Title: Resident Board Review
1Resident Board Review
- Joseph G. Timpone Jr. MD
- Georgetown University Hospital
2Case One
- An 80 y.o. female presents to the ER with a 3 day
history of fatigue, abdominal cramps and bloody
diarrhea. She denies any fevers and states that
10 days ago she was at a State Fair where she ate
hotdogs, baked beans, coleslaw, and drank fresh
apple cider. PEX T37 BP140/90 P100 ABDON
generalized tenderness LABS WBC 12.0 HCT 19.0
PLTS 90,000 BUN/Cr 50/3.0 LDH 400 T.Bili 4.0
3The most likely causative pathogen is
- A) S. aureus
- B) B. Cereus
- C) Norwalk virus
- D) Listeria
- E) E.coli O157H7
4E. Coli 0157H7
- 21,000 Cases/YR 6 pts. Develop HUS 12
Mortality - Epidemiology Young children elderly
undercooked ground beef, unpasteurized milk,
apple cider, water/vegetables contaminated with
manure. - Incubation 3-4 days ABD. cramping bloody
diarrhea (35 - 90) fever uncommon (30) - HUS MAHA, Thrombocytopenia, ARF, can also see
TTP. - Diagnosis colorless, Sorbitol non-fermenting
colonies on Sorbitol-Maconkey agar 0157 Antisera
Agglutination test. - Treatment antibiotic use may increase risk of HUS
5Case Two
- A 30 y.o. healthy male is brought to the ER by
his co-workers after a syncopal episode at work.
In the ER the pt is arousable and noted to be
afebrile. BP70/40 P40 EKG3 Heart block. The
pt states that he had recently returned from a
hiking trip in New England one month ago.
6The most likely causative pathogen is
- A) S. aureus
- B) B. Burgdorferi
- C) S. pyogenes
- D) R. rickettsii
- E) Coxsackie virus
7(No Transcript)
8Lyme Disease
- North America Borrelia Burgdorferi Europe B.
Afzelii Asia B. Garinii - Southern New England, Middle Atlantic, Wisconsin,
Minnesota, California - Ixodes Scapularis (Deer Tick) Nymphal stage must
be attached for 72 Hrs. to result in
transmission - Stage 1 Viral-like illness associated with
erythema migrans (60 - 80). Expanding annular
lesion with central clearing (at least 5cm by CDC
criteria)
9(No Transcript)
10Acute Disseminated Lyme Disease (Stage 2)
- Neurologic (occurs in 15 of patients)
- Lymphocytic meningitis
- Cranial Neuritis (Bells Palsy)
- Motor-sensory polyradiculo neuritis
- Mono-neuritis multiplex myelitis
- Cardiac (occurs in 5 of patients)
- Atrio-ventricular block
- Myo-pericarditis
- Cardiomegaly/LV dysfunction (rare)
11Chronic Lyme Disease (Stage 3)
- Arthritis (60 of untreated patients)
- Oligo-articular/Mono-articular (Kness)
- Treatment resistant arthritis in 10
- More common in North America
- Neurologic
- Cognitive dysfunction/encephalopathy
- Polyneuropathy
- More common in Europe
- Chronic Skin Lesions
- Acrodermatitis chronicum atrophicans
- Associated with polyneuropathy
12(No Transcript)
13Lyme Disease Diagnosis
- 70 - 80 pts. have () IgM by 2 - 4 wks.
- () IgG _at_ 4 wks.
- An isolated () IgM in the absence of a () IgG
after one month of symptoms is likely a false ()
IgM - IgM and IgG can remain () for years
- False () endocarditis, parvovirus B19,
syphilis, EBV, SLE, RA - Elisa must be confirmed by W.B.
- 5 of pts. In non-endemic area can be false ()
- PCR - CSF C6 Ab
14Lyme Disease Treatment
- Stage 1 (E.M.) Doxycycline, Amoxicillin,
Cefuroxime, Erythromycin for 14 - 21 days - Neurologic/cardiac IV Ceftriaxone, Cefotaxime,
PCN - Bells Palsy - ? Doxycycline
- Arthritis Doxycycline x 30 days or IV
Ceftriaxone x 14 - 28 days
15Lyme Disease Prevention
- Prophylaxis Doxycycline 200 mg x 1 dose has 87
efficacy for I. scaplilaris tick bits (0.4 vs.
3.2 - Doxy vs. placedo) - Recombinant OspA vaccine is 78 effective (0, 1,
12 mos. Or 0, 1, 2 mos.) - Steere NeJM vol. 345 July 12, 2001
- Nadelman , et.al NeJM vol. 345 July 12, 2002
16Case Three
- A 75 y.o. male with a history of HTN presents
with a 1 wk history of fevers and fatigue. His
PCP obtains some labs which reveal WBC 5.0 HCT
20.0 PLTS 40,000 AST 100 ALT 50 T.Bili. 3.5 LDH
525. The pt recently returned from his summer
home in Nantucket.
