1 / 93

ID BOARD REVIEW

ID BOARD REVIEW. James Hinchey MD PhD MSW MPH JD BA SOB. What do they like to ask?. HIV- opportunistic infections Rabies Diarrhea-infectious Ticks, worms, parasites Syphilis. Which of the following infectious agents is thought to be the most common cause of Bell Palsy?.

Télécharger la présentation

ID BOARD REVIEW

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ID BOARD REVIEW James Hinchey MD PhD MSW MPH JD BA SOB

  2. What do they like to ask? HIV- opportunistic infections Rabies Diarrhea-infectious Ticks, worms, parasites Syphilis

  3. Which of the following infectious agents is thought to be the most common cause of Bell Palsy? • Borrelia bugdorferi • Epstein-Barr virus • Herpes simplex virus • Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Varicella-zoster virus

  4. Which of the following infectious agents is thought to be the most common cause of Bell Palsy? • Borrelia bugdorferi • Epstein-Barr virus • Herpes simplex virus • Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Varicella-zoster virus

  5. Herpes simplex virus • Type 1 mostly oral, Type 2 primarily genital prodrome of pain and hyperesthesia • Painful vesicles on an erythematous base crust and heal in 10-14 days • recurrences in immunocompromised, prolonged sunlight exposure, stress • Bells Palsy: Ddx- HIV, Lyme disease, TB, temporal bone trauma, mumps, Mycoplasma pneumonia, leprosy, sjogren’s, sarcoidosis; HSV most frequently associated • antivirals in primary infection to decrease viral shedding and shorten duration of symptoms NOT to prevent recurrence • long term suppressive therapy in those with severe and frequent recurrences • IV abx and admission for HSV encephalitis

  6. 73 yr old woman p/w nausea and vomiting that began suddenly that afternoon. She was fine in the morning and went to a church picnic. 3 hours later she developed her current symptoms. She asked a friend to take her to he hospital, but her friend had also become ill. She recalls that they ate barbecued chicken, spinach salad, potato salad and some cookies.on exam, she appears weak and dehydrarted. She has no fever, and her stool tests hem-occult negative. What organism is the most likely cause of her symptoms? • Campylobacter jejuni • Clostridium perfringens • Salmonella typhimurium • Shigella flexneri • Staphylococcus aureus

  7. 73 yr old woman p/w nausea and vomiting that began suddenly that afternoon. She was fine in the morning and went to a church picnic. 3 hours later she developed her current symptoms. She asked a friend to take her to he hospital, but her friend had also become ill. She recalls that they ate barbecued chicken, spinach salad, potato salad and some cookies.on exam, she appears weak and dehydrarted. She has no fever, and her stool tests hem-occult negative. What organism is the most likely cause of her symptoms? • Campylobacter jejuni • Clostridium perfringens • Salmonella typhimurium • Shigella flexneri • Staphylococcus aureus

  8. 35 yo male with 12 hour history of severe abdominal cramping, nausea and loose watery stools, no fever no vomiting no travel-12 hours earlier he had eaten turkey left out at room temperature-what is them most likely etiology Campylobacter jejuni Clostridium perfringens Salmonella typhimurium Shigella flexneri Staphylococcus aureus

  9. 35 yo male with 12 hour history of severe abdominal cramping, nausea and loose watery stools, no fever no vomiting no travel-12 hours earlier he had eaten turkey left out at room temperature-what is them most likely etiology Campylobacter jejuni Clostridium perfringens Salmonella typhimurium Shigella flexneri Staphylococcus aureus

  10. Staphylococcus Aureus • 2 or more persons with same illness and common food exposure- foodborne infection • Staph aureus (primarily upper GI symptoms), short incubation period (1-6 hrs), preformed enterotoxin, unrefrigerated meats, potato/egg salad, cream pastries, severe sudden vomiting, • Campylobacter, Salmonella, Shigella - clinically indistinguishable, diarrheal illness 1-3 days after exposure (multiply in stomach), self-limited but usually treated with fluoroquinolone • Clostridium perfringens- watery diarrhea, symptoms within 24 hrs, precooked meats allowed to thaw before cooking, self-limited

