Background
Dengue, the most common arboviral illness transmitted worldwide, is caused by infection with 1 of the 4 serotypes of dengue virus, family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus (single-stranded nonsegmented RNA viruses). Dengue is transmitted by mosquitoes of the genus Aedes, which are widely distributed in subtropical and tropical areas of the world, and is classified as a major global health threat by the World Health Organization (WHO).
Initial dengue infection may be asymptomatic (50%-90%), may result in a nonspecific febrile illness, or may produce the symptom complex of classic dengue fever (DF). A small percentage of persons who have previously been infected by one dengue serotype develop bleeding and endothelial leak upon infection with another dengue serotype. This syndrome is termed dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), although dengue vasculopathy has been proposed as a better term, as fluid loss into tissue spaces can lead to prolonged shock and complications, including gastrointestinal bleeding, a greater fatality risk than bleeding per se. Some patients with dengue hemorrhagic fever develop shock (dengue shock syndrome [DSS]), which may cause death.
Dengue virus transmission follows two general patterns—epidemic dengue and hyperendemic dengue. Epidemic dengue transmission occurs when dengue virus is introduced into a region as an isolated event that involves a single viral strain. If the number of vectors and susceptible pediatric and adult hosts is sufficient, explosive transmission can occur, with an infection incidence of 25%-50%. Mosquito-control efforts, changes in weather, and herd immunity contribute to the control of these epidemics. Transmission appears to begin in urban centers and then spreads to the rest of a country. This is the current pattern of transmission in parts of Africa and South America, areas of Asia where the virus has reemerged, and small island nations. Travelers to these areas are at increased risk of acquiring dengue during these periods of epidemic transmission.
Hyperendemic dengue transmission is characterized by the continuous circulation of multiple viral serotypes in an area where a large pool of susceptible hosts and a competent vector (with or without seasonal variation) are constantly present. This is the predominant pattern of global transmission. In these populations, antibody prevalence increases with age and most adults are immune. Hyperendemic transmission appears to be a major risk for dengue hemorrhagic fever. Travelers to these areas are more likely to be infected than are travelers to areas that experience only epidemic transmission. Read more »
Tags: A, activation, addition, adult hosts, Aedes, aegypti, Africa, alanine, Albert Sabin, albumin, alpha, america areas, aminotransferase, analysis, ancestor, Asia, aspartate, bite, Bleeding, blood, C.
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Posted in medicalmatrix | February 13, 2010 |
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Background
Rabies is a viral disease that affects the CNS. The genus Lyssavirus contains more than 80 viruses. Classic rabies, the focus of this article, is the prototypical human Lyssavirus pathogen. Ten viruses are in the rabies serogroup, most of which only rarely cause human disease. The genus Lyssavirus, rabies serogroup, includes the classic rabies virus, Mokola virus, Duvenhage virus, Obodhiang virus, Kotonkan virus, Rochambeau virus, European bat Lyssavirus types 1 and 2, and Australian bat Lyssavirus. In 1997, an unusual bat Lyssavirus caused a brief outbreak of a rabieslike illness in Australia.
The fatal madness of rabies has been described throughout recorded history, and its association with rabid canines is well known. For centuries, dog bites were treated prophylactically with cautery, unfortunately, with predictable results. In the 19th century, Pasteur developed a vaccine that successfully prevented rabies after inoculation and launched a new era of hope in the management of this uniformly fatal disease. Rabies is recognized as a zoonosis worldwide. Animal-control and vaccination strategies currently supersede postexposure prophylaxis in preventing the spread of rabies. Through such programs, rabies has been eliminated in several nations and some areas in the US territories.
