Term
West Nile Virus (reservoir, vector, classification, mechanism of transmission) |
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Definition
- mechanism of transmission
- mosquito
- can also be via blood transfusion, organ transplantation, transplacentally
- reservoir- birds
- classification- flavivirus
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Term
West Nile Virus (epidemiology: who is at risk for disease) |
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Definition
- elderly
- immunocompromise
- deletion in CCR5 gene
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Term
West Nile Virus: clinical manifestations |
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Definition
- most infections are asymptomatic
- some get west nile fever
- rarely, get west nile neuroinvasive disease
- encephalitis
- meningitis
- polio like flaccid paralysis
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Term
WNF: symptoms and prognosis |
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Definition
- abrupt onset of fever, headache, fatigue, myalgias
- nausea, vomitting, abdominal pain
- rash sometimes (more so on trunk than extremities)
Usually recover without sequelae (3-6 days), but post fatigue illness can last weeks to months |
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Term
West Nile meningitis: symptoms, prognosis, dx |
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Definition
- WNF + meningitis
- some have cranial nerve palsies
- prognosis- usually recover without permenant neurological sequelae
- dx- CSF with WBC's (often neutrophils)
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Term
West Nile encephalitis: symptoms, risk factors, prognosis |
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Definition
- risk factors- older, immunocompromised
- chronic neurologic sequalae
- movement disorders/extrapyramidal findings
- tremors
- Parkinsonism
- ataxia
- last months/yrs
- high rate of institutionalization
- prognosis: 20% of people die
- cardiac arrhythmias and respiratory failure
- usually need hospitalizations
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Term
WN flaccid paralysis: symptoms |
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Definition
- usually assymetrical
- rarely occurs without fever or other manifestations of west nile disease
- prognosis- permanent weakness or prolonged recovery common
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Term
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Definition
- IgM in CSF or blood
- WNND: CSF IgM most sensitive (doesn't cross the BBB)
- usually detect by onset of CNS symptoms
- may be detectable for up to 1 yr post infection
- WNF: serum IgM may appear 8 days after onset
- paired acute/convalescent IgG: 4x rise
- PCR: serum or CSF (poor sensitivity)
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Term
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Definition
- supportive
- fluids
- respiratory support
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Term
dengue fever clinical manifestations |
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Definition
- asymptomatic
- undifferentiated fever
- dengue fever syndrome
- dengue hemorrhagic fever
- dengue shock syndrome
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Term
dengue undifferentiated fever: symptoms, prognosis, common age range |
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Definition
- usually young children with first episode
- symptoms- mild febrile illness
- prognosis- unremarkable recovery (do not meet criterial for dengue fever)
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Term
dengue fever (common age range, criteria symptoms) |
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Definition
- usually older children, adults
- criteria
- 2-7 days of fever
- more than 2 of following
- severe headache
- retro orbital pain
- myalgias
- arthralgias
- diffuse erythematous maculopapular rash
- mild hemorrhagic manifestations
- NO plasma leak or severe hemorrhage
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Term
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Definition
- fever
- hemorragic manifestations or positive tourniquet test
- nasal blled
- GI bleed
- increase mentstrual flow
- thrombocytopenia
- plasma leakage
- hemoconcentration
- ascities
- hypoproteinemia
- pleural effusion
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Term
DHF/DSS: what are warning signs that prompt immediate admission to ICU |
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Definition
- abdominal pain/tenderness
- persistent vomitting
- lethargy/restlessness
- hepatomegaly
- fluid accumulation (pleural effusion, ascities)
- mucosal bleeding
- sudden increase in hematocrit with rapid increase in platelet count
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Term
DSS: symptoms and prognosis |
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Definition
- DHF plus circulatory failure
- narrow pulse pressure (less than 20)
- hypotension with cold, clamy skin
High mortality if not treated promptly (low mortality with intensive supportive therapy) |
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Term
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Definition
- clinical: tourniquet test
- acute phase: virus detection
- blood, CSF, tissue
- 0-5 days post onset of symptoms
- RT-PCR
- Ag detection (NS1 protein)
- serology: IgM capture ELISA
IgG: paire acute/convalescence
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Term
dengue: describe tourniquet test |
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Definition
- inflate bp cuff between cystolic and diastolic
- leave it for 5 minutes
- should see petechial rashes (more than 20 petechiae per square inch)
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Term
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Definition
- mostly supportive
- early recognition of DHF/DSS and anticipatory tx
- volume replacement key if plasma leak
- blood and blood product transfusion as necessary (platelets are low)
- be careful to modify replacement when signs of convalescent period appear
- otherwise, can have fluid overload
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Term
Yellow fever: clinical features |
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Definition
- fever last 3-4 days, than resolve (viremia clears, Ab appears)
- leukopenia
- viremic during this time
- Faget's sign- relative bradycardia
- extreme myalgias in pack
- conjunctival suffusion (hyperemia)
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Term
yellow fever: describe its recurrence symptoms and prognosis, |
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Definition
- called biphasic disease
- symptoms
- fever, hepatitis/jaundice, renal failure
- severe hemorraging
- hematemesis
- melena
- bleeding from eyes, nose, bladder, rectum
- severity correlates with elevation in heaptic transaminases
- death can happen due to multiorgan failure and prolonged shock
- if you recover, life long immunty
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Term
yellow fever: dx, tx, prevention |
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Definition
- dx- serology IgM detectable while symptomatic (cross reactive with other flaviruses)
- tx- supportive
- prevention- live attenuated single dose vaccine
- 10+ yrs protection
- immunization of 80% of population necessary to prevent endemics
- required for travel to much of Africa, pts of South America
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Term
DHF: three phases of disease |
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Definition
- febrile phase (similar to regular DF)
- potential hepatosplenomegally late
- cirtical (plasma leak) phase
- usually alert and luccid
- lasts 24-36 hrs
- convalescent (reabsorption) phase
- end of plasma leak
- stabilization of vital signs, hematocrit, increased urine output
- rash- confluent pruritic rash with small islands of unaffected skin
- fluid overload if don't decrease fluid resuscitation
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