  11. Diarrhea • ...which is mucoid bloody + high fever + febrile seizure in infant  shigella • …in patient with pet turtle or iguana  salmonella • …in patient without spleen or with sickle cell  salmonella • …and pseudoappendicitis presentation  yersinia • …& fecal WBCs after poultry or eggs  salmonella, campylobacter • …after poultry or meat, no fecal WBCs Clostridium perfringes • …profuse and watery after antibiotic  Clostridium difficile • …after potato salad or mayonnaise Staphylococcus aureus • …after fried rice Bacillus cereus • …after raw oysters Vibrio cholera • …after drinking from mountain stream Giardia lamblia • …in AIDS patient  isospora or cryptosporidium • …and hemolytic-uremic syndrome or TTP E. coli 0157:H7

  12. Assuming the patient is a resident of North America and has never been immunized against rabies, in which of the following situations are rabies immune globulin and rabies vaccine series clearly indicated? • Patient bitten by a chipmunk that escapes • Patient bitten by a neighborhood dog that has been captured and quarantined • Patient bitten by the family dog • Patient scratched by a bat that was in his home, and the bat escapes • Patient who sees a bat in her backyard and is not aware of any contact

  13. Assuming the patient is a resident of North America and has never been immunized against rabies, in which of the following situations are rabies immune globulin and rabies vaccine series clearly indicated? • Patient bitten by a chipmunk that escapes • Patient bitten by a neighborhood dog that has been captured and quarantined • Patient bitten by the family dog • Patient scratched by a bat that was in his home, and the bat escapes • Patient who sees a bat in her backyard and is not aware of any contact

  14. Rabies • Bat main vector in US; most without documented bite, so any exposure to saliva or mucous membranes indication for treatment, unless captured, sacrificed (Negri bodies) • Dog main vector in world • Prodrome: excitement, opithotonus, hydrophobia, salivation, lacrimation, ataxia • In US rabies rare in canines • Bites from rodents (chipmunks, squirrels, hamsters, guinea pigs, etc) not indication for vaccine • Rabies postesposure prophylaxis: human rabies immune globulin (HRIG) + human diploid cell vaccine (HDCV) in deltoid days 0, 3, 7, 14, and 28

  15. Which of the following is the most common initial neurologic manifestation of diphtheria? • Bells palsy • Lower extremety weakness • Diplopia, blurred vision and photophobia • Paralysis of palate muscles • trismus

  16. Which of the following is the most common initial neurologic manifestation of diphtheria? Bells palsy Lower extremety weakness Diplopia, blurred vision and photophobia Paralysis of palate muscles trismus

  17. Diphtheria disrupts protein synthesis causes demylination- producing a peripheral neuropthy Palate muscles are most commonly affected- usually does not cause bells palsy • Trismus- tetanus • Diplopia, blurred vision, photophobia think botulism

  18. A 75 yr old man p/w fever and ear pain. He has had the earache for several weeks and has been treating it at home with warm mineral oil. On further questioning, he says that he is diabetic and that his sugars are running higher than normal. Exam is normal except for the ear which has granualation tissue on the floor of the external auditory canal. The most likely pathogen causing this infection is: • Aspergillus sp. • Candida species • Pseudomonas aeruginosa • Staphylococcus epidermidis • Streptococcus pneumoniae

  19. A 75 yr old man p/w fever and ear pain. He has had the earache for several weeks and has been treating it at home with warm mineral oil. On further questioning, he says that he is diabetic and that his sugars are running higher than normal. Exam is normal except for the ear which has granualation tissue on the floor of the external auditory canal. The most likely pathogen causing this infection is: • Aspergillus sp. • Candida species • Pseudomonas aeruginosa • Staphylococcus epidermidis • Streptococcus pneumoniae

  20. Malignant otitis externa • Seen in elderly, diabetics, HIV, immunocompromised, persistent otitis externa (failing 2-3 weeks of Abx) • Pseudomonas, aspergillus, Staph, Strep • Otalgia/otorrhea, cranial nerve involvement with progression, HA, neck pain, fever, AMS • Management: Radiographic imaging, admission parenteral antibiotics, possibly surgical debridement