Human rabies reflects the prevalence of animal infection and the extent of contact this population has with humans. Less than 5% of cases in developed nations occur in domesticated dogs; however, unvaccinated dogs serve as the main reservoir worldwide. Undomesticated canines, such as coyotes, wolves, jackals, and foxes, are most prone to rabies and serve as reservoirs. These reservoirs allow rabies to remain an indefinite public health concern, and ongoing public health measures are critical to its control. Raccoons, skunks, and insect-eating bats remain the prime vectors in the United States, followed by cats and cattle. Increasingly in the United States, the source of exposures cannot be identified, but the risk of death from rabies is exceedingly low, with fewer than 5 cases documented per year. Opossums are rarely infected and are not considered a likely risk for exposure. Read more »
Tags: absence, Acute, addition, Adherence, aerophobia, age, agitation, air, airway, amantadine, animal control, anisocoria, anorexia, antibody, anxiety, aphasia, arrest, Attempting, attention, auditory, australian bat lyssavirus, Autonomic, awareness, bat, bite, calm, cardiorespiratory, care, case, cautery, CDC, cerebrospinal, Clinical, CNS, coma, confusion, Control, cranial, CSF, death, delirium, depression, developed nations, diarrhea, diplopia, disease, dog bites, domesticated dogs, drinking, duration, Episodes, exposure, face, fact, fever, form, Furious, girl, Hand, head, headache, health, history, human rabies, Hydrophobia, hyperactivity, hypertension, hyperventilation, hypotension, incubation, individual, infection, inoculation, inoculum, insomnia, instability, International, involvement, irritant, jackals, lacrimation, laryngeal, main reservoir, malaise, Morbidity, Mortality, Nausea, neck, need, nerve, Neurologic, neurovirulent, Nonspecific, objective, October, onset, Organization, outset, pain, palsy, paralysis, Paralytic, Paresthesia, patient, percent, period, person, perspiration, phase, Physical, postexposure, postural, predictable results, predilection, preexposure, prevention, Prodromal, public health concern, public health measures, rabid canines, Rabies, rabies virus, raccoons, Race, recovery, regimen, response, Ribavirin, risk, saliva, salivation, scratch, Seizures, sensation, Sex, sign, site, skunks, spasm, suggestion, survival, survivor, Symptoms, system, tachycardia, tactile, therapy, thrashing, tissue, treatment, US, vaccination, vaccination strategies, victim, viral disease, virus, Wisconsin, world, worldwide, year, zoonosis
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Background
The word tetanus comes from the Greek tetanos, which is derived from the term teinein, meaning to stretch. Tetanus appears in military medical documents throughout the ages. Slapping infected dung on the umbilical cords of newborns (ie, as part of ritualistic ceremonies) caused rampant tetanus neonatorum or trismus nascentium in the West Indies and in Africa. Osler’s textbook describes the “eight days sickness” caused by umbilical sepsis, which killed 84 of 125 children within a fortnight of birth in St. Kilda, Scotland. During World War I, tetanus occurred in 1.47 per 1000 British wounded and in 12.5 per 1000 persons involved in the Peninsular campaign. Nicolaier discovered the anaerobic bacillus Clostridium tetani in 1885. In 1889, Koch’s pupil, Kitasato, obtained the bacillus of tetanus in pure culture and associated the disease to animals.
Although rare, the disease has not been eradicated, and early diagnosis and intervention are life saving. Prevention is the ultimate management strategy for tetanus. The 4 clinical types of tetanus are generalized, local, cephalic, and neonatal.
Neonatal tetanus is a major cause of infant mortality in underdeveloped countries, but this form is rare in the United States. Infection results from cord contamination during unsanitary delivery conditions, coupled with a lack of maternal immunization. At the end of the first week of life, infected infants become irritable, feed poorly, and develop rigidity with spasms. This form of tetanus has a very poor prognosis for survival.
Cephalic tetanus is uncommon and usually occurs following head trauma or otitis media. Patients with this form present with cranial nerve palsies. The infection may be localized or may become generalized.
