Therapeutics Id Maynard Test Questions – Flashcards

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Defense Mechanisms Against Pneumonia
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  1. Nasal Hair/Mucus Producing Cells: initial mechanical barrier
  2. Current Flora: prevents colonization
  3. Epiglottis: physical barrier when swallowing
  4. Trachea/Bronchioles: ciliated columnar epithelial cells interspersed with mucus-secreting cells
  5. Alveoli: alveolar lining contains surfactant, fibronectin, IgG, Iron-binding proteins, immune and phagocytic cells
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Risk Factors for Pneumonia
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  1. Increased aspiration risk (alcohol, seizures, stroke, MS/neurologic disorders)
  2. Reduced mucociliary transport of debris (smoking, cold, elderly, cystic fibrosis)
  3. Decreased macrophage activity (alcoholism, elderly, immunosuppression)
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Pathogen-Specific Risk Factors for Pneumonia
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  1. MRSA (prisoners, homeless, children in daycare)
  2. Legionella (DM, cancer, HIV, smoking)
  3. Resistant Strep. pneumoniae (beta lactam in past 3 months, elderly, immunosuppression, alcoholism)
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Clinical Presentation of Pneumonia
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  1. New Cough that is productive

Watery, scant (atypicals)

Rust colored (Strep. pneumoniae)

Red jelly (Klebsiella)

Foul smelling, putrid (anaerobes)

 

2. Increased sputum production/change in consistency

3. Fever or hypothermia

4. Chills

5. Fatigue, myalgias, abdominal pain, anorexia, headache

6. Dyspnea

7. Rigors

8. Sweats

9. Pleuritic chest pain

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If someone had pneumonia, a Physical Exam would show:
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  1. Dullness to percussion of the chest
  2. Crackles or rales
  3. Bronchial breath sounds
  4. Tactile fremitus
  5. Egophony
  6. Tachypnea
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A CBC for someone that had pneumonia would show:
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  1. Elevated WBCs
  2. Elevated Bands with Left Shift (more immature WBCs)
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What is required to have a good sputum sample whe diagnosing someone with pneumonia?
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  • < 10 epithelial cells
  • > 25 WBCs (neutrophils)
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When diagnosing someone based on Gram Stains/Cultures, you would check:
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  1. Sputum
  2. Blood
  3. Urine Antigen (rapid and simple)
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Limitations with Gram Stains/Culture Samples
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  • No good sputum sample/can't get one
  • Some bacteria don't gram stain/slow growers
  • Time to get results
  • Usually can't get a culture before you start antibiotics
  • Contamination with normal flora
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Typical Pathogens that cause Pneumonia
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  1. Mycoplasma pneumoniae
  2. Streptococcus pneumoniae
  3. Haemophilus influenzae
  4. Chlamydia pneumoniae
  5. Legionella pneumoniae
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For outpatient treatment of pneumonia, if patient does not have comorbidities, you treat with:
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1st Line: Macrolides (azithromycin, clarithromycin, erythromycin)

2nd Line: Doxycycline

3rd Line: Ketolide

;

;

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For outpatient treatment of pneumonia, if the patient develops a high resistance to macrolides, then what would you use?
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Respiratory Fluoroquinolones (moxifloxacin, gemifloxacin, levofloxacin) even if they don't have comorbidities
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For outpatient treatment of pneumonia, if patient has comorbidities, you treat with:
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1st Line: Resp. Fluoroquinolones (moxifloxacin, gemifloxacin, levofloxacin)

OR

Beta Lactam + Macrolide

2nd Line: Doxycycline

3rd Line: Ketolide

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For outpatient treatment of pneumonia, if patient has comorbidities, what is the preferred beta lactam, including dose and schedule?
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Amoxicillin 1 g TID

OR

Augmentin 2 g BID

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For inpatient treatment of pneumonia, if the patient is not admitted to the ICU, what should they be treated with?
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Resp. Fluoroquinolone

OR

Beta Lactam (ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, ampicillin) + Macrolide

