08 October 2009

Differential diagnosis of the flu-like illness



The sepsis syndrome: Differential diagnosis of the flu-like illness
By:Divya Ahuja, M.D.

Med Micro 2008 Clinical Correlations #5
Traditional definitions

* Bacteremia (or fungemia): presence of microorganisms in the blood
* Sepsis: Harmful consequences of microbes or their toxins in blood or tissues
* Septicemia (or bloodstream infection): bacteremia with clinical manifestations
* Septic shock: shock due to sepsis, often with bloodstream infection

Revised definitions
* Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)
* Sepsis
* Severe sepsis
* Septic shock

Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS)
* Two or more of the following
o temperature > 38 degrees C (100.4 F)
o respirations > 20/minute
o Heart rate > 90 beats per minute
o leukocyte count > 12,000/cmm or < 4000/cmm or with > 10% band forms

Sepsis and Severe Sepsis
* Sepsis: SIRS plus a documented infection (culture proven or identified by visual inspection)
* Severe sepsis: Sepsis associated with organ dysfunction, abnormalities due to hypoperfusion (such as lactic acidosis, oliguria, or acute alteration in mental status), ARDS, DIC, low platelets

Septic shock
* Definition: Sepsis-induced hypotension despite fluid resuscitation and/or inotropic support, plus hypoperfusion abnormalities
* The hallmark of septic shock is low systemic vascular resistance, which distinguishes it from hemorrhagic shock and cardiogenic shock.

Multiple Organ Failure
* Some physiologic descriptors
o Serum creatinine
o Platelet count
o pO2/FiO2 ratio
o Serum bilirubin
o Glasgow coma score

Sepsis
* Sepsis has a 20-50% mortality
* Severity has increased recently
* Hospital case-fatality has declined
* Incidence is greatest in winter
* Risk factors for sepsis
o Bacteremia
o Advanced age
o Impaired immune system
o Community acquired pneumonia

Continuum of severity
* Incidence of positive blood cultures increases along the continuum
* Increased mortality rate
* Severe organ dysfunction manifested as
o Acute respiratory distress syndrome
o Acute renal failure
o Disseminated intravascular coagulation

Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy
Case #1
* 20-year-old college student in ER
* General malaise, low-grade fever, and rapid development of purplish discoloration on his face. (from when he left his house to the time he arrived at the emergency room).
* Blood cultures were drawn and he was admitted to the intensive care unit

Presentation
* Febrile, tachycardic, systolic BP-70
* Creatinine- 3.6, poor urine output
* Platelets-46000
* INR- 2.6
* Obtunded mental status
* Needing maximum ventilatory support
* Meningococcemia with Waterhouse-Friderichsen Syndrome and DIC
* Treat with penicillin, ceftriaxone or chloramphenicol.
* Family members and hospital employees in contact with respiratory secretions should receive prophylaxis. Attack rates for household contacts is 0.3-1%, 300-1000 times the rate in the general population (rifampin x 4 doses or cipro x 1 dose)

Epidemiology of meningococcal disease

Evaluation of blood cultures
* True-positive versus false-positive (contamination; pseudobacteremia)
* Transient versus intermittent versus continuous
* Polymicrobial versus unimicrobial
* Primary versus secondary

Clues to contamination
* Microorganisms that are usually not pathogenic, unless isolated from multiple cultures (e.g., coagulase-negative staphylococci; Bacillus species)
* < 2 positive cultures and/or delayed growth and/or < 1 cfu/ml
* Doesn’t “fit” the clinical picture

Patterns of bacteremia
* Transient: caused by manipulation of a flora-containing body surface
* Intermittent: typical of most infections giving rise to positive blood cultures
* Sustained (or continuous): characteristic of intravascular infections--endocarditis, endarteritis, suppurative thrombophlebitis, infected AV fistula

Number of microorganisms
* Unimicrobial (or “monomicrobial”) bacteremia: one isolate
* Polymicrobial bacteremia: more than one microorganism; typical of complicated situations often with surgical implications

Epidemiology of sepsis
* Contributes to > 100,000 deaths in the United States each year.
* Annual incidence is probably between 300,000 and 500,000 cases.
* About 2/3rds of cases occur in patients hospitalized for another illness (nosocomial infection).