17(No Transcript)
18The most likely causative organism is
- A) B. Burgdorferi
- B) B. Microti
- C) F. Tularensis
- D) R. Rickettsii
- E) E. Chaffeensis
19Babesioses
- Caused by B. microti and B . equi
- Vector Ixodes scapularis
- N.E. (Cape Cod), California
- Can be transmitted by transfusions
- Elderly, splenectomized pts.
- Fever, myalgias, H/A, hemolytic anemia,
thrombocytopenia, elevated LFTs - Diagnosis Peripheral smear, serology, PCR
- Treatment Quinine Clindamycin Atovaquone
Azithromycine exchange transfusion - 20 co-infection with B. burgdorferi
20Case Four
- A 29 y.o. female presents to the ER with fevers,
cough, and S.O.B. PEX T 39.5 BP 110/80 P 120 O2
SAT. 88 CXR diffuse pulmonary infiltrates LABS
WBC 25.0 HCT 55.0 PLTS 50,000 PT/PTT 16/60 - The pt recently traveled to Arizona where she
stayed on an Indian reservation to learn how to
make jewelry.
21The most likely causative organ
- A) S. pyogenes
- B) Listeria
- C) C. Immitis
- D) C. Neoformans
- E) Hanta Virus
22Hantavirus
- Hanta virus RNA virus Bunyaviridae(Sin NOMBRE
virus) - Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
- S.W. U.S. (New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Colorado)
has been reported in all States - Rodent exposure (Peromyscus maniculatus)
- 4 Phages febrile, shock, diuresis, convalescent
- Clinical fever, myalgias, cough, dyspnea, H/A,
GI symptoms - Labs leukocytosis, hemoconcentration,
thrombocytopenia, prolonged PT/PTT - Rapidly progressive pulmonary edema with
hypotension - Diagnosis IFA of sputum, lung tissue
- Treatment ? Ribavirin
- Case Fatality 76
23Case Five
- A 32 y.o. male presents to the ER with fever and
a ulcerative skin lesion on his arm. In the ER he
has a T103, and you notice ipsilateral axillary
lymphadenopathy. Ten days ago he returned from a
hunting trip where he killed and skinned a
rabbit, fox, and deer.
24 25The most likely causative pathogen is
- A) B.burgdorferi
- B) B. anthracis
- C) Y. Pestis
- D) V. Vulnificus
- E) F. Tularensis
26Tularemia Francisella Tularensis
- Gm (-) coccobacillus requires cysteine for
growth - Contact with infected animals (rabbits,
squirrels, cats), inhalation, tick bite - Peak occurs with tick-borne exposure and hunting
season - Southcentral and Southwestern United States-
Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas - Hunters, trappers, lab workers
27Amblyoma Americanum
28Tularemia Incidence
- 1990-2000 1368 cases.
- Approximately 124 cases/year reported to the CDC.
- 56 cases were reported from Arkansas, Missouri,
South Dakota, and Oklahoma. - Endemic on Marthas vineyard.
- 70 cases between May and August.
- (MMWR 2002 Mar 8 51 (9) 182-184)
29Endemic Regions
30Francisella Tularensis
- Small non-motile gm (-) cocci bacillus.
- Can survive for weeks at low temperatures in
water, moist soil, hay and decaying animal
carcasses. - Voles, mice, rabbits, hares, squirrels are
reservoirs. - Vectors Ticks, flies, mosquitoes.
- Human infection
- Tick bites
- Handling infected animals or animals products.
- Ingestion.
- Inhalation.
31Tularemia Clinical
- 50 of patients with ulcer node disease
- Patients develop ulcerative lesion at site of
exposure which is associated with ipsilateral
lymphadenopathy - Bacteremia, pneumonia, oculo-glandular disease
- Pneumonia in gardeners on Marthas Vineyard
32Ulceroglandular Tularemia
33Oculoglandular Tularemia
34Pneumonic Tularemia Clinical
- Fever and non-productive cough
- 3 -5 day incubation period (range 1- 14 days)
- CXR pneumonia, pleural effusion, and hilar
lymphadenopathy
35Diagnosis, Treatment and Prevention
- Diagnosis grows on media enriched with cysteine
serology - Treatment streptomycin, gentamicin, doxycycline,
ciprofloxacin - P.E.P. doxycycline or ciprofloxacin
- Live attenuated vaccine lab workers
- Respiratory isolation not needed
36Case Six
- A 25 y.o. male presents to the ER with fevers,
myalgias, LBP, nausea, and vomiting. In the ER he
has a T39.5, BP 80/40, P120 and you notice a
rash. Labs WBC 25,000, HCT 45, PLT 40,000,
BUN/Cr 40/2.2. The patient has returned from a
camping trip in North Carolina one week ago.
