
snail involvement in life cycle
transmission: swimming in contaminated water
clinical manifestation: swimmer's itch, Katayama fever
severe complications: cirrhosis and portal vein damage
treatment: praziquantel
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Onchocerciasias
"river blindness"
endemic to Africa
transmission: black fly bite
pathogenesis: connective tissue invasion
diagnosis: skin snips, lymph nodule biopsy
treatment: ivermectin to reduce mazzotti reaction
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Taenia solium
cysticercosis with egg ingestion only
humans are intermediate AND definitive hosts
intermediate host: pigs, sheep, dogs, cats
definitive host: humans
diagnosis: stool exam or systemic radiography
treatment: albendazole (blocks microtubule assembly via tubular binding)
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[listeria, nocardia, actinomyces notes]
Rare, but interesting pathogenesis
Listeria monocytogenes
Characteristics
Gram-positive/gram-variable
pleomorphic bacillus rod/coccus
grows at cold temperatures
catalase+, oxidase-
Pathogenesis
ingestion » entry into human tissue in GI
GI co-infection may be required for intestinal wall crossing
hematogenous dissemination » preference for placenta and CNS
intracellular invasion » intracellular actin filopod rappelling into the next cell
Clinical manifestations
[adult] mild chills, fever, back pain
[untreated immunocompromised adult] milder/atypical meningitis and sepsis
[fetus] fatal disseminated multi-organ disease with granulomatosis infantisepticum and abscesses
Risk factors
contaminated processed meats, dairy and soft cheeses, vegetables and soil, dust
cantaloupe outbreak in 2011 with two brothers' arrest
age
immunocompromised, specifically T-cell mediated immunodeficiency
pregnancy (lowered T-cell immunodeficiency)
liver diseases with iron overload that listeria can scavenge
Treatment
ampicillin
gentamicin – toxic antibiotic :(
Nocardia
Characteristics
delicate, beaded filaments
weakly acid-fast staining, light orange cultures
catalase+ and super-oxide dismutase
Pathogenesis
inhalation and dissemination into lung and CNS
Clinical manifestations
[lung] acute/chronic pulmonary nocardiosis that can manifest as necrotizing pneumonia and cancer-like mass in lung
[CNS] brain abscess that looks like a tumor, hemiparesis and coma
[other sites] skin, kidney, endocarditis
contributor to mycetoma of the foot (Madura foot) that can be caused by many different species
Risk factors
soil and plant matter aerosol contact
immunocompromised, specifically T-cell immunodeficiency
chronic respiratory diseases
substance users
Treatment
Longer, CNS-penetrating antibiotics for CNS-nocardiosis
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (bactram)
carbapenems
3rd generation cephalosporins
Actinomyces
Characteristics
anaerobic with bad scent
endogenous mouth flora that has tooth-like colonies
Pathogenesis
mechanical disruption of the mucosal barrier in ALL patient populations
slow, aggressive invasion of facial planes
polymicrobial infections with multiple microbes alongside it
soft lesions that turn fibrous and woody, eventually draining sulfur granules
Clinical manifestations
[cervicofacial] acute mass that progresses and disrupts facial planes ("lumpy jaw" in submandibular region)
[thoracic] chronic pneumonia or mass
[abdominal] slow, aggressive
[pelvic] if natural breakage » right ovary focus. if IUD: equal likelihood of either ovary focus
[CNS] brain abscess, meningitis
Risk factors
male gender
poor dentition
procedures that break the oral mucosal barrier
procedures that break other mucosal barriers
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[streptococci notes]
Streptococcus Group A (S. pyogenes)
Mild strep throat and skin infections (impetigo, cellulitis)
rapid, streaky cellulitis
erysipelas – cellulitis with fever & toxicity
scarlet fever – raised tongue papule and pharyngitis
Invasion to sterile sites with mucosal barrier breakage » severe disease
necrotizing fasciitis
streptococcal toxic shock syndrome
Immune hypersensitivity develops after infection
rheumatic fever: strep antibodies attack cardiac, joint, and neural tissue » incidence is going down now
rheumatic heart disease occurs as chronic sickness
acute glomerulonephritis: antibody-strep complexes cluster and deposit in kidney
Risk factors
symptomatic transmission only, peaks in winter and spring
immunocompromised/chronic illness
age
skin lesions
substance users
Treatment
penicillin-, erythromycin-, and clindamycin-susceptible
severe infections: penicillin and clindamycin that interrupts protein synthesis (lowers TOXIN synthesis)
amputate necrotizing fasciitis sites
Streptococcus Group B (S. agalactiae)
Pneumonia, sepsis, and meningitis in newborns
vaginal colonies in women that are passed to newborn lungs via placental penetration
OR vaginal colonies passed to infant in birth canal
infants have poor immune protection and develop severe symptoms above
Treatment
prophylaxis for pregnant women who test positive
treatment for pregnant women who present with symptoms
ampicillin + aminoglycosides for infected newborns
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Gram-positive, lancet-shaped diplococcus with lance-tip, alternative-pathway-blocking capsule
Pneumonia, bacteremia, sepsis, and meningitis in adults
abrupt onset pneumonia with coughing and rusty sputum
pleuritic chest pain
Most common cause of otitis media in children
Risk factors:
transmission from person to person in the winter
age
crowding
acute viral infections
chronic respiratory diseases (asthma, COPD, sickle-cell anemia, spleen loss)
aspiration-causing events
neutropenia, lymphopenia
Treatment
[archaic] horse serum antibodies when alternative pathway isn't responding due to S. pneumoniae capsule
PCV15/20 vaccination with capsule in adults
PCV13 vaccination with conjugated carrier + capsule in toddlers
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