Term
Whooping cough
prolonged cough illness with significant morbidity and mortality especially in infants
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Definition
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Term
Agents that cause pertusis |
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Definition
caused by Berdetella pertusis
gram negative coccobacillus |
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Term
transmission of pertussis |
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Definition
respiratory droplets-up to 5 ft
humans are only reservoid
incubation 1-3wks, average 10 days |
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Term
method of infection of pertussis |
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Definition
1. inhaled-adheres to coliated epithelium in nasopharynx
2. bacteria proliferation and dissemination through lower respiratory airways
3. rarely as far as pulmonary alveoli causing pneumonia
4. will not invade farther than epitherlium |
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Term
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Definition
produces several biologically active substances
and virulence factors that affect cell attachment, cause local tissue damage, interfere with host defense mechanisms |
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Term
Reasons for increased diagnosis of pertusis |
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Definition
1. waning vaccine-induced immunity in adolescents and adults
2. inc. awareness among heath care providers, inc use of pcr for diagnosis, inc puplic reporting |
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Term
Population of highest incidence for pertpussis |
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Definition
-Infants less than 12 months (incomplete vaccine) MC <6mo old
-Adolescents and adults common reservoir
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Term
Catarrhal phase for perrussis |
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Definition
7-10 days
indistinguishable from viral URI
-gradually becomes more severe |
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Term
Paroxysmal phase of pertusis |
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Definition
1-6 wks up to 10 wks
inc cough for 1-2 wk then plateau 2-3, dec grad
bursts of coughs- numerous in one inspiration
-posttussive emesis and exhaustion
-purulent or non-purulent sputum |
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Term
Convalescent phase of pertusis
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Definition
paroxysms less common
cough resolves over 2-3 wks
can get recurrent cough from URI |
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Term
Common features of adult pertusis |
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Definition
prolonged persistent paroxysms of cough 36-48 days
post tussive vomiting more common than whoop |
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Term
Common features of child pertusis |
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Definition
-prolonged respiratory illness and paroxysms cough with whoop
atypical common: short absent catarrhal pphase , gagging, feeding dificulties |
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Term
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Definition
1. bacterial pneumonia
2. paroxysms of cough
-limit food and fluid intake , feeding difficulties
-hypoxia
3. post tussive vomiting |
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Term
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Definition
uncommon
rib fracture
hernia
back pain
incontince
pneumonia-unusual
death-rate
subconjuctival hemmorhage
pneumothorax |
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Term
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Definition
inc WBC
absolute lymphocytosis >10,000 cells
degree of lymphocytosis parallels severity |
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Term
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Definition
Peribronchial cuffing
perihilar infiltrates
interstital edema
atelectasis |
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Term
Pertusis diagnosis based on: |
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Definition
Clinical case definition
confirmational tests:
bacterial culture
PCR
serology |
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Term
CDC defnition of "pertusis" |
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Definition
Cough illness> 2 wks
Plus one:
+paroxysms of cough
+inspiratory whoop
+post-tussive vomiting w/o other cause |
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Term
Gold standard for diagnosing pertusis |
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Definition
bacterial culture:
Isoloation from nasopharyngeal secretion (swab post pharynx x 10 secs) or nasal aspirate
-100% specific
-sensitivity <3 wks approach 50-60% |
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Term
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Definition
for pertusis
-swab posterior phaynx
-100% specific
-Sensitivity much better than culture at 3-4 weeks (60%) |
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Term
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Definition
looking for antibodies
not practical clinically
IGG will increase with infection
Take initial IGG before vaccination (IGG will inc) |
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Term
If clinical presentation is positive for pertusis in < 2wks of initial symptoms confirm with: |
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Definition
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Term
If clinical case definition of pertusis is positive for pertusis, and onset >2 weeks confirm with: |
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Definition
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Term
If clinical case definition is positive for pertusis, with onset >4wks. confirm with: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
First Report disease!