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39The most likely causative pathogen is
- A) B. burgdorferi
- B) S. Pneumoniae
- C) R. Rickettsii
- D) B. Microti
- E) Leptospiria
40Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
- Caused by Rickettsia rickettsii
- D. andersoni D. variabilis
- South Atlantic Coastal, western and south central
states (North Carolina, South Carolina, Oklahoma,
and Tennessee) - 95 cases April - September
- Dogs, wooded areas, males
41RMSF Clinical
- Incubation 5 - 7 days (2 to 14 days)
- Fever, H/A, malaise, nausea, vomiting, abd. pain
- Rash 1 - 5 days after onset of illness macules
on wrists ankles spread to trunk, palms, and
soles 10 pts. without rash - Thrombocytopenia, DIC, elevated LFTS_at_ ARF, ARDS
42RMSF Diagnosis Treatment
- Mortality 5 - 25
- Diagnosis DFA of skin biopsy - Serology
- Treatment Tetracyclines chloramphenicol
43Case seven
- A 50 y.o. male with a history of hemachromatosis
was brought in by his friends with fevers,
diarrhea, severe weakness. They had recently
returned from a boating trip on the Chesapeake
bay where they ate fresh crab and other assorted
shellfish. On exam T39 BP 70/40 P130
44(No Transcript)
45The most likely causative pathogen is
- A) S. aureus
- B) Campylobacter jejuni
- C) Shigella
- D) Mycobacterium marinum
- E) Vibrio vulnificus
46Vibrio Vulnficus
- Seawater or raw seafood/shellfish (oysters)
- Chesapeake bay, Gulf coast (hurricane Katrina)
- Liver disease, cirrhosis, hemachromatosis, ETOH
- Septicemia with metastatic skin lesions
- Diarrhea
- rapidly progressive cellulitis
- 50 mortality
- Tetracycline/doxycycline combination therapy
with doxycycline 3rd generation sephalosporin
(ceftriaxone, cefotaxime)
47 A Trip to the Zoo
- Joseph G. Timpone, M.D.
- Division of Infectious Diseases
48A 35 year old male is brought to a NYC E.R. with
fevers H/A and (R) inguinal pain. In the E.R. he
is noted to have T 40oC, P 120, and BP
80/40. There is a 3x3 cm tense lymph node in (R)
inguinal region. WBC 25,000, PLTs 60,000,
Bun/Cr 40/2.0.
49The patient reports that he is visiting from
Colorado where he is employed as a veterinarian.
He has recently cared for a few sick cats, a
rabbit and assisted in the birth of a calf.
50The most likely causative agent would be
- a.) Sin Nombre Virus
- b.) Francisella Tularensis
- c.) Coxiella Burnettii
- d.) Yersinia Pestis
- e.) Bacillus Anthracis
51Plague Yersinia Pestis
- gm(-) Cocco-Bacillus (bipolar appearance -
safety pin) - Rats, ground squirrels, prairie dogs, cats
- Rodent Flea Xenopsylla cheopis
- S.W. US (New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado,
California) - Recreational/occupational hunting, camping,
military
52(No Transcript)
53Plague Clinical
- Incubation 2 -6 days
- Bubonic Tense, Tender, Fluctuant nodes
(inguinal, axillary, cervical) - Pneumonic cough, hemoptysis, watery sputum
patchy/lobar infiltrates - Septicemic hypotension, DIC, gangrene
- Meningitis, Pharyngitis
54Plague Diagnosis
- 50 mortality with out treatment 5 with
treatment - Aspirate/culture of Bubo - Waysons stain
(bipolar staining - safety pin) - DFA staining
- PCR
- Serology
55Plague Treatment
- Streptomycin or gentamicin
- Alternative Doxycycline, Ciprofloxacin
- P.E.P Doxycycline
- respiratory isolation x 48 - 72 hrs.
56A 28 year old male presents to the E.R. with
fevers, H/A, Rash, Dyspnea and a dry,
non-productive cough of 3 days duration. His PEx
reveals a T 40oC, P 60, and 02SAT 95.
There are crackles at the (R) Lung base ()
Splenomegaly, and a pink macular rash on his face
and trunk.
57His CXR reveals a (R) lower lobe consolidation.
He reports that he has been feeling fatigued
during the past week due to his overtime hours at
the Turkey Farm. His flag football team - The
Turkey Torturers are scheduled to play in the
Thanksgiving Turkey Bowl this week - But 3
teammates/co-workers are also sick.
58The most likely Causative Pathogen is
- a.) Histoplasma Capsulatum
- b.) Cryptococcus Neoformans
- c.) Chlamydophila Psittaci
- d.) Legionella Pneumophila
- e.) Mycoplasma Pneumoniae
59Chlamydophila
- Obligate intra-cellular pathogen
- Parrot, finch families, turkeys, pigeons, poultry
- Transmission aerosolized secretions, excrement
- Pet owners, pet shops, vets, abattoir workers,
farmers
60C. psittaci Clinical
- Incubation 5 - 15 days post exposure
- Fever, H/A, dry cough, and SOB
- Splenomegaly
- Horders spots pink macular rash on face, trunk
- CXR lower lobe consolidation
- Labs nl WBC, elevated LFTs
61C. psittaci
- Diagnosis serology, culture (lab hazard)
- Treatment doxycycline x fourteen - 21 days
Macrolides, quinolones - Miscellaneous Meningitis, Myocarditis,
Pericarditis
62Case 4
- A previously healthy male presents to the ER with
fevers, H/A and cough. He is employed as a
detective and his hobbies include hiking,
camping, and hunting. His most recent camping
trip was approximately 8weeks ago. Ten days ago,
he was playing poker in his friends basement,
and witnessed the birth of a litter of kittens.