Risk factors for nosocomial sepsis
* Gram-negative bacilli: diabetes mellitus; tumors; cirrhosis; burns; invasive procedures; neutropenia
* Gram-positive cocci: vascular access lines, devices
* Fungi: immunosuppression; broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy

Host factors in sepsis
* Mortality is directly related to severity of underlying disease: rapidly-fatal> ultimately fatal (i.e., within 5 years)>nonfatal.
* Elderly have increased mortality.
* Mortality is higher in patients with subnormal temperatures than in those with fever.

Clinical findings in sepsis
* Early: apprehension, hyperventilation, altered mental status
* Complications: hypotension, bleeding, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, organ failure
* Lungs: cyanosis, acidosis, full-blown ARDS

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Emerging Infections and Medical Procedures



Emerging Infections and Medical Procedures

Parasitic Infections: Clinical Manifestations, Diagnosis and Treatment
By:Lennox K. Archibald, MD, PhD, FRCP, DTM&H
Hospital Epidemiologist
University of Florida

The Reality
* 1.3 billion persons infected with Ascaris (1: 4 persons on earth)
* 300 million with schistosomiasis
* 100 million new malaria cases/yr
* At UCLA, 38% of pediatric and dental clinic children harbored intestinal parasites

Case1
* 42-yr-old previously healthy, UF professor
* 6-week history of intermittent diarrhea, flatus and abdominal cramps
* Diarrhea: x8/day; pale; no blood or mucus
* No tenesmus
* Illness began slowly during camping trip to Colorado with loose stools
* Spontaneously remission for 5-6 days at a time, then recur
* His 8-yr-old son had had a mild course of watery diarrhea—ascribed to viral gastroenteritis by general practitioner
* Stool smear—no pus cells
* However, wet preps showed…

Diagnosis?
Giardiasis (G. lamblia)
* Should be suspected in prolonged diarrhea
* Contaminated water often implicated—outbreaks
* Campers who fail to sterilize mountain stream water
* Person-person in day care centers
* MSM
* Symptoms usually resolve spontaneously in 4-6 weeks

Giardiasis Tests of choice
* Examination of concentrated stools for cysts (90% yield after 3 samples)
o Usually no PMNs
* Stool ELISA, IF Antigen (up to 98% sensitive/90-100% specific)
* Consider aspiration of duodenal contents--trophozoites
* Treatment: Metronidazole for 5-7 days

Case 2
* 40 y/o male vicar returned from 2 years of missionary work in South Africa
* Excellent health throughout stay there
* 3 months after returning to U.S.
o Suddenly ill with abdominal distension
o Fever
o Periumbilical pain
o Vomiting
o Blood-tinged diarrheal stools
* Denied arthritis /known exposure to parasites
* Family history of “inflammatory bowel disease”
* Physical examination:
o Acutely ill
o Distended abdomen
o No hepatomegaly or splenomegaly
o Decreased bowel sounds
o Stool exam
+ Gross blood present
+ No pus cells
+ Negative for O&P, one negative C&S

Sigmoidoscopy revealed…
* Multiple punctate bleeding sites at 7 to 15 cm with normal appearing mucosa between sites
* This mucosa easily denuded when pressure applied to it, leaving large areas of bleeding submucosa
* Diagnosed with ulcerative colitis
* Started on corticosteroids
* Temperature rose to 40°C
* Abdomen distension increased and worsening of symptoms
* Emergency laparotomy for toxic megacolon

Diagnosis?
Entamoeba histolytica
* One of 7 amoebae commonly found in humans
* Only one that causes significant disease
* Causes intestinal (diarrhea and dysentery) and extraintestinal (liver primarily) disease
* In US
o Institutionalized patients
o MSM
o Tourists returning from developing countries
o Patients with depressed cell mediated immunity

Trophozoites with ingested RBC
Trophozoites in colon tissue (H & E stain)
Cyst (wet mount)

Amoebiasis: Clinical Manifestations
* Symptoms depend on degree of bowel invasion
o Superficial: watery diarrhea and nonspecific GI complaints
o Invasive: gradual onset (1-3 weeks) of abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, tenesmus
* Fever is seen in minority of patients
* Can be mistaken for ulcerative colitis
* Steroids can dramatically worsen and precipitate toxic megacolon
* Amebic liver abscesses
o RUQ pain, pain referred to right shoulder
o High fever
o Hepatomegaly (50%)

