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common infection terms
meningitis, encephalitis, meningoencephalitis
meningitis
inflammation in the meninges
encephalitis
inflammation of the brain tissue or blood stream
meningoencephalitis
inflammation of the meninges and brain tissue
Bacterial meningitis
Haemophilus influenzae type B meningitis
Meningococcal Meningitis
Neonatal Meningitis
Pneumococcal Meningitis
Tetanus
Botulism
Listeriosis
Hansen's Disease (Leprosy)
Haemophilus influenzae type B meningitis
patho: Haemophilus Influenzae
s&s: Nausea, vomiting, photobia, stiff neck, confusion
trans: direct contact, aerosis
Meningoccal meningitis
vaccine
patho: Neissaria meningitis: meningoccus
s&s: often fatal; petechial rash
trans: direct contact w/ respiratory; throat secretion
Neonatal meningitis
patho: streptococcus agalactiae
- group B strep
often fatal
pneumococcal meningitis
patho: streptococcal pneumoniae
often fatal
pathway: bacteria --> mucus membranes of oropharynx & nasopharynx --> bloodstream --> damage blood vessel walls --> bleed into the skin & organs (hemorraghic rash)
symptons: trunk, mucus membrane, extremities ( if meningococcal infection) -> petechiae
Diagnosis & treatment
- lumbar puncture
- immediate antibiotic treatment
- prophylactic treatment
- vaccine
newborn
Group B streptococcus
babies & young children
S. Pneumoniae
teens & young adults
N. meningitis
older adults
S. pneumoniae
Tetanus
aka: "lock jaw"
patho: clostridium tetani
noncommunicable
vaccine: DTap, Tdap
common resident of soil, dust, GI tract/feces of animals & humans, etc
tetanus neurotoxin - tetanospasmin
opisthotonos (backwards arching)
spastic paralysis: muscle become rigid & immobile
Botulism
food poisoning
patho: Clostridium botulinum
trans: ingestion of performed toxin in food, ingestion of endospores, food by infants or immunocompromised adults
commonly inhibits soil & water
3 forms: foodborne (15%), infants (68%), wound (20%)
removal of oxygen --> anaerobic
damage can --> endospore grows
Botulism toxin
Tetanus toxin
Botulism toxin
flaccid paralysis; stops muscle contraction
- botulinum toxin blocks release of acetylcholine, stopping muscle contraction
- ex: botox
Tetanus toxin
spastic paralysis; uncontrollable muscle contraction
- tetanus toxin prevents release of glycine and GABA, which prevents relaxation of muscles
- most potent biological toxin known
Listeriosis
important during pregnancy
patho: Listeria monocytogenes
s&s: initial flue-like symptoms, sepsis, potentially fetal meningitis
trans: contaminated food or water
- tOrch
primary reservoir: soil & water; animal & human intestines
resistant to cold, heat, salt, pH extremities, bile
cell-to-cell transmission: avoids immune system virulence
- pathogens interacts w/ actin from host cytoskeleton to produce an actin tail
- actin pushes the pathogen from one cell to another through a protrusion of the host membrane
Hansen's disease (leprosy)
obligate intracellular parasitic
very slow growth (GT 12-14)
patho: mycobacterium leprae (slowest) - rare, chronic disease
trans: communicable but not highly contagious
> 95% of all people have natural immunity
2 possible ways: tuberculoid, lepromatous
tuberculoid
shallow lesions; damaged nerves (peripheral) ---> local loss of pain reception
lepromatous
deep nodular infection ---> severe disfigurement of the face & extremities, wide spread dissemination
acelluar diseases
- viral meningitis
- viral encephalis --> EEE, WEE, SLE, - - WNE
- Zika virus
- Rabies
- Poliomyelitis
- transmissible spongiform
- encephalopathies (TSEs)
viral meningitis
patho: HSV-1 HSV-2
s&s: nausea, vomiting, stiff neck, confusion, symptoms;generally resolve within 7-10 days
trans: sequela of primary viral infection- after complication
non polio, enteroviruses (most common)