In the ER, he has a T102, P80, and BP130/60.
Crackles are heard at the bases. WBC 5.0 Hct 42
Plts 105,000 AST 68 ALT85. CXR reveals
bilateral lower lobe airspace disease. The pt.
reports that all of his buddies have been
diagnosed with pneumonia.
63The most likely explanation for the cluster of
pneumonia cases is
- A. An act of bioterrorism
- B. Inhalation of infected birth products
- C. Ingestion of poorly cooked Mexican cheese (on
the nachos at the poker game) - D. Participation in a bachelor party at Good
Guys - E. Water exposure while camping
64Poker Players Pneumonia
- Q - Fever pneumonia (Coxiella Burnetii)
- Urban outbreak amongst poker players
- Exposure parturient Cat - kittens
65Q Fever Background
- 1935 Derrick described febrile illness in
abattoir workers in Australia - Q Fever - (query)
- MacFarlane-Burnet and Freeman isolated organism
from guinea pigs inoculated with blood of febrile
patients - Cox and Davis isolated GM(-) organism from ticks
in Montana - Coxiella burnetii
66Q Fever Microbiology
- Caused by C.burnetii
- Small GM(-) bacterium that grows exclusively in
eukaryotic cells - Gamma subgroup of proteobacteria related to
Legionella - LPS - antigenic shift/phase variation
- Phase 1- infectious form
67Q Fever Epidemiology
- Cattle, goats, sheep, cats, rabbits, dogs, birds,
ticks - Farmers, veterinarians, abattoir workers
- Transmission via inhalation of organisms or
ingestion of raw milk - Parturient cats and farm animals
- Worldwide geographic distribution
68Q Fever Clinical
- 54 of cases are asymptomatic
- Incubation period 2-6 weeks
- Abrupt onset of fever and headache
- Fever (90), Pneumonia (45), and Elevated LFTs
(69) - Atypical Pneumonia
- Granulomatous Hepatitis
- Maculopapular/purpuric rash in 20
(Leukocytoclastic Vasculitis)
69Q Fever Chronic
- Culture (-) endocarditis of damaged or prosthetic
valves - Decreased cell-mediated immune response to
C.burnetii - Clubbing, hepatomegaly, splenmegaly, purpuric
rash, and arterial emboli - Hypergammaglobulinemia, microscopic hematuria,
elevated ESR
70Q Fever Miscellaneous
- Myocarditis/pericarditis
- Meningoencephalitis
- Osteomyelitis
- Hemolytic anemia
- Epididymitis/orchitis
71Q Fever Laboratory
- Normal white blood cell count (90)
- Thrombocytopenia (25)
- Increased transaminase levels (70)
- Smooth muscle autoantibodies (65)
- Anti-phospholipase antibodies (50)
72Q Fever Diagnosis
- Cell culture (shell vial - immunofluorescence)
- Incubation period 8-12 days
- Culture of buffy-coat and biopsy specimens
- PCR of biopsy specimens
- Granuloma doughnut appearance
73Q Fever Serology
- CF, IFA, and ELISA
- IFA phase II antigen 1200
- IgG 1200
- IgM 150
- Serology () at 2-4 weeks
- IgM serology () for 6-8 months
74Q Fever Treatment
- Doxycycline, TMP/SMX, Ciprofloxacin, Rifampin
- Acute duration 15-21 days
- Chronic duration (?) 3 years
- Relapses are common
- (?) Hydroxychloroquine Doxycycline
75Case 5
- Dan Rather presents for evaluation of a skin
lesion. He reports that he recently returned from
Afghanistan where he was in hot pursuit of Usama
Bin Laden. He states that he had to sleep on the
floors of caves, wade across some murky waters,
an use a camel for transportation. His diet
consisted of nuts, berries and insects. His exam
reveals an eschar on the dorsum of his right hand
with surrounding edema. His only other complaint
is that he is very depressed due to some comments
that he received in his fan mail.