Amoebic abscess—remember…
* Can occur in lung, brain, spleen
Amoebic Abscess
* Liquefaction of liver cells
* Do not contain pus
* Anchovy paste sauce
* Culture of contents usually sterile
* Liver affected:
o 53%-right lobe
o 8%-left lobe

Remember…
* That stool is merely a convenient vehicle passing by
* Amoebae live the bowel wall
* Direct observation preferable to mere examination of stool
* Trophozoites best seen in direct scrapings of ulcers

Amoebiasis Treatment
* Most respond to metronidazole
* Open surgical drainage should be avoided, if at all possible

Case 3
* Previously healthy 3-year-old girl
* Attends day-care center
* 7 day history of watery diarrhea
* Nausea
* Vomiting
* Abdominal cramps
* Low-grade fever

Case 4
* 34 year-old AIDS patient
* Debilitating, cholera-like diarrhea
* Severe abdominal cramps
* Malaise
* Low-grade fever
* Weight loss
* Anorexia

Diagnosis? Case 3 & 4

Three cysts stained pale red are seen in the center with this acid fast stain
Modified acid-fast stain of stool showing red oocysts of Cryptosporidium parvum against the blue background of coliforms and debris

Cryptosporidium parvum
* Causes secretory diarrhea: 10 liter/day
* Significant cause of death in HIV/AIDS
* Animal reservoirs
* Incubation period: 5-10 days

Cryptosporidium parvum
* Infants & young children in day-care
* Unfiltered or untreated drinking water
* Farming practices: lambing, calving, and muck-spreading
* Sexual practices: oral contact with stool of an infected individual
* Nosocomial setting with other infected patients or health-care employees
* Veterinarians: contact with farm animals
* Travelers to areas with untreated water
* Living in densely populated urban areas
* Owners of infected household pets (rare)

Diagnosis and Treatment
* Best diagnosed by stool exam
* No known effective treatment
* Nitazoxamide shortens duration of diarrhea

Case 5
* Mr. & Mrs. R. were sailing with their 3 children in Jamaica
* Living primarily on the boat with several day trips to a small coastal island
* On island, ate several types of tropical fruit
* Both became suddenly ill with fevers, chills, muscle aches, and loss of appetite.
* Sought treatment locally, and were diagnosed with hepatitis, likely due to ingestion of toxic fruit

Case 5
* Two days later, Mr. R. became jaundiced and passed dark urine
* He progressively worsened, became comatose and died
* In the meantime, Mrs. R. was transferred to SUF for liver transplant
* None of the children were sick despite having eaten the same fruits and other foods.
* The family had taken chloroquine prophylaxis against malaria, but the parents stopped the medicine 2 weeks prior to becoming ill because of side effects.

Falciparum vs. Vivax
* Location: Falciparum confined to tropics and subtropics; vivax more temperate
* Falciparum infects RBC of any age; others like reticulocytes
* Falciparum-infected RBCs stick to vascular endothelium causing capillary blockage

Malaria: Genetic susceptibility
* Two genetic traits associated with decreased susceptibility to malaria
* Absence of Duffy blood group antigen blocks invasion of Plasmodium vivax
o Significant number of Africans
* Persons with sickle cell hemoglobin are resistant to P. falciparum
* Sickle cell disease and trait

Malaria: Clinical manifestations
* Non-specific, flu-like illness
* Incubation
o P. falciparum: 9-40 days
o Non-P. falciparum: may be prolonged
+ P. vivax: 6-12 months
+ P. malariae and ovale: years
* Fever is the hallmark of malaria
o Classically, 2-3 day intervals in P. vivax and malariae
o More irregular pattern in P. falciparum
* Fever occurs after the lysis of RBCs and release of merozoites