  21. 24 year old man with no PMH p/w 5 days of nonprod cough, fever, sob, and DOE, the patient is thin has multiple enlarged cervical lymph nodes, bilateral ronchi on pulmonary exam, a temperature of 40.1 and O2 sat of 83% on room air. He is admitted to the hospital. Which of the following is the most appropriate choice for empiric antibiotics? • Ceftriaxone and azithromycin • Levofloxacin • Levofloxacin and bactrim • Metronidrazole • Bactrim

  22. 24 year old man with no PMH p/w 5 days of nonprod cough, fever, sob, and DOE, the patient is thin has multiple enlarged cervical lymph nodes, bilateral ronchi on pulmonary exam, a temperature of 40.1 and O2 sat of 83% on room air. He is admitted to the hospital. Which of the following is the most appropriate choice for empiric antibiotics? • Ceftriaxone and azithromycin • Levofloxacin • Levofloxacin and bactrim • Metronidrazole • Bactrim

  23. PCP • PneumoCystis Pneumonia caused by pneumocystis jiroveci • Chest pain, cough, dyspnea, scant sputum, high fever, hypoxia, A-a gradient, CXR- bilat interstitial infiltrates • Most common opportunistic infxn in those with HIV • Rx: CAP coverage + PCP coverage: bactrim, pentamidine, clindamycin + primaquine

  24. In adults with suspected meningitis which of the following clinical features at presentation is most likely to predict abnormal findings on head CT scan? • Fever • Headache • Immunocompromised state • Photophobia • Stiff neck

  25. In adults with suspected meningitis which of the following clinical features at presentation is most likely to predict abnormal findings on head CT scan? • Fever • Headache • Immunocompromised state • Photophobia • Stiff neck

  26. Study of 235 patients CT before LP • Clinical features assoc with abnormal CT: age>60, immunocompromised state, h/o CNS disease, h/o seizure within 1 wk of presentation • Neuro signs associated with abnormal CT: abnormal level of consciousness, inability to answer 2 consecutive commands, gaze palsy, abnl visual fields, facial palsy, arm drift, leg drift, abnl language

  27. The organism most commonly occurring in puerperal mastitis is: • Bacteroides fragilis • Candida Albicans • Escherichia coli • Staphylococcus aureus • Streptococci

  28. 8. The organism most commonly occurring in puerperal mastitis is: • Bacteroides fragilis • Candida Albicans • Escherichia coli • Staphylococcus aureus • Streptococci

  29. Puerperal Mastitis • Inflammation of breast typically in immediate postpartum period but also with teeth eruption in infants • Blockage of ducts by overgrowth of bacteria in nutirent-rich breast milk • Staph, E coli, Strep • Vague symptoms: myalgia, fevers, chills, flu-like sx • Rx: breast emptying, skin cleansing, analgesia, abx, breastfeeding can continue • If fails therapy, consider abscess/polymicrobial infxn/carcinoma, do ultrasound

  30. Which of the following statements regarding anthrax is correct? • Aerobic blood culture growth of gram - cocci suggests systemic anthrax • Cutaneous anthrax, although uncomfortable, is usually self-limited and does not require therapy • Inhalational anthrax is initially a flu-like illness that deteriorates into septic shock within 24-48 hrs of symptom onset • Only known samples are in repositories in Russia and US • Treatment of choice for all types is ceftriaxone

  31. Which of the following statements regarding anthrax is correct? • Aerobic blood culture growth of gram - cocci suggests systemic anthrax • Cutaneous anthrax, although uncomfortable, is usually self-limited and does not require therapy • Inhalational anthrax is initially a flu-like illness that deteriorates into septic shock within 24-48 hrs of symptom onset • Only known samples are in repositories in Russia and US • Treatment of choice for all types is ceftriaxone

  32. Anthrax • Woolsorter’s disease • Manifestation depends on how spores enter body: Skin, GI, Inhalational (most lethal) • Cutaneous(1-5days) papule->vesicle->eschar • GI(2-5days) n/v, mesenteric adenitis-> hematemesis, ascites, abd. pain-> shock • Inhalation(1-6days) ->Flu like illness ->within 24-48 hours sepsis, shock, hemorrhagic mediastinitis, resp failure • CXR: mediastinal widening, hilar adenopathy • Gm + bacilli, serology, cipro or doxy, vaccine

