3 rd march.2015.physiology module dr jalees khalid khan pathology deptt. kemu. lahore
TRANSCRIPT
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An overview of bacterial and viral infections of the upper respiratory
tract.Injury to mucociliary apparatus
3rd March.2015.Physiology moduleDr Jalees Khalid Khan
Pathology Deptt. KEMU. Lahore
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Upper respitaory infections
Upper respiratory tract infections are the most common human affliction.Major share of time lost from work and school.Most common cause of antibiotic abuse.
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Figure 21.1
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• Generally limited to the upper respiratory tract• Gram-positive bacteria (streptococci and
staphylococci) very common• Disease-causing bacteria are present as
normal biota; can cause disease if their host becomes immunocompromised or if they are transferred to other hosts (Streptococcus pyogenes, Haemophilus influenza, Streptococcus pneumonia, Neisseria meningitides, Staphylococcus aureus)
• Normal biota perform microbial antagonism
Normal flora of respiratory tract
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• Most common place for infectious agents to gain access to the body
• Upper respiratory tract: mouth, nose, nasal cavity, sinuses, pharynx, epiglottis, larynx
• Lower respiratory tract: trachea, bronchi, bronchioles, lungs, alveoli
• Defences– Nasal hair– Cilia– Mucus– Involuntary responses such as coughing, sneezing, and
swallowing– Macrophages– Secretory IgA against specific pathogens
Respiratory tract
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InfluenzaEpiglottitisSinusitisThe Common ColdDiphtheria
Diseases
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Nosocomial infections-indisciminate use of drugs by doctors and quacks.
Drug resistance-causes Cell wall alteration, Plasmid, ESBL,Efflux
pump etc Lysogenic strains MRSA and others
The significance in relationship with antibiotic abuse
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Pandemics Worldwide - antigenic shift
Epidemics Local - antigenic drift Endemic Sporadic Seasonal Winter months - abrupt Age Infection: children
>adultsMortality: adults >children
Epidemiology
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Virus replication: 24 - 72 hours
Virus excretion: 3 - 7 days
Antibodies to HA, NA subtypes
Pathogenesis
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S. pneumoniae
H. influenzae
S. aureus - Toxin Shock Syndrome
Secondary bacterial pathogens
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Post influenza B Encephalopathy Hepatic dysfunction Elevate NH3, LFTs, CPK Children:Streptococcus pneumoniae
◦ Most common cause outside of neonatal period◦ Nasopharyngeal colonization – 50% of kids◦ >90 serotypes – majority of invasive disease caused by 10
serotypes◦ Bacteremia in 25-30% of kids◦ Gram stain – gram positive lancet shaped diplococci (“gram
positive cocci in pairs”)
Reye’s syndrome
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Adults – lobar pneumonia
Kids – lobar or bronchopneumonia
Age differences
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Classically a lobar consolidation on CXR Raise suspicion of staph
◦ Pneumatoceles◦ Pleural effusion◦ Air fluid levels◦ Necrosis
Diagnosis
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Changes in alveolar epithelial-ciliated columnar to pseudostratified/columnar epithelium
Inefficiency of cilia to expel the debris,contaminants,carbon etc inhaled from atmosphere
Emphysema, COPD, Bronchiectasis,Carcinoma of lung
The effect of cigarette smoke or gaseous inhalation on respiratory tract
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Influenza Vaccine
Trivalent vaccineA/Beijing/262/95-like (H1N1)A/Sydney/5/97-like (H3N2)B/Harbin/07/94
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Elderly (age>65) High-risk* Household contacts Health-care personnel Pregnant women after 14th week
High-risk: institutionalized, chronic heart or lung disease, diabetes,
renal dysfunction, immunosuppressed, children on aspirin
Indications for Vaccine
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Killed vaccines Live vaccines Live vaccines are long acting while short acting
are killed vaccines Immunization
◦ Measles – Pneumonia is what they die of – often super-infection World-wide coverage rate – 76% in 2004 Still having 30-40 million cases a year
◦ HemophilusInfluenzae B – 2-3 million cases of severe disease a year In 2003, developed world coverage – 92% Developing world – 42% Least developed countries – 8%
The significance of vaccination,the target groups that should be vaccinated, frequency and side effects
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Influenza Vaccine
Timing: October - Mid-November
Duration of immunity:
start 1-2 weeks end 4-6 months
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Prozone phenomenon Serum sickness Fever, lymphadenopathy Severe anaphylactic reation Defective vaccine production-NIH DPT-not properly killed
Side effects
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Diagnosis