Malaria: Clinical manifestations
* Febrile paroxysms have 3 classic stages
o Cold stage
+ Pt feels cold and has shaking chills
+ 15-60 mins. prior to fever
o Hot stage
+ 39-41°C
+ Lassitude, loss of appetite, bone and joint aches
+ Tachycardia, hypotension, cough, HA, back pain, N/V, diarrhea, abdo pain, altered consciousness
o Sweating stage
+ Marked diaphoresis followed by resolution of fever, profound fatigue, and sleepiness
+ 2-6 hours after onset of hot stage
* Other symptoms depend on malaria strain
* P. vivax, ovale and malariae: few other sxs
* P. falciparum:
o Dependent upon host immune status
o No prior immunity/splenectomy  high levels of parasitemia  profound hemolysis
o Vascular obstruction and hypoxia
+ Kidneys: renal failure
+ Brain: (CNS) ― hypoxia, coma, seizures
+ Lungs: pulmonary edema
o Jaundice & hemoglobinuria (blackwater fever)
* Always suspect malaria in travelers from developing countries who present with:
o Influenza-like illness
o Jaundice
o Confusion or obtundation

Diagnosis
* Giemsa-stained blood smear
o Thick and thin smears
* P. falciparum:
o Best just after fever peak
* Others:
o Smears can be performed at any time
* Examine blood on 3-4 successive days

Differences in strains
* P. falciparum
o No dormant phase in liver
o Multiple signet ring trophs per cell
o High percentage (>5%) parasitized RBCs considered severe

Differences in strains
* P. vivax and ovale
o Dormant liver phase
o Single signet ring trophs per cell
o Schuffner’s dots in cytoplasm
o Low percent (< 5%) of parasitized RBCs
* P. malariae
o No dormant stage
o Single signet ring trophs per cell
o Very low parasitemia

Treatment
* P. falciparum malaria can be fatal if not promptly diagnosed and treated
* Non- P. falciparum malaria rarely requires hospitalization

Treatment
Uncomplicated malaria
* P. vivax, ovale, malariae, chloroquine-susceptible falciparum
o Chloroquine
o Primaquine for dormant liver forms
* Chloroquine-resistant falciparum
o Quinine plus doxycycline
o Mefloquine
o Atovaquone plus proguanil (AP)
o Artemisins (common in SE Asia due to multi-drug resistance)

Treatment Severe malaria
* Drug options
o Quinidine gluconate—only approved parenteral agent in US
o Artemisin
Prevention
* Mefloquine
* Doxycycline
* Nets
* 30-35% DEET
* Permethrin spray for clothing and nets

And don’t forget baggage malaria!
Case 5
* Mrs. R. was treated with IV quinidine and improved rapidly.
* In retrospect, Mr. R. had died from untreated blackwater fever
o Few parasites in peripheral blood
o Acute renal failure

Case 6
* A 24-year-old white male army officer
* Referred to the VA ID clinic with a 3-month history of a lesion on his right leg, developing approximately 2 weeks after returning from Iraq
* Recent travel history: 1 month in Kuwait and 2 months traveling between Kuwait and Iraq
* Recalled being bitten numerous times by small flying insects and other nasty “bugs”

Physical examination essentially normal except for:
* Non-tender (20 × 15 mm) scaly erythematous plaque with a moist central erosion of the left popliteal area.
* There was no lymphadenopathy and no mucosal lesions were noted

Diagnosis?
An intact macrophage practically filled with amastigotes (arrows),

Leishmaniasis
* Tropical areas where phlebotomine sandfly is common: South America, India, Bangladesh, Middle East, East Africa
* Sandfly introduces flagellated promastigote into human  ingested by macrophages  develops into nonflagellated amastigote
* Cutaneous
o Most common among farmers, settlers, troops and tourists in Mid East (L. major and tropica), Central and South America (L. mexicana, braziliensis, amazonensis, and panamensis)
o L. mexicana reported in Texas
* Visceral (kala azar)
o Anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, hypergammaglobulinemia common

Leishmaniasis: Diagnosis
* Biopsy and Giemsa stain with amastigotes
* Species most prevalent in different places
# L. donovani – India
# L. infantum – Mid East
# L. chagasi – Latin America
# L. amazonensis -- Brazil

Visceral Leishmaniasis
* Dissemination of amastigotes throughout the reticulendothelial system of the body
o Spleen
o Bone marrow
o Lymph nodes
* Opportunistic infection in AIDS patients
* Ineffective humeral response

Hepatosplenomegaly
Splenic aspirate
* Most satisfactory method
* Spleen must be at least 3cm below LCM
* Aspirate stained with Giemsa