  33. Anthrax

  34. Cutaneous Anthrax

  35. A 22 year old man p/w headache, stiff neck, and fever. An immediate LP reveals cloudy CSF. What is the appropriate treatment? • Dexamethasone only until gram stain of fluid is available • Intrathecal antibiotics • Intravenous antibiotics • Intravenous dexamethasone followed by antibiotics • IVIG followed by antibiotics

  36. A 22 year old man p/w headache, stiff neck, and fever. An immediate LP reveals cloudy CSF. What is the appropriate treatment? • Dexamethasone only until gram stain of fluid is available • Intrathecal antibiotics • Intravenous antibiotics • Intravenous dexamethasone followed by antibiotics • IVIG followed by antibiotics

  37. Meningitis • high mortality rate, survivors may have long-term neurological sequelae • 10 mg of dexamethasone 15-20 min before antibiotic reduces morbidity and mortality (steroids cont. Q6 x 4 days) • Gans study: dex reduced mortality rate in pneumococcal meningitis by 50% • Not shown to reduce neurologic sequelae • Not shown to provide benefit in meningococcal meningitis

  38. Which of the following statements regarding bite wounds is correct? • Cat bites are most commonly polymicrobial • Cat bites do not require prophylactic unless there is a foreign body in the wound • Mammal bites are not tetanus-prone wounds • Only 5-6% of dog bites ultimately become infected without treatment • Pasturella multocida is frequently the sole pathogen in infected dog bites

  39. Which of the following statements regarding bite wounds is correct? • Cat bites are most commonly polymicrobial • Cat bites do not require prophylactic unless there is a foreign body in the wound • Mammal bites are not tetanus-prone wounds • Only 5-6% of dog bites ultimately become infected without treatment • Pasturella multocida is frequently the sole pathogen in infected dog bites

  40. Mammalian Bites / DOG • Least infective • Most commonly polymicrobial • Pasteurella multocida • RX: prophylactic antibiotics not routinely recommended except for immunocompromised or bites to hand: PCN, augmentin, doxy

  41. Mammalian Bites / Cat • More infective (30-80%) • Pasteurella • Same Abx

  42. Human Bite • Clenched fist • Consider in genital wounds • Most infective • Eichenella corrodens • PCN, Augmentin

  43. Which of the following statements regarding Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever in children is correct? • CSF pleocytosis is commonly present • IV Clindamycin is the treatment of choice • Most cases are diagnosed in the western US • Most commonly seen in adolescents • Rash is initially petechial and becomes purpuric

  44. Which of the following statements regarding Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever in children is correct? • CSF pleocytosis is commonly present • IV Clindamycin is the treatment of choice • Most cases are diagnosed in the western US • Most commonly seen in adolescents • Rash is initially petechial and becomes purpuric

  45. Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever • most common rickettsial disease in US • Endemic in southeast US • Most common age 5-9, least common 10-29 • fever, rash, tick exposure (~50% don’t recall)  malaise, headache, fever, myalgias, abdominal pain, • rash initially blanching becomes petechial starts on ankles and wrists, spreads inwards • Lab: nml WBC, left shift, mild anemia, moderate thrombocytopenia, CSF pleocytosis • Clue = clinically no URI sx’s, no N/V, prodrome and labs • Also seen in Erlichiosis • Dx: Clinical! Don’t wait for serologies • Rx: Tetracycline, chloramphenicol

  46. Lyme Disease • Borrelia burgdorferi (spirochete) • Txmitted by bites of Ixodes ticks • Tick reservoir = rodents, rabbit, deer • Less than 30% of pts recall tick bite • Fever, myalgias, arthralgias, HA, Bells Palsy • Erythema chronicum migrans – annular, erythematous lesion with central clearing as it spreads (spares palm and sole) • 3 stages: • キStage I: ECM (60 – 80%), viral symptoms • キStage II: neurologic (neuritis, Bell’s palsy), cardiac (nodal heart block) • キStage III: chronic arthritis, myocarditis, encephalopathy • ELISA (screening – sensitive, not specific), Western Blot (dx) • Rx: doxy, erythro, amox, ceftriaxone

  47. Infection with which of the following helminths is known to cause a fatal hyperinfection in immunocompromised pts? • Ascarsislumbricoides • Enterobiusvermicularis • Necatoramericanus • Strongyloidesstercoralis • Trichuristrichiura • SridharBasarvaju

More Related