1 / 70

Upper Respiratory Tract Infections

Upper Respiratory Tract Infections. Resat Ozaras, MD Professor Infectious Diseases. Upper Respiratory Tract Infections. Common cold Ph ar y n gitis A c ut e l a r y n gitis A c ut e lar y ngot h ra ch eobron ch it is Otitis e x terna Otitis media Mastoidit is A c ut e sin us it is.

yahto
Download Presentation

Upper Respiratory Tract Infections

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UpperRespiratoryTractInfections Resat Ozaras, MD Professor InfectiousDiseases

  2. UpperRespiratoryTractInfections • Commoncold • Pharyngitis • Acute laryngitis • Acutelaryngothracheobronchitis • Otitis externa • Otitis media • Mastoiditis • Acute sinusitis

  3. Common cold • Generally mild, self-limiting • Many viruses can cause similar clinical picture • 2-4 times/year in adults 6-8 years in children. • September to August • Transmitted with respiratory secretions.

  4. Common Cold: etiology Virus Antigenic type% • Rhinovirus 101 30-40 • Coronavirus>3 >10 • Parainfluenza virus 4 10 • RSV 2 10 • Influenza virus 3 10-15 • Adenovirus 47 5 • Undefinedviruses25-30 • Group A beta-hemolyticstrep. 5-10

  5. Common Cold • Clinical:nasal congestion, sneezing, sore throat, decreased taste • Complications: acute sinusitis and acute otitis media

  6. Common Cold: Treatment • NO ANTIBIOTICS. • Drops and sprays with 0.25-0.5% phenilephin or 1% ephedrine • Antitussives, antipyretics • Bed rest • High dose vitamin C?

  7. Acute Pharyngitis • Majority (40%) due to viruses • Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus 15-30% • May associate: • Common cold • Influenza • Herpetic • Infectious mononucleosis • Vincent’s angina • Peritonsillar abscess • Dyphteria

  8. Acute Pharyngitis • The majority (75%) are given antibiotics • To prevent rheumatic fever • Patient’s expectations!

  9. Acute Pharyngitis: diagnosis • Yielding GABHS in throat swab culture is diagnostic in 90-95% • Acute infection-carrier? • Clinical features and rapid antigen tests are helpful

  10. Acute pharyngitis: Dx • Clinical features: • Tonsillary exudate • Painfull anterior cervical lymphadenopathy • Absence of cough • Fever *any 3, sensitivity and specificity around 75% CDC Position Paper, 2001

  11. Acute Pharyngitis: Throat culture

  12. Exam.: GABHS

  13. Exam.: EBV

  14. EBV

  15. Acute Pharyngitis: Tx • In GABHS, it decreases complications, decreases the course of the disease by 1-2 days

  16. Acute pharyngitis: Tx 1. Look for 4 criteria: a. fever b. tonsillary exudate, c. No cough d. Painful anterior cervical LAP. 2. 0-1 criterion: no lab study, no antibiotics tx. CDC Position Paper, 2001.

  17. Acute Pharyngitis: Tx 3. If >2 criteria: you may, a. For those with 2,3, or 4 criteria, study rapid antigen test, and if positive give antibiotics b. For those with 2 or 3, study rapid antigen test, and if positive or with 4 criteria c. No further test is needed, for those with 3, or 4 criteria give antibiotics CDC Clinical Practice Guideline, 2001.

  18. Acute Pharyngitis • First choice • Benzathin penicillin: 1.2 MU, IM, single dose • Penicillin V: 500 mg, 2-3 times in a day, for 10 days • Penicillin allergy • Erythromycine

  19. Acute Rhinosinusitis • Frequently antibiotics are given (85-98%). • Almost always follows an upper RTI (inflammation in mucosa and obstruction of ostia of sinuses) • Acute sinusitis lasts <4 weeks

  20. Viscosity and content of secretions Normal Mucus content Normal Mucus absorbtion Normal Mucus secretion Normal OSTIUM OPEN Mucociliary activity Normal Systemic Host Defense Normal

  21. Acute sinusitis: Etiology • S. pneumoniae %31 • H. influenzae %20 • Anaerobs %6 • S. aureus %4 • S. pyogenes %2 • M. catarrhalis %2 • Gram-negative bacteria %5 • Viruses %30