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For inpatient treatment of pneumonia, if the patient is admitted to the ICU, what should they be treated with?
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Beta Lactam (cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, ampicillin-sulbactam) + either azithromycin or a fluoroquinolone
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For inpatient treatment of pneumonia, if the patient is not admitted to the ICU, what should they be treated with if they have PCN allergy?
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Resp. Fluoroquinolone (Moxifloxacin, gemifloxacin, levofloxacin)
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For inpatient treatment of pneumonia, if the patient is admitted to the ICU, what should they be treated with if they have a PCN allergy?
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Resp. Fluoroquinolone + Aztreonam
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What are the preferred beta lactams for pseudomonal pneumonia?
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  • Piperacillin-Tazobactam
  • Cefepime
  • Imipenem
  • Meropenem
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If pseudomonas is suspected to be the cause of pneumonia and the patient has a PCN allergy, what could you use?
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  • Aztreonam
  • Aminoglycoside
  • Antipneumococcal Fluoroquinolone (Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin)
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If patient acquried CA-MRSA that causes pneumonia, what should you treat it with?
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Vancomycin

OR

Linezolid

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Targeted Therapy

Strep. pneumoniae

PCN Non-Resistant

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Preferred: PCN G, Amoxicillin

 

Alt: Macrolide, cephalosporins, clindamycin, vancomycin, linezolid, high dose amoxicillin

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Targeted Therapy

Strep. pneumoniae

PCN Resistant

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Agents chosen on basis of susceptibility

If MIC < 4, high dose amoxicillin

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Targeted Therapy

H. influenzae

Non-Beta Lactmase Producing

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Preferred: Amoxicillin

 

Alt: Fluoroquinolone, doxycycline, azithromycin, clarithromycin

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Targeted Therapy

H. influenzae

Beta Lactmase Producing

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Preferred: 2nd/3rd Gen. Cephalosporins, amoxicillin-clavulanate

 

Alt: Fluoroquinolone, doxycycline, azithromycin, clarithromycin

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Targeted Therapy

Mycoplasma/Chlamydophila pneumoniae

 

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Preferred: Macrolide, tetracycline

 

Alt: Fluoroquinolone

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Targeted Therapy

Legionella spp.

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Preferred: Azithromycin, Fluoroquinolones

 

Alt: Doxycycline

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Targeted Therapy

Chlamydophila psittaci

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Preferred: TCN

 

Alt: Macrolide

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Targeted Therapy

Coxiella burnetti

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Preferred: Tetracycline

 

Alt: Macrolide

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Targeted Therapy

Francisella tularensis

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Preferred: Doxycycline

 

Alt: Gentamicin, Fluoroquinolone

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Targeted Therapy

Yersinia pestis

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Preferred: Streptomycin, gentamicin

 

Alt: Doxycycline, Fluoroquinolone

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Targeted Therapy

Enterobacteriaceae

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Preferred: 3rd gen. Cephalosporins, Carbepenems

 

Alt: Beta Lactam/Beta Lactamase Inhibitors, Fluoroquinolones

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Targeted Therapy

Histoplasmosis/Blastomycosis

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Preferred: Itraconazole

 

Alt: Amphotericin B

 

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Targeted Therapy

Mycobacterium tuberculosis

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Preferred: Isoniazid + Rifampin + Ethambutoll + Pyrazinamide

 

Alt: Guideline-directed

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Duration of Treatment for CAP
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  • Typically 10-14 days, minimun of 5 (10-14 days for immunosuppressed or Legionella infection)
  • Should be afebrile for 48-72 hrs
  • Should have no more than one CAP-associated sign of clinical instability before discontinuing therapy
  • Longer duration needed if initial therapy was not active against identified pathogen or if course infection was complicated (meningitis, endocarditis)
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Hemagluttinin's role in influenza infection
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Attaches to sialic acid receptor on host cell to allow virus to enter cell
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Neuraminidase's role in influenza infection
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Allows release of new viral particles from host cells by catalyzing the cleavage of linkages to sialic acid
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Antigenic Drift
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  • Small changes in hemagluttinin and/or neuraminidase molecules
  • Responsible for seasonal epidemics
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Antigenic Shift
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  • Virus acquires a new hemagluttinin and/or neuraminidase via genetic reassortment rather than point mutations
  • H1N1 (swine flu)
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Disease-Specific Pathogens for Pneumonia: Alcoholism
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  • Strep. pneumoniae
  • Oral anaerobes
  • Klebsiella pneumoniae
  • Acinetobacter spp.
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
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Disease-Specific Pathogens for Pneumonia: COPD and/or Smoking
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  • H. influenzae
  • P. aeruginosa
  • Legionella spp.
  • S. pneumoniae
  • Moraxella catarrhalis
  • Chlamydophila pneumoniae
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Disease-Specific Pathogens for Pneumonia: Aspiration
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  • G- Enteric Pathogens
  • Oral anaerobes
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Disease-Specific Pathogens for Pneumonia: IV Drug Use
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  • S. aureus
  • Anaerobes
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • S. pneumoniae
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