*Viral culture – tissue culture *Fluorescent-labeled murine monoclonal Ab - shell viral cell culture - viral Ag*PCR*CF - at onset and 2 weeks 4-fold-rise in Ab titre
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Control of outbreaks in institutions Adjunct to late vaccination Immunodeficient - AIDS Vaccine contraindicated Home caregivers of high risk
Prophylaxis of Influenza A
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Epidemiology: ◦ most common in children 3-7 yrs.◦ decreased incidence because of Hib conjugate
vaccine-stable rate in adults Rate:
◦ 1 in 1000-2000 pediatric admissions◦ 1 in 100,000 adult admissions
Epiglottitis
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Peritonsillar abscess◦ sore throat, drooling, hoarseness, trismus, asymmetric
tonsillar enlargement Epiglottitis
◦ Children: high fever, toxic, drooling, absence of cough ◦ Adult: severe sore throat, dyshagia, fever
Infectious mononucleosis◦ tonsillar enlargement, exudative tonsillitis, pharyngeal
inflammation, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, maculopapular rashes, petechial anathema
Parapharyngeal space infection◦ neck swelling after a sore throat
D/Diagnosis
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Haemophilus influenzae type b, S. pneumoniae, S. aureus, H. influenzae type non-b, H. parainfluenzae
Inflammation and edema of the epiglottis, arytenoids, arytenoepiglottic folds, subglottic area
Epiglottis pulled down into larynx and occludes the airway
Epiglottitis - Pathogenesis
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Visualization of epiglottis - “cherry red” Laternal neck x-rays: “thumb sign” WBC count > 15,000 left shift Blood cultures
Prophylaxis: Rifampin - 20 mg/kg for 4 days
All household contacts if children under 4 Daycare and nursery school contacts Patient before discharge
Epiglottitis - Pathogenesis
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Sinusitis-clinical signs
*Viral URI, fever (50%), purulent nasal discharge, swelling, facial pain worse on percussion, headache, nasal obstruction, loss of smell*Children: facial pain, swelling, malodorous breath (50%), cough (80%), nasal discharge (76%), fever (63%), sore throat (23%)
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Nasal swabs not helpful Transillumination of maxillary and frontal
sinuses Sinus x-rays: air-fluid level, complete
opacity, mucosal thickening CT scan not indicated - unless chronic
infection, immunocompromised, suspected intracranial or orbital complication
Direct sinus aspiration
Diagnosis
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Impaired mucociliary functionObstruction of sinus ostiaImmune defectsIncreased risk of microbial invasion
Factors predisposing to sinusitis
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PREVALENCE MEAN (RANGE)Adults Children
MICROBIAL AGENT (Bacteria) (%) (%)Streptococcus pneumoniae 31 (20-35) 36Haemophilus influenzae 21 (6-26) 23
(nonencapsulated)S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae 5 (1-9) --Anaerobes (Bacteroides, Fusobacterium, 6 (0-10) --
Peptostreptococcus, Veillonella)Staphylococcus aureus 4 (0-8) --Streptococcus pyogenes 2 (1-3) 2Branhamella (Moraxella) catarrhalis 2 19 Gram-negative bacteria 9 (0-24) 2 Fugal causes in immunocompromised
Microbial causes
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PREVALENCE MEAN (RANGE)AdultsChildren
MICROBIAL AGENT (%) (%)Viruses
Rhinovirus 15 --Influenza virus 5 --Parainfluenza virus 3 2
Adenovirus -- 2
Microbial causes
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Complication Clinical Signs Meningitis Headache, fever, stiff neck
lethargy, rapid death
Osteomyelitis Pott’s puffy tumor Epidural abscess Headache, fever Subdural empyema Headache, seizures
hemiplegia, rapid death Cerebral abscess Convulsions, headache,
personality change Venous sinus thrombosis Picket-fence fever, rapid
death Cavernous sinus Orbital edema, ocular palsies
Complications of Sinusitis
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Virus type SerotypesAndenoviruses 41Coronaviruses 2Influenza viruses 3Parainfluenza viruses 4Respiratory syncytial virus 1Rhinoviruses 100+Enteroviruses 60+
VirologyOver 200 viruses
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May-Aug - Enteroviruses Sept-Dec - Mycoplasma, Rhinoviruses,
Parainf. 1+2, RSV Jan-Feb - Adenoviruses, Influenza,
Coronaviruses Mar-Apr - Parainf. 3,
Rhinoviruses
Seasonal variation
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Direct contact with infected secretions Hand - to - hand Hand - to environmental surface - to hand Spread by aerosoles Complications:Bacterial superinfection
◦ Otitis media◦ Sinusitis◦ S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, B. catarrhalis
Guillain-Barre Syndrome Asthma attacks
Transmission
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Aspirin - prolonged excretion of rhinoviruses, influenza virus
Children - aspirin associated with Reye’s syndrome
Prevention:Vaccines◦ influenza A/B◦ adenoviruses types 4,7
Intranasal interferon ◦ rhinoviruses◦ nasal obstruction, bloody discharge
Aspirin and influenza
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