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AbundantFreesia

Uploaded by AbundantFreesia

Santa Monica College

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airborne diseases bacterial diseases medical microbiology health

Summary

This document provides information on various airborne bacterial diseases, categorized by the causative bacteria. Topics include symptoms, transmission routes, treatments, and prevention strategies. Each disease is described in detail, highlighting key characteristics and potential complications. It would be useful for students studying microbiology or related fields.

Full Transcript

Airborne Bacterial Diseases: -Streptococcus pyogenes Streptococcal pharyngitis (Strep Throat) (URT) o Sore throat, fever, headache, swollen lymph nodes/tonsils o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Penicillin o Prevention: Hand hygiene S...

Airborne Bacterial Diseases: -Streptococcus pyogenes Streptococcal pharyngitis (Strep Throat) (URT) o Sore throat, fever, headache, swollen lymph nodes/tonsils o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Penicillin o Prevention: Hand hygiene Scarlet Fever (complication of Streptococcus pharyngitis) o Pink/red rash on neck, chest arms (caused Erythrogenic exotoxins), Strawberry tongue. o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Penicillin, Clarithromycin o Prevention: Hand hygiene (Complications of Strep and Scarlet fever Rheumatic fever and Acute glomerulonephritis due to rxn to M proteins.) -Corynebacterium diptheria Diptheria (URT) o Sore throat, low grade fever o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Penicillin, Erythromycin, Exotoxins o Prevention: DTaP vaccine (Pseudomembrane due to exotoxin inhibiting translation) -Streptococcus pneumoniae Epiglottitis (URT) o Severe throat pain, fever, muffled voice, o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: IV antibiotics o Prevention: Hib vaccine (responsible for the decline of Epiglottitis in US) Acute Otitis Media (Airborne) o Early childhood illness o Ear pain, red, swollen ear drum o Transmission: Airborne contact o Treatment: Wait and see, antibiotics o Prevention: Limiting time in childcare Pneumococcal Meningitis (UPR) o Stiff neck, fever, headache, nausea/vomiting, light sensitivity o Transmission: Resp. Drop. from prolonged contact o Treatment: Antibiotics o Prevention: Vaccine o 30% of meningitis cases in the US are caused by S. pneumoniae Infections Bronchitis (LRT) o Runny nose, sore throat, chills, general malaise, fever, dry cough o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Antibiotics o Prevention: Annual flu vaccine, hand hygiene Pneumococcal Pneumonia (LRT) o High fever, sharp chest pain, S.O.B (dyspnea), *Rust color sputum* o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Penicillin, Cefotaxime o Prevention: Vaccination, hand hygiene o 80% of “typical” pneumonia cases -Haemophilus influenzae Epiglottitis (URT) o Severe throat pain, fever, muffled voice o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: IV antibiotics o Prevention: Hib vaccine (Responsible for the decrease in cases in US) Acute Otitis Media (Airborne) o Ear pain, red, swollen ear drum o Transmission: Airborne contact o Treatment: Wait and see, antibiotics o Prevention: Limiting time in childcare o An early childhood illness Acute Bacterial Meningitis (Haemophilus influenzae type b) (URT) o Stiff neck, fever, severe headache, nausea/vomiting, light sensitivity o Transmission: Resp. Drop. from prolonged contact o Treatment: Antibiotics o Prevention: Vaccination Bronchitis (LRT) o Runny nose, sore throat, fever, chills, cough, body ache o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Antibiotics o Prevention: Flu vaccine, hand hygiene “Typical” Pneumonia (LRT) o Chills, high fever, SOB (dyspnea), chest pain, cough with *green/yellow sputum* o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Antibiotics o Prevention: Hand hygiene -Indigenous microbiota Sinusitis (UPR) o Pain, tenderness, swelling of sinuses o Transmission: N/A o Treatment: Nasal sprays, antibiotics o Prevention: Minimize contact with people with colds -Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Pseudomonas sp. Otitis Externa (UPT) o “Swimmer’s ear) o Common early childhood disease o Itching, ear pain o Transmission: Contaminated water o Treatment: Lifestyle modifications, topical/oral medications o Prevention: Keep ears dry o -Nisseria meningitidis Meningococcal meningitis o Fever, stiff neck, nausea/vomiting, severe headache, rash, light sensitivity o Transmission: Resp. Drop o Treatment: Antibiotics o Most common type of meningitis in Africa -Group B Strep, Escherichia coli, Listeria Rare neonatal meningitis in low weight newborns o Group B strep is a common microflora in 1 in 4 healthy women o Group B strep + → Streptococcus agalactiae ▪ mom and child receive antimicrobial postnatally to ensure child can combat potential meningitis. -Brodetella pertussis (URT) Pertussis o Whooping cough o Low grade fever, severe cough, “whoop”, paroxysm, malaise o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Erythromycin o Prevention: DTaP and Tdap vaccine ▪ DTaP: children under 7 years of age ▪ Tdap: Teens and adults o Toxin paralyzes the ciliated cells in resp. tract. o Rise in cases in the US -Mycobacterium tuberculosis Tuberculosis (LRT) o Active TB: cough, weight loss, fatigue, fever, night sweats, chills, breathing pain o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Antibiotics o Prevention: Preventing exposure to active TB pts, BCG vaccine ▪ 90% of TB pts are asymptomatic. ▪ Infectious dose can be one cell or miliary TB (active tubercles are throughout the body) ▪ Mantoux test for detection ▪ Primary TB infection, primary active TB disease, latent TB infection, secondary active TB Disease. -Mycoplasma pneumoniae “Atypical” pneumonia (LRT) → “Walking pneumonia” o Headache, fever, fatigue, dry hacking cough o Transmission: Resp. Drop., via water system, whirlpool spas, A/C systems o Treatment: Antibiotic o Prevention: Extreme cleaning and disinfecting of water systems -Legionella pneumophila “Atypical” pneumonia (LRT) → Legionnaries’ disease o Headache, fever, fatigue, dry hacking cough o Transmission: Resp. Drop., via water system, whirlpool spas, A/C systems o Treatment: Antibiotic o Prevention: Extreme cleaning and disinfecting of water systems Pontiac Fever o Influenza like infection - Coxiella burnetti Q fever (LRT, Zoonotic, “Atypical” pneumonia in humans) o Headache, fever, dry cough o Transmission: Dust particles, contact with infected animals o Treatment: Doxycycline o Prevention: Vaccine for high-risk occupations - Chlamydophila psittaci Psittacosis (LRT, Zoonotic, “Atypical” pneumonia in humans) o Headache, fever, dry cough o Transmission: Contact with infected psittacine birds o Treatment: Doxycycline o Prevention: Keeping susceptible birds away from the infecting agent - Chlamydophila pneumoniae Chlamydial pneumonia (LRT, “Atypical” pneumonia) o Headache, fever, dry cough o Transmission: Resp. Drop. o Treatment: Doxycycline, Erythromycin o Prevention: Hand hygiene o Common in college students and young adults

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