Leishmaniasis: treatment
* Only drug approved in US is Amphotericin B
* Treatment of cutaneous disease depends on anatomic location
* Many spontaneously heal and do not require treatment

Remember..
* The factors determining the form of leishmaniasis:
o Leishmanial species
o Geographic location
o Immune response of the host

Case 7
* 38-year-old businessman
* Previously fit
* 2-week history of fever since returning from Brazil business trip
* Flu-like symptoms and myalgia
* Had consumed steak tartare in Brazil
* Results all unremarkable---normal WBC and ESR; negative smears; CXR and urine OK
* Continued to have fever, tachycardia and myalgia

Case 8
* A 29-yr-old man with AIDS (CD4 count=59) presents with a 2 week history of headache, fevers and new onset seizures
* He had not been taking any antiretroviral medications

Cases 7 & 8
What parasite could
cause this picture?
AIDS Patient
Toxoplasma gondii cyst in brain tissue with H & E stain (100x)
For the businessman…
* Toxoplasma serology was positive at a very high titer
* Responded to treatment with sulphonamide + pyrimethamine
* No relapse

Transmission
* Eating oocysts excreted by cats harboring sexual stages of parasite
* Outbreaks traced to inadequately cooked meat of herbivores (raw beef)
* Mutton

Toxoplasma gondii
* Worldwide distribution
* Human infection
o Ingestion of cysts in undercooked meat of herbivores
o Water/food contaminated with oocysts
o Congenitally
o Infected organs, blood (less common)
* Prevalence of latent infection in US about 10%; France about 75%
o Generally higher in less-developed world
o 50% in AIDS patients; up to 90% of AIDS patients in developing world

Toxoplasma gondii: Immunocompetent hosts
* Latent infection (persistence of cysts) is generally asymptomatic
* Cervical lymphadenopathy (10-20%)
* Mono-like presentation (<1% of all mono-like illnesses)
* Chorioretinitis
* Very rare: myocarditis, myositis

Toxoplasma gondii: Immunocompromised hosts

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Differentiating Babesia from Malaria



Differentiating Babesia from Malaria
By:Devak Desai

Case Presentation
* Middle aged hypertensive and asplenic man presented with a pruritic rash on his right buttock accompanied by flu-like symptoms.
* 1010, arthralgias, myalgias, some nausea, and general malaise, and decreased appetite.
* Reports walking through a wooded area on Martha’s Vineyard, an island off the coast of Mass.
* PE shows a well nourished man with no significant findings other than an erythmatous oropharynx without exudate.

Laboratory Data
* Normal WBC differential
* Blood smear: numerous intraerythrocytes involving 2.7% of RBCs
* Direct Combs test was negative
* Positive serologic test for Lyme Disease

Peripheral Blood Smear
* Numerous erythrocytes are infected with the predominantly ring or pear-shaped form of Babesia microti.
* Pleomorphic rings with 1-3 chromotin dots per parasite.
* 3 dots is unique for Babesia.

Host Infection Cycle
* Infection begins when sporozoites are released from the deer tick’s salivary gland during a blood meal.
* Sporozoites replicate directly in RBCs.
* Attachment and adsorption seems mediated through the C3b receptor.
* During invagination a clear vacuole appears.
* Babesia divided by asynchronous budding.
* The replicating structures are now called trophozoites.
* This is an asynchronous process with varying degrees of hemolysis.

Life cycle of Babesia spp. in the tick and vertebrate hosts
High Power
* Ring shaped trophozites
* The intraerythrocytic trophozoites multiply by binary fission or schizogony, forming two to four separate merozoites.
* White eccentric “food vacuole” in a ring form.
* Very transient stage in Malaria. Very rarely seen.

the famous Maltese Cross
* Presence of 4 daughter merozoites in a tetrad is pathomnemonic.
* However, rarely seen.
* Never seen in malaria.

Multiply infected RBCs
* RBCs can be infected with multiple organisms at the same time. Up to 12 parasites may infect a single RBC.
* Plasmodium has up to 3 parasites/RBC.
* Unremarkable RBCs.

Other Sightings
* Parasite with a peripheral nuclear band
* Basket cell
* Syncytium of extracellular parasites
* Far more common in Babesia infections

Malaria Review

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