Term
what is the the 2nd leading cause of morbidity/mortality in the world? why? |
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Definition
diarrhea - and it is the leading cause w/respect to infection, as it outpaces TB, AIDS, and malaria. over 1 billion people in the world don't have access to safe drinking water. |
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Term
what are the long term sequelae associated with infectious diarrhea? |
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Definition
HUS, renal failure, guillaume-barre (from campylobacter), and malnutrition |
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Term
how do children under 3 yrs compare to adults in terms of rates of infectious diarrhea? |
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Definition
children get diarrheal episodes 2x as often as adults |
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Term
what are sources of exposure to infectious diarrhea? |
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Definition
travel, ingestion of raw/undercooked meat, seafood, milk products, ill contacts, daycare, institutional exposure, farms, zoos, recent antibx use, and sexual activity |
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Term
what is the definition of diarrhea? (*need to know*) |
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Definition
an *increase in daily stool wt > 200g, including increase in frequency/fluidity/amount |
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Term
what does diarrhea need to be differentiated from clinically? |
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Definition
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Term
what defines acute vs chronic diarrhea? |
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Definition
acute: episodes less than 2 wks chronic: over a month |
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Term
what does diarrhea need to be differentiated from clinically? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the 2 kinds of acute diarrhea? |
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Definition
inflammatory (pts febrile, blood in stool, colonic damage - includes shigella, e. coli, crohn's, and ischemic bowel) and non-inflammatory (larger volume - watch dehydration, cryptosporidia, cholera, norovirus, rotovirus, giardia, e. coli, laxative abuse) |
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Term
what do you do in the case of persistent diarrhea (more than 2 wks)? |
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Definition
stool cx: collect for 3 days to check malabsorption (fat, lytes, osmolality), check for O+P, and sigmoidoscopy to visualize the mucosa |
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Term
what do most pts with acute diarrhea respond to? |
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Definition
rehydration and antidiarrheal agents w/in 5-7 days |
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Term
why not do stool cx more routinely? |
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Definition
pathogens are isolated from stools only 3% of the time and can be expensive. |
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Term
what is a good, cheap diagnostic for pts with persistent diarrhea? |
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Definition
WBC test to check inflammatory status |
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Term
what will a colonoscopy help determine in the case of persistent diarrhea? |
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Definition
check for UC, ischemic colitis, and c. diff (can give a false negative on assay) |
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Term
what are the pros/cons of bypassing stool cx w/a persistent diarrhea pt and treating empirically? |
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Definition
pros: possible quicker resolution of diarrhea, diarrhea may have resolved before cx results come back anyway, can be expensive. cons: public health importance (salmonella/shigella need to be reported), cxs help determine resistance issues, if e coli 0157:H7 is treated with antibx - in kids HUS may occur, some antibx can create shigella/salmonella carrier state, and VRE colonization risk |
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Term
what are some approaches to improve the cost effectiveness of stool cxs? |
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Definition
selective testing - such as for e coli 0157:H7 w/specific media, 3 day rule for pts in hospital (only worry about pts who have been in the hospital for more than 3 days), and screening for inflammatory diarrhea (fever, tenesmus, bloody stools, WBCs) |
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Term
what is the most common bacterial pathogen responsible for infectious diarrhea in the US? what are some other causes? |
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Definition
e. coli and its many kinds, (campylobacter in the world). though c. diff is catching up. yersinia, vibrio, aeromonas and pleisomina (also causes cellulitis) |
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Term
what are the viral pathogens responsible for infectious diarrhea? how are they treated? |
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Definition
norovirus (cruise ships), calicivirus, astrovirus, and rotovirus. for these = only treat symptoms |
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Term
what is the most common parasite responsible for diarrhea? others? |
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Definition
giardia is the most common (from mountain lake water), followed by entamoeba histolytica, cyclospora, cryptosporidium, and microsporidium |
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Term
what are the chronic infectious agents (diarrhea lasts for more than a couple wks)? |
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Definition
giardia, entamoeba histolytica, and cyclospora |
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Term
what are the AIDS-related diarrheal infections? |
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Definition
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Term
what characterizes diarrhea due to salmonella? what causes it? how is it treated? how long is the pt a carrier? |
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Definition
salmonella is associated with contaminated poultry/egg yolk and incubation is 8-48 hrs. pts present with diarrhea but there is little invasion of the bowel- antibx are not recommended unless the pt is immune compromised. pts can carry infectious particles for up to 2 mos after resolving infection - need to check stools 1x/week and stress importance of hygiene maintenance. |
