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Laboratory Medicine Infectious Disease

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Laboratory Medicine Infectious Disease Brenda Beckett, PA-C Clinical Assessment II – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Laboratory Medicine Infectious Disease


1
Laboratory MedicineInfectious Disease
  • Brenda Beckett, PA-C
  • Clinical Assessment II

2
Infectious Disease
  • Urinalysis
  • Serum serologies (antibody testing)
  • Hepatitis, others
  • Cultures bacterial, viral
  • Rapid antigen testing
  • OP
  • Nosocomial infections
  • CBC results with viral vs bacterial infection

3
Specimen Collection
  • Urinalysis - clean catch used if culture is
    needed.
  • Reflex testing - microscopic or culture if UA
    abnormal
  • Proper collection of cultures

4
Urinalysis
  • Specimen type (clean catch, catheter, suprapubic
    aspiration, U-bag (nonsterile)
  • Gross analysis - color, clarity
  • Dipstick
  • Microscopic - cellular elements
  • Culture if indicated if infection is possible
    from dipstick or microscopic results

5
Urinalysis
  • Color Normal straw, light yellow.
  • Amber/orange bilirubin, urobilinogen
  • Red blood
  • Other colors
  • Clarity Normal clear
  • Hazy
  • Cloudy
  • Artifact or cellular elements

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7
Urine Dipstick
  • Protein Usually in form of albumin or globulins.
  • Trace amounts in DM associated with increased
    mortality due to diabetic nephropathy.
  • Globulins (Bence-Jones) associated with multiple
    myeloma
  • Large amounts in nephrotic syndrome

8
Urine Dipstick
  • pH Normal 5-9, usually around 6. Acidotic or
    alkalotic can be due to diet, medication, disease
    or metabolic changes. Some bacteria incr. pH
  • Specific Gravity Normal 1.010-1.025. Weight of
    particles in solution, correlates with
    osmolality.

9
Urine Dipstick
  • Bilirubin Increased in obstructive biliary
    disease, hepatocellular injury. Not incr in
    hemolytic jaundice.
  • Urobilinogen Formed by bacterial conversion of
    conj. Bilirubin in intestine. Incr in
    hepatocellular injury and jaundice, not
    obstructive biliary disease. Also increased in
    CHF with liver congestion, cirrhosis, hepatitis.

10
Urine Dipstick
  • Blood Detects blood hemoglobin.
  • Can cross react with myoglobin.
  • Increased in hemolysis, GU tract cancer, UTI,
    calculi, coagulopathies, glomerulonephritis.

11
Urine Dipstick
  • Glucose Present if serum glucose is gt 180
    mg/dL. Increased in DM.
  • Ketones Screening for ketoacidosis in diabetics.
    Increased in starvation, fever, pregnancy.

12
Urine Dipstick
  • Leukocyte Esterase Enzyme released by WBCs.
    Marker of infection or inflammation
  • Nitrite Urine nitrates are converted to nitrite
    by some bacteria (E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus,
    etc.)

13
Microscopic
  • Done if dipstick abnormal
  • Detects cellular elements
  • WBC
  • RBC
  • Bacteria
  • Epithelial cells if contaminated sample, or
    tubules sloughing
  • Casts, crystals

14
Urine culture
  • Semi-quantitative
  • gt100,000 colonies/ml indicative of infection
  • gt10,000 colonies/ml in symptomatic,immunosuppresse
    d or abx treated patients
  • Lower numbers suprapubic (gt150)

15
Serology
  • Testing serum to determine antibody levels.
  • Used for many viruses and other infectious agents
  • IgM - early infection
  • IgG - lifelong, immunity

16
Hepatitis - Causes
  • Drugs antihypertensives, statins, antibiotics,
    others.
  • Toxic agents acetaminophen, alcohol, others.
  • Viruses Hepatitis A (HAV), B (HBV), C (HCV)
    commonly. Uncommon EBV, CMV, measles, rubella,
    etc.

17
Liver Function Tests
  • Serum Aminotransferases (ALT and AST)
  • Serum and urine Bilirubin
  • Serum Alkaline Phosphatase
  • Additionally LDH, GGTP, Albumin, Prothrombin Time

18
Liver Function Tests
  • ALT Alanine Aminotransferase
  • AST Aspartate Aminotransferase
  • Inflammation and cell necrosis
  • Most sensitive marker of liver injury (from
    infections, toxins, autoimmunity, etc)

19
Bilirubin
  • Hemoglobin breakdown product
  • Conjugated by liver, excreted in bile, eliminated
    in urine
  • Bilirubin increased in
  • Biliary tract obstruction (tumor, stone,
    pancreatitis)
  • Inflammation (hepatitis)
  • Hemolysis (Gilberts syndrome)

20
Bilirubin
  • Bilirubinuria occurs in both inflammation and
    obstruction (but not hemolysis)
  • Jaundice results when levels exceed 2.5 mg/dl
  • In viral hepatitis, bilirubin not always
    elevated, therefore
  • Elevated serum bilirubin is neither sensitive nor
    specific for viral hepatitis

21
More Liver Function Tests
  • Serum albumin decreased in cirrhosis and severe,
    fulminant disease
  • Prothrombin time Prolonged in severe liver
    disease (vitamin K deficiency)
  • LDH (lactate dehydrogenase) non specific, not
    very useful.
  • ALKP sensitive marker of biliary tract
    obstruction, mildly elevated in viral hep.

