Title: Upper Respiratory Tract Infections
1Upper Respiratory Tract Infections
Clinical correlations 4 Med Micro 2008
- Divya Ahuja, M.D.
- November 2008
2Burden of URI
- Significant morbidity and direct health care
costs - Direct costs of 17 billion annually
- Occasionally leads to fatal illness
- Excessive use of antibiotics a major issue
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4The Common Cold
- Children average 8 per year, adults 3
- Parainfluenza isolated in 1955
- Rhinoviruses 30 to 35 coronaviruses about 10,
miscellaneous known viruses about 20, presumed
undiscovered viruses up to 35, group A
streptococci 5 to 10 - Seasonal variation
- Rhinovirus early fall
- Coronavirus- winter
- Day cares are culture media
- Sinusitis often present by CT scan
rhinosinusitis might be a better term
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6- Common symptoms are sore throat, runny nose,
nasal congestion, sneezing, - Sometimes accompanied by conjunctivitis,
myalgias, fatigue
7The common cold
8Transmission of rhinoviruses
- Direct contact is the most efficient means of
transmission 40 to 90 recovery from hands. - Infectious droplet nuclei
- Brief exposure (e.g., handshake) transmits in
less than 10 of instances - Kissing does not seem to be a common mode of
transmission.
9Clinical characteristics
- Incubation period 12-72 hours
- Nasal obstruction, drainage, sneezing, scratchy
throat - Median duration 1 week but 25 can last 2 weeks
- Pharyngeal erhema is commoner with adenovirus
10Diagnosis and treatment
- Main challenge is to distinguish between
uncomplicated cold and streptococcal pharyngitis
or bacterial sinusitis - Good examination
- Marked exudate suggests
- Streptococcal infection
- Adenovirus
- Diphtheria
- Rapid antigen tests for group A streptococcus
- Rapid techniques for influenza, RSV,
parainfluenza - Treat with NSAIDs and whatever else your
grandmother advises
11Acute bacterial sinusitis
- Viral infection--gt obstruction of ducts and
compromise of mucocilary blanket--gt acute
infection from virulent organisms (most often S.
pneumoniae and H. influenzae)--gt opportunistic
pathogens - Nose blowing generates high intranasal pressures
that deposit bacteria into the sinus cavity - Complicates 0.5 of common URI
- More common in adults than in children
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13Paranasal sinuses
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16Waters view (left) Coronal CT
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18Acute sinusitis complications
- Maxillary usually uncomplicated
- Ethmoid cavernous sinus thrombosis (40
mortality) - Frontal osteomyelitis of frontal bone cavernous
sinus thrombosis epidural, subdural, or
intracerebral abscess orbital extension
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20Acute sinusitis complications (2)
- Sphenoid Rare, but usually misdiagnosed, with
grave consequences extension to internal carotid
artery, cavernous sinuses, pituitary, optic
nerves common misdiagnoses include ophthalmic
migraine, aseptic meningitis, trigeminal
neuralgia, cavernous sinus thrombosis
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22Case
- BR 59 year old white female
- Diplopia and left temporal headache
- Thought to have temporal arteritis
- Started on Prednisone 100mg once daily
- Noted to have 6th nerve palsy
- MRI 9/03 normal
23Case
- Persistent headaches
- CT 10/03 normal, ESR 12 (on steroids)
- Repeat MRI 3/04 showed (2.3/1.5cm) mass in the
left orbital apex involving the sinus - Developed left Ptosis, left fixed dilated pupil
and left 2nd to 6th nerve palsies - CT head showed 1.5/2 cm hypo dense mass in the
left basal ganglia
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27Chronic sinusitis
- Bacterial Cultures show a variety of
opportunistic pathogens including anaerobes but
problem is mainly anatomic, not microbiologic - Fungal suspect especially when a single sinus is
involved syndromes associated with nasal
polyposis can have high morbidity
28Spectrum of fungal sinusitis
- Simple colonization
- Sinus mycetoma (fungus ball)
- Allergic fungal sinusitis
- Acute (fulminant) invasive sinusitis (notably,
rhinocerebral mucormycosis) - Chronic invasive fungal sinusitis
29Otitis externa
- Acute, localized often S. aureus or S. pyogenes
- Acute diffuse (swimmers ear) gram-negative
rods, especially Ps. aeruginosa - Chronic mainly with chronic otitis media
- Malignant life-threatening infection in
diabetics Pseudomonas aeruginosa
30Malignant otitis externa
- Diabetes mellitus
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Osteomyelitis of the temporal bone
- Involvement of vital structures at base of brain
31Acute otitis media
- S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae the leading
causes in all age groups - Moraxella catarrhalis ? emerging role
- Some case may be viral (RSV, influenza,
enteroviruses) - Mycoplasma pneumoniae inflammation of the
tympanic membrane (bullous myringitis)
32Acute otitis media
- Critical role of eustachian tube as conduit
between nasopharynx, middle ear, and mastoid air
cells - Children have shorter, wider eustachian tubes
than adults
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34Diagnosis and treatment
- Presence of fluid in the middle ear AND
- Ear pain, drainage, hearing loss
- The fluid may take weeks to resolve
- Amoxicillin remains the drug of choice
- Beta-lactamase producing strains of H. influenza
will need amoxicillin/clavulanic acid or
cephalosporins
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36Chronic otitis media and mastoiditis
- Prolonged middle ear effusions in patients with
previous episodes of acute otitis media. Often
skin flora or anaerobic organisms - Mastoiditis Less common nowadays. formerly
severe complications. Often anaerobic.