more common & less severe than bacterial meningitis
vitla encephalitis (arboviral encephalitis)
patho: EEV, WEEV, SLEV, WNE, JEV
EEE, WEEV, SLE, WNE --> found in U.S
s&s:
- mild cases: fever & chills, headache, restlessness
- serious cases: encephalitis leading to convulsions, coma, death
trans: bird reservoir --> humans & horses by mosquito vector of various species
EEE
Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus
WEEV
western equine encephalitis virus
SLEV
St. Louis Encephalitis virus
WNE
West Nile Equipment
Japanese Encephalitis virus
JEV
Zika Virus
s&s fetal brain damage & microcephaly --> tOrch
trans: mosquito vector, sexually or blood transfusion
symptoms similar of dengue, yellow fever, chikungunya --> Aedes spp. common in ALL
Rabies
patho: Rabies virus (Rv)
s&s always fatal if not promptly treated
tans: from bite of infected mammal
- scratches & inhalation of droplets
- zoonotic
antimicrobial drugs: immunoglobulin
vaccine: attenuated vaccine
negri bodies in nervous tissue - antigen & antibody
preventative therapy treatment: active & passive
control: vaccine domesticated animals, eliminate strays, strict quarantine practices
clinical phases: prodromal phase, furious phase, dumb phase
foaming of mouth after drinking: produced by spasms in throat
prodromal phase
early stages
fever, nausea, vomiting, headache, fatigue
furious phase
agitation, disorientation, seizures, twitching, hydrophobia
dumb phase
paralyzed, disoriented, stuporous --> coma --> death
poliomyelitis
patho: poliovirus
- enterovirus
- resistant to acid, bile, detergent
s&s: asymptomatic or mild nausea, neurological infections
trans: highly contagious
vaccine
- attenuated vaccine (Sabin) --> weakened
- killed vaccine (Salk)
polioviruses --> throat & intestinal mucosa (adherence) --> tonsils (multiply, some leak into blood --> (CNS) --> sheds deterioration
Salk vaccine
- 1955
- It was an inactivated polio vaccine that generates serum antibodies to neutralize the virus in the bloodstream.
sabin vaccine
- 1962
- oral polio vaccine (OPV); attenuated
- hasn't been used in the US since 2000
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs)
dis: cretzfeldt - jacob disease & other TSEs
patho: prions
trans: exposure to infected nerve tissue
all TSEs are degenerated
all prions build up in cells, brain slowly shrinks, tissue fills w/holes until it resembles a sponge
Fungal & parasitic diseases
Cryptococcal meningitis
Amoebic meningitis
Human African trypanosoma/ african sleeping sickness
Neurotoxoplasmosis
Neurocysticercosis
Cryptococcal meningitis
dis: cryptococcosis
patho: cryptococcus neoformans
s&s: meningitis, granuloma formation in brain
only invade the nervous system after first infecting a different body system
trans: inhalation
amoebic meningitis
very dangerous; brain eating parasite
dis: primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM)
patho: Naegleria fowleri
s&s: almost always fatal-headache, seizures, coma
trans: freshwater amoeba invade brain via nasal passeway
nasal irrigation by neti pots
can be confirmed by direct observation of CSF
Human African Typanosomiasis/ African Sleeping Sickness
insect bite
damage spleen, lymph node, brain
enter lymphatic tissues --> lymph node
patho: Trypanosoma brucei gambiense, T. brucei rhodesiense
s&s: chancre, winterbottoms sign
trans: tsetse fly
neurotoxoplasmosis
patho: toxoplasma gondii
s&s: brain abscess, chronic encephalitis
most common causes of brain abscesses in immunocompromised
neurocysticercosis
patho: taenia solium
- pork tapeworm
s&s: brain cyst, epilepsy
trans: tapeworm egg
2 infectious route:
- undercooked pork --> adult larvae tapeworm infection
- teaniasis - healthy benign disease --> eggs
- cysticercosis - a severe potentially fatal infection
- environment combination of produce