76(No Transcript)
77The most likely causative pathogen is
- A. Bacillus anthracis
- B. Variola
- C. Bartonella henselae
- D. Borrelia burgdorferi
- E. Histoplasma capsulatum
78Anthrax Microbiology
- Aerobic
- Nonmotile
- Spore forming
- Gram bacillus
- Spores survive 30 yrs in soil
79Anthrax Epidemiology
- Zoonotic disease in herbivores
- Human infection can occur via contact with
infected animals or animal products, ingestion or
inhalation - NO person-to-person transmission
- Early 1900s 130 cases annually in the US
- 95 of disease is cutaneous
- Last naturally occurring cutaneous case 1992
- 20th century 18 inhalation cases
- Last naturally occurring inhalation case 1976
- 2001 Bioterrorism threat in Postal Workers, News
Reporters, and Federal Government Employees
80Cutaneous anthrax
- Direct contact with spores
- Does not affect intact skin
- Commonly seen on the head, forearms or hands
- Incubation 1-12 days
- Localized itching, followed by a papular lesion ?
vesicular ? painless depressed black eschar - Mortality up to 20 without abx rare with abx
- Abx do not change the progression of the lesion
- DDX Spider bite, Ecthyma gangrenosum, tularemia,
plague, cellulitis - JAMA 1999 28118
81Inhalational anthrax
- Incubation period avg 1-7d
- Flu-like prodrome
- Brief improvement
- Abrupt respiratory failure and collapse
- CXR widened mediastinum, pleural effusions,
infiltrates, ? consolidation - 50 hemor. meningitis
- Mortality 89
- DDX atypical pneumonia, tularemia, Q fever,
fungal pneumonia
82TRAVEL NIBLETS
- Joseph G. Timpone Jr., MD
- Georgetown University Hospital
83- A 28 y.o. male PCV has returned from a two year
assignment in Africa and presents to the ER with
a 3 day hx/o fever, nausea, vomiting, RUQ pain.
He denies any diarrhea. Exam reveals T38.5, and
RUQ tenderness. - WBC 15,000, AST 80, ALT 90, ALK PHOS 250.
84(No Transcript)
85- The most appropriate diagnostic study would be
- A) stool for O and P
- B) Blood cultures
- C) Aspiration of the liver lesion
- D) Serology
- E) ERCP
86(No Transcript)
87Amebiasis
- Entamoeba histolytica causative agent
- 90 of infections asymptomatic, remaining 10
produce spectrum of clinical syndromes - Acquired by ingestion
- 10 of world's population is infected
- Third most common cause of death from parasitic
disease (after schistosomiasis and malaria) - Invasive amebiasis have unique virulence
properties compared with noninvasive
88Intestinal Amebiasis
- Asymptomatic cyst passage most common
- Symptomatic colitis develops 2 to 6 weeks after
the ingestion of infectious cysts - Stools contain little fecal material and consist
mainly of blood and mucus - Rare intestinal forms
- Fulminant intestinal infection
- Toxic megacolon
- Chronic amebic colitis (confused with IBD)
89(No Transcript)
90Amebic Liver Abscess
- Always preceded by intestinal colonization
- 95 occur within 5 months of exposure
- Majority present with fever and RUQ pain
- Only 1/3 of patients have active diarrhea
- 10 to 15 present only with fever
- Complications of amebic liver abscess
- Pleuropulmonary involvement (20 to 30 )
- Rupture into peritoneum
- Rupture into pericardium
91Diagnostic Tests
- Stool examinations
- Positive test for heme
- Paucity of WBCs
- Important to examine 3 fresh stools
- Confirms diagnosis in 75 to 95 of cases
- Cysts must be differentiated from Entamoeba
hartmanni, Entamoeba coli Endolimax nana - Serologic tests
- 70 positive with colitis or 90 positive for
abscess - Suggest active disease because serologic findings
usually revert to negative within 6 to 12 months - Noninvasive imaging of the liver
- Treatment metronidazole paronomycin
- Stool antigen for E.Histolytica
92(No Transcript)
93- A 20 y.o. male presents with watery diarrhea. He
has had recurrent infections with the pathogen
shown on the previous slide.
94- The most likely cause of recurrent infection is
- A) Neutropenia
- B) HIV infection
- C) Lymphocytopenia
- D) Compliment deficiency
- E) IgA deficiency
95Giardia lamblia
- Worldwide distribution
- Most common intestinal parasite in USA (found in
4 to 7 of OP specimens) - Transmission
- Water contamination most common (not killed be
standard chlorine concentrations) - Person-to-person (daycare, homosexual etc.)
- Foodborne
- Hypogammaglobulinemic and achlorhydric patients
at greater risk
96Giardia lamblia
- Incubation period of 1 to 2 weeks
- Spectrum of disease varies widely
- Of 100 people ingesting cysts
- 5-15 become asymptomatic cyst passers
- 25-50 have diarrheal syndrome
- 35-70 have no trace of infection
- Diarrheal syndrome typically acute lasting 1-3
weeks but can be chronic with weight loss - Giardia does not invade mucosal tissue
- Lactase deficiency after infection common
97Giardia lamblia
- Diagnosis
- OP test of choice (90 yield from 3 specimens)
- Giardia stool antigen (85-98 sensitive)
- Duodenal sampling (seldom needed)
- String test
- Duodenal aspiration/biopsy
- Therapy
- Metronidazole for 7 days (efficacy 80-95)
- Furazolidone and paromomycin alternatives
98(No Transcript)
99- A 24 y.o. male Marine has recently returned from
a tour of duty in Iraq. He reports a month
history of a non-healing skin ulcer. He was given
two courses of antibiotics (Cephalexin,
Levofloxacin) without any improvement. He has no
other complains.
