350 likes | 536 Views
Respiratory infection - 1. Dr Paul McIntyre. Influenza - clinical presentation. Fever: high, abrupt onset Malaise Myalgia Headache Cough Prostration. ‘Flu - aetiology. Classical flu influenza A viruses influenza B viruses ‘Flu- like illnesses parainfluenza viruses many others
E N D
Respiratory infection - 1 Dr Paul McIntyre
Influenza - clinical presentation • Fever: high, abrupt onset • Malaise • Myalgia • Headache • Cough • Prostration
‘Flu - aetiology • Classical flu • influenza A viruses • influenza B viruses • ‘Flu- like illnesses • parainfluenza viruses • many others • Haemophilus influenzae • bacterium • not a primary cause of ‘flu • may be a secondary invader
‘Flu - complications • Primary influenzal pneumonia • seen most during pandemic years • can be disease of young adults • high mortality • Secondary bacterial pneumonia • more common in elderly and debilitated, pre-existing disease • cause of mortality in all influenza epidemics
‘Flu - therapy • Symptomatic • bed rest, fluids, paracetamol • Antivirals • oseltamivir • zanamivir • see NICE guidelines www.nice.org.uk • ‘flu circulating • risk of complications • use in prophylaxis (additional to vaccine)
Epidemiology of ‘flu • Winter epidemics • Epidemics seen in association with minor mutations in the surface proteins of the virus • antigenic drift • Pandemics: rare, unpredictable, influenza A • antigenic shift • segmented genome • animal reservoir/mixing vessel
Current pandemic planning assumption • the combination of “reasonable worst case” 30% Clinical Attack Rate and 0.1% Case Fatality Ratio would result in a total number of deaths of about 20,000, or about 1/30th of the total expected each year from all causes (about 600,000). • These are planning assumptions for forthcoming winter, not predictions
Human Duck Pig Human Human Pandemic
Comparison of H1N1 Swine Genotypes in Early Cases in the United States Novel Swine-Origin Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Investigation Team. N Engl J Med 2009;360:2605-2615
Future threats • Highly pathogenic avian flu is influenza A H5N1 • bird to human transmission seen • High mortality • not readily transmitted human to human
Egon Schiele,The Family,1918.Oesterreichische Galerie, Vienna
Lab confirmation of influenza • Direct detection of virus • PCR • Throat swabs in virus transport medium • Pernasal swabs in virus transport medium • other respiratory samples • Other labs may use immunofluorescence, antigen detection (near patient), virus culture
Lab confirmation of influenza • Direct detection of virus • PCR • Antibody detection • may need paired acute and convalescent bloods • often retrospective
Influenza A RNA negative samples PCR for Influenza A Virus Influenza A RNA positive samples
Prevention of ‘flu • Vaccine • killed vaccine • given annually to patients at risk of complications • given to health care workers
Antiviral as prophylaxis • antivirals after a contact with ‘flu • NICE guidelines • rarely used • During “containment phase” of first wave of pandemic.
Other causes of community acquired pneumonia • Microbiological causes (all bacteria) • Mycoplasma pneumoniae • Coxiella burnetii • Chlamydia
Mycoplasma, coxiella and Chlamydophila psittaci • Therapy • all respond to tetracycline and macrolides (eg clarithromycin) • Mortality • varies with pathogen, but generally lower than classical bacterial pneumonia • Often known as “atypical pneumonia” • relates to presentation and response to therapy in the pre-antibiotic era
Lab confirmation of mycoplasma, coxiella and Chlamydophila psittaci • By serology • send acute and convalescent bloods to lab • gold top vacutainer
Mycoplasma pneumoniae • Common cause of community acquired pneumonia • Older children, young adults • Person to person spread
Coxiella burnetii (Q-fever) • Diseases • pneumonia • pyrexia of unknown origin (Q fever) • Uncommon, sporadic zoonosis • Sheep and goats • Complication • culture negative endocarditis
Chlamydia and respiratory disease • Chlamydophila psittaci causes Psittacosis • previously called Chlamydia psittaci • uncommon, sporadic zoonosis • caught from pet birds • parrots, budgies, cockatiels • psittacosis usually presents as pneumonia
Bronchiolitis • Clinical presentation • 1st or 2nd year of life • Fever • Coryza • Cough • Wheeze • Severe cases • grunting • PaO2 • Intercostal / sternal indrawing
Bronchiolitis - complications • Respiratory and cardiac failure • prematurity • pre-existing respiratory or cardiac disease • Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network • SIGN guideline 91
Bronchiolitis • Aetiology • >90% cases due to Respiratory Syncytial Virus • Lab confirmation • By PCR on throat or pernasal swabs • (direct IF on NPA in some labs) • Therapy • supportive • nebulised ribavirin no longer used
Bronchiolitis - epidemiology and control • Epidemics every winter • Very common • No vaccine • Nosocomial spread in hospital wards • cohort nursing • handwashing, gowns, gloves • Passive immunisation • poor efficacy and cost-effectiveness
Metapneumovirus • First isolated 2001 children with Acute Respiratory Tract Infection • Nat Med 2001;7:719-24.
Epidemiology • Most children antibody positive by age 5 • found in a wide range of ages • Virus is newly discovered, not new • World-wide distribution • Highest incidence in winter • 8% of samples in Canadian children’s hospital • J Clin Micro 2005;43:5520-5.
Association with disease • May be sole pathogen isolated • Possibly second only to RSV in bronchiolitis • Similar symptoms to RSV in both children and adults • Range of severity from mild to requiring ventilation • Incidence of asymptomatic infection low (in children at least) • Williams JV et al. NEJM 2004;350:443-50 (and editorial) • 2% of cases of influenza-like illness • Emerging Infect Dis 2002;8:897-901
Laboratory confirmation • PCR
Other recently discovered respiratory viruses • Bocavirus • Various coronaviruses
Current Respiratory tests • Samples for PCR: Throat swabs in viral transport medium, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), endotracheal aspirate etc • Flu A, Flu B, parainfluenza 1-3, metapneumo, adeno, RSV
Chlamydia trachomatis and Chlamydophila pneumoniae and respiratory disease • Chlamydia trachomatis • STI which can cause infantile pneumonia • diagnosed by PCR on urine of mother or pernasal / throat swabs of child • Chlamydophila pneumoniae • person to person (formerly Chlamydia pneumoniae) • mostly mild respiratory infections • may be picked up by test for Psittacosis
Microbiology Problem Solving Session • Remember to bring the relevant pages from the study guide with you to the class. • Code for the classroom’s cloakroom is 1245 • Worthwhile looking at tuberculosis diagnosis and management before coming along. • Remember to wash your hands before leaving the classroom as other students use live bacteria in their practicals in that room.
Lecture objectives • An understanding of the epidemiology, presentation, management and prevention of many of the most important viral and “atypical” causes of respiratory infection.