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68 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Anatomical defenses of Upper Respiratory System?
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course hairs, mucus secreting cells, cilia, tonsils - lymphoid tissue
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Laryngitis and tonsillitis caused by?
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Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes,viruses - can often work in combination - usually self-limiting (i.e., recovery will usually occur without medical intervention)
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Epiglottitis caused by?
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Haemophillus influenzae - most threatening disease of the URS, Hib vaccine has significantly reduced the number of cases
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Strep throat caused by?
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Streptococcus pyogenes - group A beta-hemolytic
Resistant to phagocytosis Streptokinases lyse clots Streptolysins are cytotoxic Diagnosis by indirect agglutination - uses latex particles coated with antibodies against group A streptococci |
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Scarlet Fever caused by?
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Streptococcus pyogenes
Erythrogenic toxin produced by lysogenized S. pyogenes - reddening toxin causes red skin rash and high fever |
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Diptheria caused by:
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Corynebacterium diptheriae; gram postive rod
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Diphtheria was the leading infectious killer of children until?
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Leading infectious killer of children until 1935
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What has a membrane that can block the air passage?
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Diphtheria membrane of fibrin, dead tissue, and bacteria - can totally block air passage
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Diphtheria toxin produced by? and the toxin does what?
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Diphtheria toxin produced by lysogenized C. diphtheriae - toxin interferes in protein synthesis
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Diptheria prevented by?
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Prevented by DTaP and Td vaccine (Diphtheria toxoid, inactivated toxin that elicits an immune response)
Effective treatment requires antibiotics and antitoxin |
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Cutaneous diphtheria:
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Infected skin wound leads to slow healing ulcer
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Otitis Media:
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Infections of the middle ear - account for nearly one half of office visits to pediatricians, affects 85% of children before the age of three
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Causes and percentages of Otitis Media?
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S. pneumoniae (35%)
H. influenzae (20-30%) M. catarrhalis (10-15%) S. pyogenes (8-10%) S. aureus (1-2%) |
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Otitis Media is treated with?
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Treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics
Incidence of S. pneumoniae reduced by vaccine |
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The Common Cold:
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Viral disease of the URS; most prevalent disease of humans in the temperate zones (kids: 6-8 colds/year, and adults: 2-4 colds/yr)
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What causes the common cold?
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More than 200 agents cause the common cold
Rhinoviruses (50%) - at least 113 serotypes A single virus particle can cause a cold Almost all Rhinoviruses attached to ICAN-1 on nasal mucosa of host cells - possible mechanism for control Coronaviruses (15-20%) |
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Lower respiratory system?
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Larynx, trachea, bronchial tubes, alveoli
The ciliary escalator keeps the lower respiratory system sterile Aveolar macrophages - destroy microorganisms that reach the lung |
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Bacteria, viruses, & fungi cause in the Lower Respiratory System:
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Bacteria, viruses, & fungi cause:
Bronchitis Bronchiolitis Pneumonia |
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Pertussis (whooping cough) caused by?
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Bordatella pertussis: gram neg. coccobacillus, capsulated
Attach to ciliated cells in the trachea Tracheal cytotoxin of cell wall damages ciliated cells Pertussis toxin - enters bloodstream, causese symptoms of disease |
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Pertussis prevented by?
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Prevented by DTaP vaccine (acellular Pertussis cell fragments)
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Pertussis' 3 stages?
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Stage 1: Catarrhal stage: like common cold
Stage 2: Paroxysmal stage: Violent coughing sieges Stage 3: Convalescence stage: may last for months |
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Tuberculosis caused by:
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis: acid-fast rod that is transmitted from human to human.
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Mycobacterium Tuberculosis generation time?
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>20 hours
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M. bovis:
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M. bovis: <1% U.S. cases, not transmitted from human to human
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M. avium-intracellulare:
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M. avium-intracellulare - infects people with late stage HIV infection
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Stages of Tuberculosis:
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1. bacilli is inhaled and reach the alveoli of the lung
2. ingested by a macrophage but survives 3. bacilli multiply in macrophages and cause a chemotactic response (start of tubercule) 4. after a few weeks, disease symptoms appear as many macrophages die, releaseing tubercule bacilli and forming a caseous center in the tubercule. 5. liquefication=caseous center enlarges and forms tuberculous cavity 6. tubercule ruptures and bacilli spill into bronchioles and diseminate throughout the lung, circulatory, and lymphatic systems. |
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Treatment of Tuberculosis:
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Prolonged treatment with multiple antibiotics - bacilli are slow growing and may be hidden in macrophages or locations difficult to reach with antibiotics
Vaccines: BCG, live, avirulent M. bovis. Not widely used in U.S |
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Diagnosis of Tuberculosis
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Diagnosis: Tuberculin skin test screening
+ = current or previous infection Followed by X-ray, acid-fast staining of sputum, culturing bacteria |
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Pneumococcal Pneumonia caused by:
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Streptococcus pneumoniae: Gram-positive encapsulated diplococci
Most common - typical pneumonia |
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Diagnosis and Treatment of Pneumococcal Pneumonia?
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Diagnosis by culturing bacteria
Penicillin is drug of choice - antibiotic resistance is becoming a problem |
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Haemophilus influenzae Pneumonia? Predisposing factors?