Patients with local tetanus present with persistent rigidity in the muscle group close to the injury site. The muscular rigidity is caused by a dysfunction in the interneurons that inhibit the alpha motor neurons of the affected muscles. No further CNS involvement occurs, and this form has very low mortality rates. Read more »
Tags: action, activity, adduction, advent, Africa, alpha, axonal, Background, birth, bond, California, campaign, cause, cause of infant mortality, Cephalic, chain, Clostridium, clostridium tetani, clothing, CNS, contamination, cord, cranial, culture, delivery, delivery conditions, diagnosis, disease, disulfide, dung, dust, dysfunction, dysphagia, end, extension, failure, feed, flexion, form, fortnight, Frequency, germinate, group, head, head trauma, hemolysin, immunization, immunocompetent, incidence, infant, infection, injury, instability, International, interneurons, intervention, involvement, Kilda, Kitasato, Koch, lack, life, management, manure, masseter, maternal, medical documents, Morbidity, Mortality, motor, motor neurons, muscle, muscle group, muscular rigidity, nascentium, neonatal, neonatal tetanus, neonatorum, nerve, nerve palsies, neuronal, Nicolaier, noise, Nuchal, Osler, otitis media, pain, part, Pathophysiology, Peninsular, peninsular campaign, poor prognosis, prevention, prognosis, protein, pupil, recovery, release, response, rigidity, saving, Scotland, sensorium, sepsis, sickness, site, skin, Slapping, smile, soil, spasm, st kilda scotland, strategy, survival, system, teinein, tendon, term, tet, tetani, tetanolysin, tetanospasmin, tetanus, tetanus neonatorum, textbook, tissue, Tonic, touch, toxin, transport, trauma, ultimate management, umbilical cords, United States, war, week, West Indies, word, world, world war i, year
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Background
Mycoplasma species are the smallest free-living organisms. These organisms are unique among prokaryotes in that they lack a cell wall, a feature largely responsible for their biologic properties such as their lack of a reaction to Gram stain and their lack of susceptibility to many commonly prescribed antimicrobial agents, including beta-lactams. Mycoplasmal organisms are usually associated with mucosal surfaces, residing extracellularly in the respiratory and urogenital tracts. They rarely penetrate the submucosa, except in the case of immunosuppression or instrumentation, when they may invade the bloodstream and disseminate to different organs and tissues throughout the body.
Although scientists have isolated at least 17 species of Mycoplasma from humans, 4 types of organisms are responsible for most clinically significant infections that may come to the attention of practicing physicians. These species are Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Mycoplasma hominis, Mycoplasma genitalium, and Ureaplasma species. The focus of this article is infections caused by M pneumoniae; articles on Ureaplasma infections (eg, Ureaplasma Infection) and genital mycoplasmal infections contain discussions of infections caused by other mycoplasmal species.
Pathophysiology
M pneumoniae is perhaps best known as the cause of walking or atypical pneumonia, but the most frequent clinical syndrome caused by this organism is actually tracheobronchitis or bronchiolitis, often accompanied by upper respiratory tract manifestations. Pneumonia develops in only 5%-10% of persons who are infected. Acute pharyngitis and myringitis are less common.
After inhalation of respiratory aerosols, the organism attaches to host cells in the respiratory tract. The P1 adhesin and other accessory proteins mediate attachment, followed by induction of ciliostasis, local inflammation that consists primarily of perivascular and peribronchial infiltration of mononuclear leukocytes, and tissue destruction that may be mediated by liberation of peroxides. Recently, M pneumoniae has been shown to produce an exotoxin that is believed to play a role in the damage to the respiratory epithelium that occurs during acute infection. The organism also has the ability to exist intracellularly. Additionally, acute mycoplasmal respiratory tract infection may be associated with exacerbations of chronic bronchitis and asthma. More extensive information on the pathogenesis of mycoplasmal respiratory infections is available in a recent review article.
Spread of infection throughout households is common, although person-to-person transmission is slower than for many other common bacterial respiratory tract infections; close contact appears necessary. Generally, the incubation period is 2-3 weeks. The organism may persist in the respiratory tract for several months, and sometimes for years in patients who are immunosuppressed, after initial infection. Read more »
Tags: ability, Acute, acute pharyngitis, adhesin, administration, aerosols, antimicrobial, article, asplenia, asthma, attachment, attention, atypical pneumonia, Background, beta lactams, bloodstream, body, bronchiolitis, case, cause, cell, climate, contact, damage, degree, destruction, disease, Epidemics, epidemiology, epithelium, evidence, exotoxin, failure, fall, feature, focus, Frequency, genitalium, geography, Gram, gram stain, greate, hospitalization, immunity, immunosuppression, incidence, increase, incubation, induction, infection, infiltration, inflammation, information, inhalation, instrumentation, International, Japan, lack, liberation, living organisms, majority, mononuclear, mononuclear leukocytes, Morbidity, Mortality, mucosal, mucosal surfaces, Mycoplasma, mycoplasma species, Mycoplasmal, mycoplasmal infections, myringitis, organism, Pathophysiology, peribronchial, period, perivascular, pneumonia, pneumoniae, prokaryotes, proportion, reaction, recovery, resolution, review, risk, role, sequelae, seroprevalence, Severe, sickle, spread, Streptococcus, Subclinical, submucosa, summer, susceptibility, syndrome, term, tissue, tissue destruction, tract, transmission, United States, upper respiratory tract, Ureaplasma, urogenital, wall, year
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Background
Typhus refers to a group of infectious diseases that are caused by rickettsial organisms and that result in an acute febrile illness. Arthropod vectors transmit the etiologic agents to humans. The principle diseases of this group are epidemic or louse-borne typhus and its recrudescent form known as Brill-Zinsser disease, murine typhus, and scrub typhus. (For more information on pediatric scrub typhus, see the eMedicine article Scrub Typhus in the Pediatric: General Medicine volume.)