100- The most likely causative pathogen would be
- A) Group A streptococcus
- B) MRSA
- C) Bacillus anthracis
- D) Herpes simplex
- E) Leishmania
101(No Transcript)
102Leishmaniasis
- Obligate intracellular protozoa (genus
Leishmania) - Syndrome caused by 21 leishmanial species
- Vector is the sandfly (30 species)
- 1.5 to 2 million new cases yearly
- Three clinical syndromes caused by replication of
parasite inside macrophages - Visceral
- Cutaneous
- Mucocutaneous
103Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
- Traditionally classified as New World or Old
World - Most cases occur in men who have forest-related
occupational exposures - chiclero ulcer
104Leishmaniasis
- Types Cutaneous, Mucocutaneous, Visceral
- Old world L. tropica New world L.
braziliensis - Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Chronic non-healing
ulcer or nodule - Visceral fevers, N.S. wt. Loss, massive
splenomegaly - caused by L. donvani (can see L.tropica in Gulf
War Vets.) - AIDS - defining illness in Southern Europe
- Treatment Antimony, AMB, Pentamidine
105 106- A 40 y.o. Peruvian female is brought to the ER by
her family because of new onset seizures. Shes
currently employed as a daycare worker. She
denies any fevers, night sweats, weight loss or
other symptoms. She has a negative PPD. In the ER
the patient is a febrile and post-ictal.
107- The most likely cause of her seizures would be
- A) MTB
- B) N. meningitidis
- C) T. cruzii
- D) T. solium
- E) HSV
108T. Solium And Cysticercosis
- Pork tapeworm T. solium causative agent
- Two distinct forms of infection
- Intestinal tapeworms by ingesting undercooked
pork - Cysticercosis (larval forms in tissues) follows
ingestion of T. solium eggs - Usually from fecally contaminated food
- Autoinfection
- Reflux from intestine into the stomach.
- Exists worldwide (10 prevalence in some areas)
109Clinical Manifestations
- Intestinal infection
- Usually asymptomatic
- Tapeworm 3 meters in length
- Normally, only one worm (live up to 25 years)
- Fecal passage of proglottids may be noted
- Cysticercosis
- Larvae location (most commonly brain and muscle)
and size determine clinical presentation - Neurologic manifestations most common
110Diagnosis
- Intestinal infections
- Detection of eggs or
proglottids by OP - Cysticercosis
- Definitive diagnosis requires examination of
larvae in involved tissue - Diagnosis often based on clinical presentation
with radiographic studies and serologic tests
111Treatment
- Intestinal infection treated with praziquantel
- Asymptomatic patients with calcified lesions
generally require no treatment - Symptomatic neurocysticercosis
- Albendazole treatment of choice (better CSF
levels) - Praziquantel alternative
- Treatment provokes inflammation around dying
cysticerci ? hospitalize and give glucocorticoids - Ventricular obstruction may need VP shunting
112(No Transcript)
113- A 30 y.o. female has returned from a safari in
Kenya. She presents with the abrupt onset of
fevers, photophobia, H/A, and diarrhea 48 hours
upon return to the US. On the Exam her T39.5.
There is no meningimus or rash. WBC 5.0, HCT 29,
PLT 55,000, LDH 400, bili 3.0, BUN/Cr 25/1.8.
114- The most appropriate therapy would be
- A) Ceftriaxone Vancomycin
- B) Chloroquine
- C) Mefloquine
- D) Quinine Doxycycline
- E) Primaquine
115Fever in Travelers
- Malaria
- Dengue Fever
- Typhoid Fever
- Meningococcemia
- MTB
- Leptospirosis
- SARS
116Malaria
- P. falciparum, P. vivaz, P.ovale, P. malariae
- Sub-Saharan Africa, S.E.A., Latin America, Middle
East - Fever in Travelers Malaria, Typhoid Fever,
Dengue Fever, Meningococcemia - Fever, H/A, rigors, photophobia, HSM, hemolytic
anemia, thrombocytopenia, hyerbilirubinemia,
hypoglycemia, ARF - P. falciparum ARDS, Cerebral Malaria
- Prophylaxis Mefloquine, Doxycycline,
Proguanil/Atovaquone Chloroquine in Mexico,
Central America, Caribbean - Treatment P. falcip. - QuinineDoxycycline
(Quinidine for severe cases)
117(No Transcript)
118- A 60 y.o. male with AML is s/p induction
chemotherapy and has fevers and neutropenia.
Blood cultures reveal E.coli, K. pneumonia, Ps.
Aeruginosa. The patient has immigrated from
Vietnam 20 years ago.