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Gram-negative coccobacillus
Alcoholism, poor nutrition, cancer, or diabetes are predisposing factors |
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Haemophilus influenzae Pneumonia treatment?
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Second-generation cephalosporins = drugs of choice
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Mycoplasmal Pneumonia caused by?
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Mycoplasma pneumoniae: pleomorphic, wall-less bacteria
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Mycoplasmal Pneumonia also called?
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Also called primary atypical pneumonia and walking pneumonia
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Mycoplasmal Pneumonia common in what age group? and how do you diagnose?
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Common in children and young adults
Diagnosis by PCR or by IgM antibodies |
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Legionellosis caused by?
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Legionella pneumophila: Gram-negative rod
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L. pneumophila found where? and how is it trasmitted?
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L. pneumophila is found in water
Transmitted by inhaling aerosols, not transmitted from human to human |
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Diagnosis and Treatment of Legionellosis?
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Diagnosis: culturing bacteria
Treatment: Erythromycin |
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Psittacosis (Ornithosis) caused by?
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Chlamydia psittaci: gram-negative intracellular bacterium associated with birds such as parakeets and parrots
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Psittacosis (Ornithosis) transmitted by?
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Transmitted by elementary bodies from bird dropping to humans
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What reorganizes into reticulate body after being phagocytized?
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Psittacosis (Ornithosis)
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Diagnosis and Treatment of Psittacosis (Ornithosis)?
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Diagnosis: culturing bacteria in eggs or cell culture
Treatment: Tetracycline |
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Chlamydial Pneumonia caused by?
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Chlamydia pneumoniae
Resembles mycoplasmal pneumonia Transmitted from human to human |
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Chlamydial Pneumonia transmitted by?
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Transmitted from human to human
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Diagnosis and Treatment of Chlamydial Pneumonia?
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Diagnosis by FA test
Treatment: Tetracycline |
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Q fever caused by? transmitted by? Who is most at risk?
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Coxiella burnetti: obligate, intracellular bacterium
Can survive airbourne transmission(has an endospore like body) Inhaling a single pathogen can cause infection Workers in dairy and meat processing plants are most at risk |
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Viral Pneumonia (LRS)?
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can occur as a complication of influenza, measles, chickenpox
Viral etiology suspected if no cause determined |
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Respiratory Synctial Virus (RSV)?
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Common in infants; 4500 deaths annually
Causes cell fusion (syncytium) in cell culture Symptoms: coughing and wheezing Diagnosis by serologic test for viruses and antibodies |
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Influenza symptoms and mortality?
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Chills, fever, headache, muscle aches (no intestinal symptoms)
1% mortality due to secondary bacterial infections |
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Treatment of Influenza?
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Treatment: Amantadine
Vaccine for high-risk individuals |
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Structure of Influenza Virus:
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8 separate RNA segments of different lengths
enclosed by inner layer of protein (capsid) outer lipid bilayer-which contains H and N spikes |
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H spikes:
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Hemagglutinin (H) spikes used for attachment to host cells
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N spikes:
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Neuraminidase (N) spikes used to release virus from cell
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Antigenic shift:
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Changes in H and N spikes
Probably due to genetic recombination between different strains infecting the same cell |
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Antigenic drift:
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Mutations in genes encoding H or N spikes
May involve only 1 amino acid Allows virus to avoid mucosal IgA antibodies |
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Influenza serotypes:
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A: causes most epidemics, Antigenic subtypes = H3N2, H1N1, H2N2
B: moderate, local outbreaks C: mild disease |
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Histoplasmosis caused by? transmitted by?
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Histoplasma capsulatum; dimorphic fungus
Transmitted by airborne conidia from soil - >75% of population in affected areas have antibodies |
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Diagnosis and Treatment of Histoplasmosis?
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Diagnosis by culturing fungus
Treatment: amphotericin B |
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Coccidioidomycosis caused by? and Life cycle?
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Cocciodioides immitis
arthrospore grows into tubular hypha --> hypha segments into arthrospores-->arthrospores inhaled -->inhaled arthrospore (how they are transmitted) grows into spherule-->endopores grown inside spherule-->spherule releases endospores |
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Diagnosis and Treatment of Coccidioidomycosis?
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Diagnosis by serological tests or DNA probe
Treatment: amphotericin B |
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Pneumocystis Pneumonia caused by?
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Pneumocystis jiroveci (P. carinii) found in healthy human lungs (once thought to be a protozoan but now identified as a fungus)
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Pneumocystis Pneumonia occurs in?
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Pneumonia occurs in newly infected infants & immunosuppressed individuals (had become a primary indicator of AIDS)
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Pneumocystis Pneumonia treated by?
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Treatment: Timethoprim-sulfamethoxazole
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Pneumocystis life cycle:
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Mature cyst contains intracystic bodies-->cyst ruptures releasing bodies-->bodies develop into trophozites-->trophozites divide-->trophozites develop into a cyst.
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Blastomycosis caused by?
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Blastomyces dermatitidis, dimorphic fungus
Found in soil |
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Blastomycosis causes? treatment?
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Can cause extensive tissue destruction
Treatment: amphotericin B |
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Opportunistic fungi involved in respiratory disease:
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Aspergillus
Rhizopus Mucor |
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What requires both antibiotics and an antitoxin?
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Diphtheria
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