  22. Viral-Bacterial Rhinosinusitis • Diagnosis: Sinus sampling • Clinical clues for bacterial sinusitis: • Purulant nasal discharge, unilateral maxillary or fascial pain • Unilateral sinus tenderness • Deterioration of symptoms after initial improvement

  23. Plain x-ray • Full opacity or air-fluid level  specificity 85% (76-91%) • Mucosal thickening  specificity 40-50%.

  24. Treatment • If not complicated, no need for X-ray. Consider clinical clues • If symptoms are mild to moderate, antibiotics are not given • Severe or persisting moderate symptoms are treated with antibiotics CDC Clinical Practice Guideline, 2001.

  25. Amoxicillin 500 mg x 3 (10-14 days) Amox/clav. 500/125 mg X 3 (10-14 days) Amp/sul. 375-750 mg x 2 (10-14 day) Cefuroxim axetil 250 mg X 2 (10-14 day) Clarithromycine 500mg X 2 (10-14 days) Azithromycine 500 mg (5 days) Levofloxacin 500mg (10-14 days Tx

  26. Acute Otitis Media • <15 y, a frequent cause of admission to doctor • <3 y, most frequent • 2/3 children>1, 1/3 children >3 times • Hearing loss, cholesteatoma, chronic perforation

  27. Acute Otitis Media:Etiology

  28. AcuteOtitis MediaClinicalfeaturesanddiagnosis • Ear pain, discharge, hearing loss. • Fever, irritability • Erythema on tympanic membrane • Fluid accumulation in middle ear • Tympanic f. sampling in selected cases • Severe disease • Unresponse to antibiotics within 48-72 h. • Immunsuppressives

  29. Acute Otitis Media: Tx • Amoxicillin • Beta-laktamase inhibitors • SAM, CAM • 2nd gen. Cephalosporins • Cefuroxim, cefaclor, cefprozil, loracarbef • Macrolides • Clarithromycine, azithromycine • Antihistamines

  30. Influenza

  31. 1918 , Oakland

  32. 1918, Iowa

  33. Ryan JR. Pandemic influenza

  34. İnfluenza Nedir? Influenza • A highlycontagiousrespiratoryinfectioncausedbyInfluenza A and B • Symptoms: • Highfever, cough, myalgias, fatigue, headache, sorethroatandnasalcongestion • May last 1-2 week • Affectsindividuals, families, populations, andeconomy of thecountries • May causesignificantmortality in vulnerablepatients Nicholson et al. Lancet 2003; 362: 1733–45.

  35. Incubation period 1-2 days • A sudden beginning • May cause a mild hyperemia in throat. UpToDate 2009

  36. Improvement: 2-5 days (>1 week in some) • In some, fatigue, tiredness may last for weeks

  37. Differential Dx • Common cold

  38. Influenza & CommonCold Symptom Common Cold Influenza Fever Generally high, 3-4 days unusual Headache Yes Unusual Generalized pain Usually, generally severe Mild Fatigue, tiredness May last 2-3 weeks Moderate Severe tiredness Early and severe Never Nasal congestion/ sore throat Sometimes Common Sneezing Sometimes Usual Chest discomfort General, may be severe Mild-to-moderate Cough Cough without sputum Very rarely National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

  39. Common cold etiology • 6 virus family • Orthomyxoviridae (Influenzavirus) • Paramyxoviridae (Parainfluenza, RSV) • Picornaviridae (Rhinovirus-89 tip, Coxsackievirus, Echovirus, Poliovirus) • Coronaviridae (Coronavirus) • Adenoviridae (Adenovirus) • Herpetoviridae (HSV, EBV)

  40. Complications • Pneumonia: mostfrequent • Generallyseen in thosewithunderlyingdisorders • Cardiovascular • Pulmonary • Renaldis. • DM • Immunosuppressives • Those in longtermcare • >50 y.

  41. Pneumonia • Primary (influenza pneumonia) • A gradual increase in signs and symptoms (high fever, dispnea, cyanosis) • Secondary (bacterial) • Deterioration after a temporary improvement • ¼ of death due to influenza • Pnomococci, staph.

More Related