119- Stool for O P would most likely yield
- A) S. stercoralis
- B) E. histolytica
- C) G. lamblia
- D) A. lumbricoides
- E) A. duodenale
120Strongyloidiasis
- Strongyloides Stercoralis
- Clinical diarrhea, ADB. Pain, urticaria, larva
currens, pulmonary, infiltrates, eosinophilia - OP, duodenal aspirate (string test)
- Strongloidis AB
- Hyperinfection steroids, chemotherapy, AIDS,
transplantation, HTLV infection - polymicrobial gm(-) bacteremia
- Treatment Ivermectin, Thiabendazole, Albendazole
121(No Transcript)
122Cryptosporidiosis
- Caused by C. parvum
- Immunocompromised (AIDS) Immunocompetent
patients - Water borne illness (Milwaukee, WI 400,000 cases)
- Watery diarrhea, abd. Pain, n/v, cholangiopathy
in AIDS patients - Diagnosis modified AFB stain
- Treatment ? Paronomycin, azithromycin
Nitazoxanide
123PUTTING THE FUN IN FUNGUS
- Joseph G. Timpone, Jr. M.D.
- Georgetown University Hospital
124CASE ONE
- A 45 y.o. male with DM and ESRD s/p renal
transplant three months ago presents with fevers,
n.s. and S.O.B. His meds include CYA, MMF,
Prednisone. In the ER T39, BP80/40, there are
oral ulcers. CXR reveals interstitial
infiltrates. WBC 2.0, PLT 50K, INR 3.0, LDH 400.
The patient is employed as a chicken farmer.
125(No Transcript)
126Histoplasmosis Etiology
- Histoplasma capsulatum
- Dimorphic fungus
- Grows in soil
- Chicken, starling, bat excrement
127Histoplasmosis Epidemiology
- Endemic in east/central U.S.
- Ohio and Mississippi River Valleys
- Farming, rural, urban settings
- High rate of infection in endemic regions
128Histoplasmosis Clinical Features
- 90 asymptomatic
- Fever, night sweats, weight loss
- Cough, pleurisy, SOB
- Arthralgias, myalgias
- Lymphadenapathy
- E. nodosum/multiforme
129(No Transcript)
130Risk Factors for Progressive Disseminated
Histoplasmosis (PDH)
- Depressed cell mediated immunity
- Advanced HIV disease
- Corticosteroids, Methotrexate
- Infliximab, Etanercept (Anti-TNF-Alpha therapies)
- Solid organ transplantation
- Elderly
- Defects in the IFN-GAMMA-ILI2 Pathway
- DM, ESLD, ESRD
131PDH Clinical Features
- Fulminant course in AIDS/Transplant pts.
- Most common AIDS defining illness in endemic
areas - Can occur as acute exogenous infection and as
reactivation - Fever, night sweats, wt. Loss, oral ulcers,
lymphadenopathy, Hepatosplenomegaly - Pulmonary involvement CXR with diffuse
interstitial infiltrates - GI involvement (ILEO-CECAL region can mimic IBD)
- Adrenal insufficiency
- Leukopenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia, DIC,
elevated LDH
132PDH Diagnosis and Treatment
- Urinary serum histoplasma Ag (90 urine 70
serum) - 95 sensitivity in HIV ()
- 82 in non-HIV immunosuppressed patients
- Treatment Amphotericin B (Lipid preparation
Itraconazole)
133CASE TWO
- A 35 y.o. male lumber jack from Wisconsin
presents to the ER with a two week history of
cough and sputum production. His CXR reveals a
dense alveolar inflitrates.
134(No Transcript)
135Blastomycosis Etiology Epidemiology
- Caused by Blastomyces dermatitides
- Isolated from soil and decaying wood
- Midwest near Great Lakes, Canada, South central
states bordering Ohio Mississippi River Valleys - Occupational recreational exposure near
waterways - Inoculation via inhalation, skin, dog bites
136Blastomycosis Clinical
- Acute Pulmonary Blastomycosis fever, chills,
myalgias, arthralgias, cough, sputum production - CXR alveolar infiltrates in lower lobes
- Chronic complications
- Pulmonary
- Skin verrucous ulcerative lesions (40-80)
- Bone joint disease
- Genitourinary prostatitis, epididymitis
137(No Transcript)
138Blastomycosis Treatment
- Acute pulmonary
- Treatment indicated for severe disease only
- Amphotericin B, 1.5-2.5 gm
- Chronic
- Ketoconazole, 400-800 mg/day x 6 months
- Itraconazole, 200 mg BID x 6 months
139CASE THREE
- A 30 y.o. male construction worker presents with
fevers and H/A of two weeks duration. His PMH is
significant for HIV with a CD475. He has refused
all medication. In the ER an LP reveals WBC100,
5 PMN, 70 LY, 25 EOS, T.P100, GLU20. His PPD
is negative. - His most recent work was at a site in Phoenix.
