Term
Bronchitis: Etiological Agents |
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Definition
- Rhinoviruses
- Coronaviruses
- Influenza virus
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Term
Respiratory Syncitial Virus |
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Definition
- Paramyxovirus (like mumps)
- Most common cause of bronchiolitis and pneumonia in children under 2
- It inflames bronchioles and restricts air to alveoli
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Term
Types of Bacterial Pneumonia |
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Definition
1. Pneumococcal Pneumonia
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Called typical or lobar pneumonia
- Involves bronchi and alveoli
- High fever, chest pain, bloody sputum
2. Mycoplasmal Pneumonia
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- No cell wall
- Walking or Atypical pneumonia
- Aerobic
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Term
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Definition
- Inflammation of the lining of the pleural membranes
- Can occur as a result of pneumonia or tuberculosis
- Usually a viral pathogen
- Very painful, sharp stabbing pain accompanies inspiration
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Term
Influenza Viral Infection |
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Definition
- Orthomyxoviridae
- Can cause endemic, epidemic, and pandemic influenza
- Fever, myalgia, headache, pharyngitis
- H spikes allow viral recognition to host and attachment
- N spikes help virus exit the infected host cell
- Viral strains based on H and N antigens
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Term
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Definition
epidemics, pandemics, with animal reservoirs |
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Term
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Definition
epidemics, no animal hosts |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Whooping Cough (pertussis) |
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Definition
- Bordetella pertussis
- Gram-Negative coccobacillus
- Aerobic
- Attaches to and multiply in ciliated tracheal cells but don't invade deeper
- Many toxins: tracheal cytoxin damages ciliated cells, pertussis toxin causes systemic symptoms
- Cold symptoms, gasping for air
- Secondary complications can be CNS anoxia, secondary pneumonia
- Major cause of death worldwide
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Term
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Definition
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Gram-Positive bacillus
- Aerobic
- Waxy outer coat; grows slowly and in clumps
- Acquired by inhalation
- If infective dose is low, can fight it via activated macrophages
- If infective dose is high:
- bacteria are ingested by alveolar macrophages and walled off in alveoli (tubercle)
- Lesion becomes calcified
- If defenses fail, tubercle breaks down and bacilli are released into respiratory, lymphatic, and cardiovascular systems
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Term
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Definition
- Many species, spores inhaled regularly ; most harmless
- Aspergillus fumigatus can cause allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis or aspergillomas, fungal balls of entangled hyphae
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Term
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Definition
- Inhale fungal spores of Histoplasma capsulatum
- Found in feces of starlings, pigeons, chickens, bats (soil with high nitrogen content)
- H. capsulatum is dimorphic; yeast like in tissue growth, filamentous in soil
- Resembles TB; lesions in lungs but spread via blood and lymphatics
- Usually asymptomatic
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