initiate antibx with clinical suspicion (since labs take longer)- Z pack or clarithro (4-7days)
best to treat during catarrhal phase -when its most contageous to dec transmission and severity
Treat is symptoms <3-4 wks
healthcare workers (6-8wks) |
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Term
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Definition
-suggested for close contacts
-high risk for severe complications
-kids and adults in household, daybare and some school settings
-watch for those who were exposed for 20 days
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Term
Isolation after exposure: |
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Definition
No school, daycare, health care worker until 5 days of treatment or 21 days of symptoms
Avoid those at risk of complications until 5 days of treatment
Public health requirement for schools |
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Term
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Definition
Preventing the development of disease |
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Term
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Definition
early diagnosis and prompt rx to shorten duration of illness |
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Term
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Definition
Limit the degree of disability and promote rehabiliatation in chronic and irreversible disease |
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Term
exp: immunization, couseling to change risky behaviors |
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Definition
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Term
exp: sccreening and treatment for asymptomatic disease |
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Definition
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Term
Exp: treatment for and management of chronic disease |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
cause an immune response w/o causing disease
triggers immune system to produce antibodies in absence of disease |
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Term
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Definition
live attenuated- weakend whole cell-never to pregnant women (measles, small pox)
Inactivated/killed-whole cell organism without toxin (tetanus, polio)
Acellular-just toxin no cell (flu, pertusis)
Subunit- fragement of microorganism (hepB, pneumococcus)
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Term
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Definition
children 80-85% less likely to develop pertusis than unvaccinated
immunity lasts 5-10 years |
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Term
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Definition
Pertusis vacc at 2, 4,6 15-18, 4-6 mo
-important b/c immunity lot likely in breat milk
immunity dec in 4-12 years after primary series
-if its been more than 5 years assume patient doesenot have tDAP then go every 10 years TD |
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Term
MOA of influenza Antigens |
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Definition
1. envelope glycoproteins
2. hemagluttinin binds to respiratory epithelium (H)
3. Neuraminidase liberates new virions for propagation of virus |
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Term
Severity of influenza strain depends on: |
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Definition
1. susceptibility of population
2. intrinsic virulence of strain
-efficiency of transmission
-ability to cause symptomatic infection |
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Term
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Definition
major change can lead to epidemic and pandemic
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Term
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Definition
minor change leads to localized outbreaks of varying extent (point mutation) |
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Term
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Definition
new causes of certain disease substantially exceed what is expected in a population |
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Term
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Definition
an epidemic restricted to one locale (seasonal) flu may affect 10-20% of population |
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Term
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Definition
global epidemic (pandemic flu may affect 50% of population) |
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Term
Characteristics of an influenza pandemic |
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Definition
reassortment of genes b/w human and animal influenza- virus that simultaneously infect host
-mainly affects extrenes of age
-virulent
-b/c of significant antigenic shift the population is susceptible
-sustained human to human transmission |
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Term
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Definition
Less extensive outbreaks
disease less severe
change in drift in H antigen
outbreak every 2-4 yrs |
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Term
Case definition of influenza-like illness: |
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Definition
affects upper and lower respiratory tracts
signs if systemic illness
Not attributed to another cause
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Term
Physical presentation of seasonal flu |
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Definition
hyperemia
mild cervical LAD
Unremarkable chest
-lymphopenia (associated with shedding) |
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Term
Transmission of influenza |
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Definition
Fast onset-no prodome just abrupt sickness
usually seen 2 days after exposure
Large particle droplets (sneeze, cough, etc)
Shedding highest 1-2 days after onset. Peak=2nd day
Shedding longer in kids, and those with chronic disease
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Term
Complications of influenza |
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Definition
1.Pneumonia:
-primary viral-most severe
-secondary bacterial-most common
2. Rhabdomyolysis
3. myositis
4. CNS
5. Myocarditid
6. Pericarditis
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Term
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Definition
screening limited by sensitivity, better specificity
++most common and easiest to do |
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Term
Reverse Transcriptase PCR |
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Definition
Most sensitive and specific, can differentiate influenza types including swine and avian (within hours but usually a sendout)
exp: what type: H1N1? H1N3? |
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Term
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Definition
Not useful outpatient
(more for epidemiological basis) |
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Term
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Definition
antivirals could shorten duration of influenza symptoms by 1-3 days if given within 24-36 hours. greater than 48 hours little to no benefit.
Some evidence may reduce severity and incidence of complications of influeza
better to dec symp for one day, when it could inc resistance??? |
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Term
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Definition
1. Neuraminidase inhibitors: potentially active against A and B (tamaflu=oseltamivir and zanamivir)
2. Adamantanes: Potentially active against influenza A only (high resistance, Amantadine and rimantadine, cns toxicity)
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Term
2008-2009 recommendations for flu treatment |
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Definition
1. zanamivir
2. oseltamivir and amatadine/rimatidine |
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Term
Treatment guidelines for flu: |
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Definition
1. high risk <48 hours
2. close contact of those at high risk
3. those .48 hours if persistent moderate or severe illness |
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Term
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Definition
1.sidents in long term care facilities
2. high risk complications if not yet vaccinted
-give vacc and treat x 14 days |
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Term
flu vacc characteristics: |
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Definition
-new annually
-trivalent (3 strains)
-50-80% effective against a and b flu
-intramuscular (inactivated vaccine)
-intranasal live-attenuated |
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Term
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Definition
recommended for all persons 6 mo and older
-two doese
-tiered distribution |
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Term
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Definition
-influenza A H1N1
Concern for becoming pandemic
-MC in young people
-virulent
-antigenic drift-only thing that is limiting
-limited human-human transmission |
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Term
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Definition
Novel H1N1
most common complications: pneumonia and dehydration
concern for pandemic
-most common in young (30yo)
-human-human transmission
-human/avian/swine virus
sensitive to NA-I
Resistent to AT
treat:
-all hospital patients
-patients at high risk for complications
-<5 yo
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