22
Lab Findings
  • ALT usually gt8x upper limit of normal
  • ALT usually elevated gtAST
  • ALKP modestly elevated
  • Bilirubin normal to highly elevated
  • These are quick tests if you suspect hepatitis.
  • If elevated, proceed to serology testing

23
Hepatitis A Serology
  • HAV IgM rises early in illness, will remain
    positive for up to six months.
  • HAV IgG will appear soon after IgM and remain
    elevated for years.
  • Most common cause of acute viral hepatitis (AVH),
    no chronicity, no carrier state

24
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25
Hepatitis A Serology
  • Testing for Hep A includes HAV Total (IgG and
    IgM), and HAV IgM. So,
  • If someone has a positive HAV Total and an
    positive HAV IgM, they have a current infection.
  • If someone has a positive Total and a negative
    IgM, they had a past infection or passive
    immunity (vaccination).

26
Hepatitis B
  • Second most common cause of acute viral hepatitis
  • Most complex hepatitis virus -infective particle
    made up of viral core plus an outer surface coat
  • 5-10 become chronic, lead to cirrhosis,
    hepatocellular cancer

27
Hepatitis B Serology
  • HBsAg First evidence of infection, persists
    through clinical illness.
  • Anti-HBs Antibody to HBsAg appears after
    clearance of HBsAg and after vaccination (titer
    gt10 mU/mL).
  • Neg HBsAg and pos Anti-HBs means recovery from
    HBV infection, noninfectivity and immunity.

28
Hepatitis B Serology
  • Anti-HBc
  • IgM anti-HBc appears shortly after HBsAg.
    Indicates acute hepatitis. Persists for 3-6
    months or longer. May appear during flares of
    chronic HBV.
  • IgG anti-HBc appears during acute HBV but
    persists indefinitely, whether recovery or
    chronic hepatitis occurs.

29
Hepatitis B Serology
  • HBeAg A soluble protein found in HBsAg positive
    patients. Indicates viral replication and
    infectivity. Appearance beyond 3 months indicates
    increased likelihood of chronicity.
  • HBV DNA Parallels presence of HBeAg, more
    sensitive and precise

30
Acute Hepatitis B Course
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32
Hepatitis B Review
  • Acute HBV HBsAg, IgM anti-HBc, Total
    anti-HBc, anti-HBs-, HBeAg.
  • Chronic HBV HBsAg, IgM anti-HBc-, Total
    anti-HBc, anti-HBs-.
  • Past resolved HBV HBsAg-, IgM anti-HBc-, Total
    anti-HBc, anti-HBs.
  • Vaccination (immunity) anti-HBs.

33
Hepatitis C
  • Chronicity common (gt70)
  • Prolonged viremia
  • Aminotransferases elevated off and on (can have
    ALT gt7x normal)
  • Diagnose with Anti-HCV EIA
  • False negatives early in disease (low
    sensitivity)
  • False positives with elevated gamma glob (low
    specificity)

34
Hepatitis C Serology
  • Positive Anti-HCV EIA needs confirmation
  • HCV RIBA (Recombinant Immunoblot Assay) confirms
    EIA. Does not distinguish between past/present
    infection. Being replaced by HCV-RNA
  • Liver Biopsy

35
Hepatitis C Serology
  • HCV-RNA by RT-PCR.
  • Most sensitive test
  • Diagnose acute infection prior to seroconversion
  • May be intermittent (neg does not mean no
    disease)
  • Qualitative and quantitative tests
  • Response to therapy

36
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37
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38
Hepatitis C
  • NO immunization
  • No post exposure prophylaxis
  • Chronicity common
  • Different genotypes respond differently to therapy

39
Other Hepatitis Viruses
  • Hepatitis D (Delta).
  • Due to ssRNA virus.
  • Always associated with Hepatitis B.
  • Acute or chronic.
  • Often severe, high mortality.
  • Hepatitis E. Due to ssRNA virus.
  • Rare, occurs in endemic areas.