Pathophysiology
Epidemic typhus is the prototypical infection of the typhus group of diseases, and the pathophysiology of this illness is representative of the entire category. The arthropod vector of epidemic typhus is the body louse (Pediculus corporis). This is the only vector of the typhus group in which humans are the usual host. Rickettsia prowazekii, which is the etiologic agent of typhus, lives in the alimentary tract of the louse. A Rickettsia- harboring louse bites a human to engage in a blood meal and causes a pruritic reaction on the host’s skin. The louse defecates as it eats; when the host scratches the site, the lice are crushed, and the Rickettsia- laden excrement is inoculated into the bite wound. The Rickettsia travel to the bloodstream and rickettsemia develops.
Rickettsia parasitize the endothelial cells of the small venous, arterial, and capillary vessels. The organisms proliferate and cause endothelial cellular enlargement with resultant multiorgan vasculitis. This process may cause thrombosis, and the deposition of leukocytes, macrophages, and platelets may result in small nodules. Thrombosis of supplying blood vessels may cause gangrene of the distal portions of the extremities, nose, ear lobes, and genitalia. This vasculitic process may also result in loss of intravascular colloid with subsequent hypovolemia and decreased tissue perfusion and, possibly, organ failure. Loss of electrolytes is common.
Some people with a history of typhus may develop a recrudescent type of typhus known as Brill-Zinsser disease. After a patient with typhus is treated with antibiotics and the disease appears to be cured, Rickettsia may linger in the body tissues. Months, years, or even decades after treatment, organisms may reemerge and cause a recurrence of typhus. How the Rickettsia organisms linger silently in a person and by what mechanism recrudescence is mediated are unknown. The presentation of Brill-Zinsser disease is less severe than epidemic typhus, and the associated mortality rate is much lower. Risk factors that may predispose to recrudescent typhus include improper or incomplete antibiotic therapy and malnutrition.
Murine typhus and scrub typhus share the same pathophysiology as epidemic typhus, although they are somewhat milder. The incubation period is approximately 12 days for the typhus group. Prior infection with Rickettsia typhi provides subsequent and long-lasting immunity to reinfection. Read more »
Tags: acute febrile illness, advent, Africa, age, alimentary tract, Appropriate, area, array, arthropod, axilla, bathing, bite, blood meal, body, body louse, bradycardia, Brill, California, Central, changing, chigger, Clinical, CNS, Cold, colloid, coma, contact, cough, death, development, diagnose, disaster, disease, distal portions, dullness, duration, dysfunction, ear lobes, eir, endothelial cells, environment, Epidemic, epidemic typhus, eschar, etiologic agent, etiologic agents, excrement, exposure, failure, fall, fatigue, favor, fever, flea, formation, gangrene, general medicine, group, headache, Himalayas, history, hygiene, hypovolemia, illness, immunity, incidence, infection, infectious diseases, Infrequent, initiation, International, involvement, laboratory, lack, loss, lymph, lymphadenopathy, macular, maculopapu, maculopapular, malaise, Malaysia, Medical, mentation, month, Morbidity, Mortality, multiorgan, multisystem, murine, northern Australia, northern China, Occupational, onset, organ failure, organism, Orientia, Outbreaks, Overcrowding, papule, Pathophysiology, petech, petechial, Physical, population, Populations, port, predilection, presentation, process, propagation, Rash, rate, Rats, recovery, region, reinfection, rickettsia prowazekii, rickettsial, rickettsial organisms, risk, RMSF, Rocky Mountain, scrub, scrub typhus, season, section, Sex, site, South America, southern California, southern Texas, spread, spring, study, subcontinent, summer, system, Tachypnea, temperate, tender, testing, Texas, therapy, tissue perfusion, transmission, treatment, trunk, tsutsugamushi, typhi, United States, Untreated, vector, war, weather, western Pacific, world, Zinsser
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