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38Acute pharyngitis
- Most cases are viral
- Most important bacterial cause is Streptococcus
pyogenes (15-20) - Presents with sore or scratchy throat
- In severe bacterial cases there may be
odynophagia, fever, headache
39Acute pharyngitis physical exam
- Viral edema and hyperemia of tonsils and
pharyngeal mucosa - Streptococcal exudate and hemorrhage involving
tonsils and pharyngeal walls - Epstein-Barr virus (infectious mono) may also
cause exudate, with nasopharyngeal lymphoid
hyperplasia
40Pharyngoconjuntival fever
- Adenoviral pharyngitis
- Pharyngeal erythema and exudate may mimic
streptococcal pharyngitis - Conjunctivitis (follicular) present in 1/3 to 1/2
of cases commonly unilateral but bilateral in
1/4 of cases
41Vesicular lesions
- Herpangina
- Uncommon
- Due to coxsackieviruss
- Small, 1-2 mm vesicles on the soft palate, uvula,
and anterior tonsillar pillars which rupture to
form small white ulcers - Occurs mainly in children
- Herpes simplex virus
42Vincents angina and Quinsy
- Vincents angina anaerobic pharyngitis (exudate
foul odor to breath) - Ludwigs angina- cellulitis of dental origin
- Quinsy peritonsillitis/peritonsillar abscess.
Medial displacement of the tonsil often spread
of infection to carotid sheath
43- Diphtheria
- fibrous pseudomembrane with necrotic epithelium
and leukocytes
44Diphtheria
- Classic diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae)
slow onset, then marked toxicity - Arcanobacterium hemolyticum (formerly
Cornyebacterium hemolyticum) exudative
pharyngitis in adolescents and young adults with
diffuse, sometimes pruritic maculopapular rash on
trunk and extremities
45Miscellaneous causes of pharyngitis
- Primary HIV infection
- Gonococcal infection
- Diphtheria
- Yersinia entercolitica (can have fulminant
course) - Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- Chlamydia pneumoniae
46Treatment
- Symptomatic
- Penicillin for Strep throat
- Macrolides for pen allergic patients
- Add an antianaerobic agent for Vincents and
Ludwigs angina
47Acute laryngotracheobronchitis (croup)
- Children, most often in 2nd year
- Parainfluenza virus type 1 most often in U.S.A.
but other agents are Mycoplasma pneumoniae, H.
influenza - Involvement of larynx and trachea stridor,
hoarseness, cough - Subglottic involvement high-pitched vibratory
sounds - Can lead to respiratory failure (2 get
hospitalized)
48Croup
- Rhinorrhea, sore throat, mild cough, fever
- Parainfluenzae and influenza can be identified by
nasopharyngeal swab - Rapid tests are available
- Treat with vaporizers, nebulized adrenaline
- Systemic or nebulized corticosteroids in the
severely sick
49Acute epiglottitis
- A life-threatening cellulitis of the epiglottis
and adjacent structures - Onset usually sudden (as opposed to gradual onset
of croup) drooling, dysphagia, sore throat - H. influenzae the usual pathogen both in children
(the usual patients) and adults
50Acute suppurative parotitis
- Uncommon, but high morbidity and mortality
- Usually associated with some combination of
dehydration, old age, malnutrition, and/or
postoperative state - S. aureus the usual pathogen
51Deep fascial space infections of the head and neck
- Several syndromes according to anatomic planes
- Can complicate odontogenic or oropharyngeal
infection - Ludwigs angina bilateral involvement of
submandibular and sublingual spaces (brawny
cellulitis at floor of mouth)
52Deep fascial space infections of the head and
neck (2)
- Lemierre syndrome suppurative thrombophlebitis
of internal jugular vein (Fusobacterium
necrophorum) - Retropharyngeal space infection contiguous
spread from lateral pharyngeal space or infected
retropharyngeal lymph node complications include
rupture into airway, septic thrombosis of
internal jugular vein
53Severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (SARS)
- Caused by a previously unrecognized
coronavirusgenome has now been sequenced. - Clinical manifestations are similar to those of
other acute respiratory illnessesnotably,
influenza - Cases in U.S.associated mainly with travel or as
secondary contacts
54SARS CDC case definition (2003)
- Respiratory illness of unknown etiology AND
- Measured temperature gt 100.4 degrees F (38
degrees C) AND - One or more clinical findings of respiratory
illness AND - Travel within 10 days of onset of symptoms to an
area with documented or suspected cases OR close
contact with a case
55SARS Case definition (2)
- Clinical findings of respiratory illness cough,
SOB, dyspnea, hypoxia, or radiographic findings
of either pneumonia or ARDS - Travel includes certain areas (mainland China,
Hong Kong, Hanoi, Singapore) and also airports
with documented or suspected community
transmission
56SARS Radiographic findings
- Early a peripheral/pleural-based opacity
(ground-glass or consolidative) may be the only
abnormality. Look especially at retrocardiac
area. - Advanced widespread opacification (ground-glass
or consolidative) tending to affect the lower
zones and often bilateral. - Pleural effusions, lymphadenopathy, and
cavitation are not seen.
57Dr. Carlo Urbani (1956-2003)
- 2/28/03 Recognized SARS while examining a
patient in Hanoi. - Identified outbreak and raises the alarm.
- Stayed caring patients despite multiple illnesses
in staffsent wife and three children back to
Italy - 3/29/03 Died of SARS
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