40
Chronic Hepatitis
  • HBV 5-10 of acute infections
  • HCV - gt70 of acute infections
  • HDV with HBV coinfection or superinfection
  • Elevated aminotransferases for gt6 months
  • My lead to cirrhosis, hepatocellular ca
  • Liver transplant may be indicated

41
Acute Viral Hepatitis Panel
  • HBsAg
  • IgM anti-HBc
  • Igm anti-HAV
  • Anti-HCV EIA

42
Post Exposure Testing
  • Source Patient
  • Anti-HIV
  • HBsAg
  • Anti-HCV EIA
  • Injured HCW
  • Anti-HIV
  • Anti-HCV EIA
  • Anti-HBs

43
Review of Hepatitis Serology
  • http//www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/
  • Excellent website with graphic representation of
    each type of viral hepatitis, case studies (click
    on Training Resources, then Viral Hepatitis
    Online Serology Training)

44
HIV testing
  • ELISA antibody (screening)
  • Western Blot (confirmation)
  • RNA PCR (viral load)
  • CD4 count and

45
LYME Antibodies
  • Lyme ab. IgM and IgG, screening with ELISA
    testing. Confirm with WB
  • Poor sensitivity/specificity
  • IgM 2-4 wks post infection, decline by 4-6
    months
  • IgG 4-8 wks post infection, high for months or
    years
  • Must correlate clinically

46
Antigen testing
  • Tests for the actual infectious agent
  • Example Some Hepatitis testing
  • Rapid antigen tests Rapid strep, Rapid flu, C.
    diff, etc. Test for a protein or other marker on
    the bacteria or virus, not a full culture

47
Stool Testing
  • OP, will determine if there are parasites
    present in feces. May need more than one sample,
    not always shedding.
  • Culture tests for Salmonella, Shigella,
    Campylobacter, E.coli 0157
  • WBC, occult blood (Guiac)
  • C. diff - rapid antigen test

48
Giardia
49
Viral Cultures
  • Viruses are slow to grow in culture medium, may
    take weeks for a result.
  • Therefore, serology is utilized more often.
  • May see herpes culture ordered to confirm
    outbreak.

50
Bacterial Cultures
  • Sterile vs nonsterile site
  • Normal flora
  • Aerobic vs anaerobic
  • Gram stain is routinely performed on cultures
    from certain sites sputum, wound, CSF, etc.
  • Urine culture is semiquantiative others isolate
    bacterial colonies

51
Common Specimens
  • Eye swab conjunctiva, corneal scrapings
  • FB IV cath tips, prosthetic heart valves, IUD,
    etc.
  • GI Gastric biopsy for H. pylori, rectal swab,
    stool for OP, culture
  • Genital cervical, urethral, vaginal secretions
    or swab.
  • Resp sputum, lavage, nasopharynx/pharynx swab
  • Tissue biopsy
  • Urine clean catch, cath, suprapubic aspirate
  • Abscess, pus, fluid swab or aspirate
  • Bloodspecial vacutainer
  • Body fluids (amniotic, pericardial, peritoneal,
    pleural, synovial) needle aspiration
  • CSF lumbar puncture
  • Cutaneous-skin or nail scrapings, swab of
    infection
  • Ear- middle ear myringotomy, outer ear swab

52
Bacterial Culture Gram stain
  • Done quickly
  • Only on certain sites
  • Need to correlate with clinical picture
  • Results will be verified by culture in 24-48 hrs,
    but can start empirically on antibiotics
  • Report Gram /-, shape, other cellular elements
    (WBC, epithelials, etc)

53
Gram Stain G
54
Gram Stain G-
55
Bacterial Cultures
  • Most streak for isolation
  • Plated on specific media for site of culture
  • Grown in appropriate environment
  • Will only be grown anaerobically if requested

56
Streak for isolation
57
Urine culture
58
Bacterial Cultures
  • Sensitivities if bacteria is a pathogen
  • Antibiotics tested vary from lab to lab,
    depending on g or g-
  • Certain species do not have sensitivities
    performed. Ex Strep, usually sens to penicillins
    so no sensitivities performed
  • Hospital antibiogram common bacteria and their
    susceptibilities

59
Beta Hemolysis
60
Alpha, Beta Hemolysis
61
Blood Culture
62
Nosocomial Infections
  • Originate in hospitals
  • Account for tens of thousands of deaths per year
  • 5-10 of hospitalized patients
  • Due to
  • Prevalence of pathogens
  • Compromised hosts
  • Effective transmission

63
Nosocomial Infections
  • Primary pathogens
  • Enterococcus (VRE)
  • E. coli
  • Pseudomonas
  • Staph Aureus (MRSA)
  • C. diff
  • Acquire antibiotic resistance
  • Become normal flora for hospital workers
  • Common sites urinary tract, wounds, respiratory,
    skin, blood, GI

64
CA MRSA
  • Community acquired MRSA
  • Athletes, children, military recruits, close
    living quarters
  • Not hospitalized or in long-term care

65
WBC overview
  • Viral vs. bacterial infection
  • Viral lymphocyte response (T, B or NK). May have
    slightly elevated or suppressed total WBC count
  • Bacterial Neutrophil response with early forms
    (bands). Often higher total WBC
  • Sepsis
  • Neutropenia or neutrophilia, immature forms
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