How are RTIs normally divided?
Into lower and upper tract infections
What two types of infections are grouped into lower tract infections?
2. AECB/AE-COPD
What does AECB/AE-COPD stand for?
Acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis / acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
What 3 infections are grouped into upper tract infections?
Pharyngitis
Otitis media
Sinusitis
What is the most common type of sample to obtain from someone with a lower tract infection?
Sputum
What are 7 types of specimens you can obtain to test for an RTI ?
Sputum BAL / bronchial washing Nasopharyngeal aspirates / swabs Endotracheal aspirates Sinus aspirates Tympanocentesis Throat swabs
What is the pathogen most commonly associated with all RTIs (with the exception of pharyngitis)?
Streptococcus pneumoniae
What are the 3 common (not atypical) pathogens responsible for RTIs?
What are the 3 atypical pathogens commonly associated with RTIs?
What are the 2 major causes (pathogens/types of pathogen) for community acquired pneumonia?
2. Atypical pathogens (30%)
Why can you not treat CA pneumonia empirically with a a ß-lactam?
Because it won’t deal with the atypical pathogens that are the cause in 30% of cases
Define pneumonia
an inflammatory condition of the lung primarily affecting the alveoli (microscopic air sacs)
What are the three “types” of pneumonia?
CAP: community acquired
HAP: hospital acquired
VAP: ventilator associated pneumonia
What pathogens tend to be the cause of HAP and VAP?
gram negatives and anaerobes
- ex: Klebsiella, S. aureus
What are some typical signs and symptoms of pneumonia?
fever,cough (productive or dry), chest pain,shortness of breath
Why are throat swabs useless for diagnosing pneumonia?
Because 5-10 % of adults and 20-40% of children have their nasopharynx colonizes by streptococcus pneumoniae
What are the main features (atmosphere, shape, testing, susceptibilities) of Strep. pneumoniae?
Streptococcus pneumoniae being soluble in bile and sensitive to optochin allows it to be separated from…?
other viridans group strep
What are 6 factors that can predispose someone to developing a pneumococcal infection?
What is the most important virulence factor for S. pneumoniae?
Capsule formation!
What two jobs does the capsule have for S. pneumoniae?
2. Help form adherence + colonization
What are 2 other virulence factors used by S. pneumoniae?
2. Secretory IgA protease
What does pneumolysin do? (3 things)
What two vaccines exist against pneumococcal infections?
2. PREVNAR (conjugate vaccine)