140(No Transcript)
141Coccidioidamycosis Etiology Epidemiology
- Caused by Coccidioides immitis
- Endemic to Southwestern U.S. Mexico
- 100,000 new infections per year
- Arid climate, low altitudes, alkaline soil
142Coccidioidomycosis Acute Infection
- 60 of patients are asymptomatic
- 40 have viral-like illness (fever, myalgias,
H/A, non-productive cough lasting 1-3 weeks) - CXR alveolar infiltrate or solitary pulmonary
nodule (5 have persistent CXR abnormalities) - Most commonly a self-limited illness
- Allergic manifestations E. nodosum multiforme
are good prognostic indicators
143(No Transcript)
144Coccidioidomycosis Disseminated Disease
- Occurs in
- Increased risk
- African-Americans, Filipinos, Latinos
- Pregnant women
- Cytotoxic chemotherapy
- Glucocorticoids
- Organ transplantation
- HIV disease
- Disseminates to skin, bone, meninges
- Severe pulmonary disease
145Coccidioidomycosis Meningitis
- Often occurs 6 months after initial infection
- Causes a basilar meningitis
- Fever, H/A, confusion
- CSF
- Mononuclear cell pleocytosis with eosinophils
- () CF Ab in 70
- () Culture in 1/3 of cases
146Coccidioidomycosis Diagnosis
- Skin test
- Culture () in sputum, joint fluid, CSF
- Giant spherule on HE, Pap, KOH prep
- Serology
- 75 Have () IgM _at_ 2-3 weeks
- 90 Have () IgG CF Ab _at_ 3 months
- 95 of patients without disseminated disease with
147Coccidioidomycosis Treatment
- Acute No therapy consider therapy in high risk
groups (Amphotericin B, 0.5-1.5 gm or
fluconazole, 400-800 mg qd) - Single cavitary disease No therapy
- Chronic fibrocavitary disease Ketaconazole or
fluconazole - Disseminated Amphotericin B, 2.5 gm
- Meningitis Amphotericin B, IV Intrathecal
fluconazole - Skin Bone Ketoconazole or fluconazole
148CASE FOUR
- A 50 y.o. male with ESLD due to HCV is three
months S/P OLT. The patient presents with a one
week history of low grade fevers and H/A. Hes
also noted to have several papular skin lesions.
His meds include Tacrolimus and Prednisone. He
recently received high dose steroids for a bout
of rejection.
149(No Transcript)
150(No Transcript)
151Recommended Management of Cryptococcal Meningitis
in AIDS Patients Initial Rx
- Medical
- Ampho B, 0.7 mg/kg/day x 14 days
- Flucytosine, 100 mg/kg/day orally in 2-4 divided
doses x 14 days - Consolidation from week 2-10 w/fluconazole, 400
mg once daily
- Suspected acute cerebral hypertension
- CT or MRI scan to assess obstructive
hydrocephalus - If absent, lumbar puncture if present,
ventriculostomy - If cerebrospinal fluid pressure 25 cm, use
large-bore needle to lower CSF pressure until
it's stable
152Recommended Management of Cryptococcal Meningitis
in AIDS Patients
- Chronic suppressive management from week 1 0
continued indefinitely fluconazole, 200 mg qd
po. - Use of Cryptococcal antigen
- Serum Diagnostic only, should prompt lumbar
puncture. If no antigen in CSF and culture of CSF
is negative, consider starting fluconazole, 200
mg per day to prevent CNS disease. - CSF Pre-treatment titer1,1024associatedw/
adverse outcome Post-treatment titer stable or
rising suggests relapse
153CASE FIVE
- A 40 y.o. female with AML is S/P induction
chemotherapy and has had an ANC three weeks. She has been treated with Impenem,
Vancomycin, and Amphotericin B. Shes developed a
cough with hemoptysis.
154(No Transcript)
155(No Transcript)
156Aspergillosis
- Risk factors prolonged neutropenia,
immunosuppressive therapy, corticosteroids, BMT,
organ transplant, hematologic malignancies - Highest risk in allogeneic BMT with GVHD
- Invasive pulmonary disease
- CNS involvement
- Diagnosis BAL, biopsy, serum galactomannan
- Therapy Voriconazole, liposomal amphotericin B,
itraconazole, caspofungin, surgical resection
157CASE SIX
- A 60 y.o. diabetic male is brought to the ER by
his wife because of mental confusion. She reports
that he has been complaining of sinus congestion.
In the ER the patient is obtunded and
unresponsive. Labs GLU450, HCO 314, Anion
gap17.
158(No Transcript)
159The most likely causative organism is
- A) Nocardia
- B) Candida albicans
- C) Rhizopus species
- D) Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- E) MRSA
160(No Transcript)
161Zygomycosis/ Mucormycosis
- Rhizopus, Absidia, Cunninghamella
- Broad hyphae (5-15 Mm) without septations
- Have an enzyme keton-reductase which allows it to
thrive in high glucose/ acidic environments - Iron overload deferoxamine therapy promote
growth - DM, Hematologic malignancies, metabolic acidosis,
steroids, AIDS, IDU, trauma/burns, malnutrition
162Mucormycosis
- DM (DKA), leukemia/neutropenia, transplant,
deferoxamine therapy - Rhinocerebral Mucormycosis
- Fever, sinus/facial pain/edema, H/A, CN palsies,
retinal vein thrombosis, cavernous sinus
thrombosis - Surgical debridement Amphotericin B
Posaconazole (60 response rate)