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Term
what are the different kinds of e. coli and related diseases? |
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Definition
enterotoxigenic: traveler's diarrhea (most common cause). enteroinvasive: dysentery. enteropathogenic: infant diarrhea. enterohemorrhagic: 0157 - can cause HUS/microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, liver, and hematopoietic problems. |
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Term
what is a common cause of c. diff infections? |
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Definition
overuse of virtually any antibx as well as radical changes in diet, bowel sx, radiation or chemo - all of which alter normal bowel flora, allowing c. diff overgrowth and development of pseudomembranes which cause malabsorption. |
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Term
what are contributing factors that increase c. diff risk (check these before antibx adm)? |
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Definition
recent antibx usage, enemas, GI stimulants, often/constant hospitalization, elderly, critically ill, burn patients, hemologic malignancy, and GI sx - alters GI motility |
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Term
what characterizes humans as a c. diff reservoir? can c. diff be found in infants? what is the carriage rate in healthy adults? asymptomatic hospitalized adults on antibx? nursing home residents? |
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Definition
c. diff or one of its toxins is found in 15-70% of neonates while the carriage rate in healthy adults is <3-8%. the c. diff carriage rate for hospitalized asymptomatic adults on antibx is 20% and 2-8% for elderly nursing home residents (asymptomatic, b/c few harbor enough toxin A/B) |
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Term
what are common nosocomial sources of c. diff? |
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Definition
bed sheets, bed rails, walls, nursing/medical staff hands (c. diff is gram +, a spore-former). c. diff pts are now quarantined. |
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Term
where in the environment can c. diff be found? |
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Definition
soil, swimming pools, beaches, sea, river and tap water |
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Term
what is the c. diff carriage rate for household pets? |
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Definition
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Term
how did c. diff antibx resistance start? how is it progressing? |
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Definition
clindamycin and ampcillin were the first to incur resistance w/c. diff, but newer strains are increasingly more resistant to most antibx (esp broad spectrum, b/c they are the most likely to interrupt normal bowel flora) |
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Term
what is the pathogenesis of c. diff? |
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Definition
acid-resistant spores convert to vegetative forms after exposure to bile. the organisms grow throughout the bowel, rather than attaching to specific receptors. *toxin A causes a diffuse lymphocytic infiltrate in the lamina propria in the apical portions of the villi, leading to edema and bulging of the bowel (toxin A + B mediate cytoskeletal derangement). ensuing cytolysis and separation of the basal portions of the apical epithelial cells leads to eventual *pancolitis. the colonic mucosa is eventually studded with adherent, raised white and yellow plaques that coalesce - pseudomembranes which are most pronounced in the recto-sigmoid colin. |
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Term
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Definition
a new strain of c. diff set off by levaquin, which produces 15-20x more toxin than before. this and other new strains have produce second binary toxins and have partial deletions in the gene which down-regulates toxin A + B expression |
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Term
what is a good diagnostic cue for c. diff? |
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Definition
diarrhea and a *very high WBC count |
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Term
what needs to be differentiated when considering antibx-related diarrhea? |
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Definition
AAD (antibiotic associated diarrhea) from AAC (antibiotic associate colitis) |
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Term
what is the clinical manifestation of c. diff? |
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Definition
can be asymptomatic or fatal. symptoms start 5-10 days after antibx tx and consist of to fever, nausea, malaise, dehydration, leukocytosis, abdominal pain, hypoalbumninemia, anorexia |
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Term
how is c. diff diagnosed? |
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Definition
stool for c. diff toxin assay (up to 3x b/c of possible false negative), CT scan, WBC count (>10,000) and endoscopy |
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Term
what are intra-abdominal c. diff complications? |
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Definition
toxic megacolon, colonic perforation, transverse volvulus, protein-losing enteropathy, and recurrent CDAD |
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Term
what does c. diff need to be differentiated from? |
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Definition
ischemic colitis and diverticultis (the antibx for this will worsen c. diff) |
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Term
how is it possible to have c. diff w/o diarrhea? |
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Definition
if c. diff causes toxic megacolon, then diarrhea may not occur. leukocytosis may also not occur, and presentation may simply consist of acute abdominal syndrome (abdominal pain, distension, guarding, etc.). |
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Term
what is the definition of toxic megacolon? |
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Definition
acute dilation of the colon to a diameter greater than 6 cm, associated systemic toxicity, absence of mechanical obstruction, and a high mortality rate (64%). |
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Term
what is the first step in treating c. diff? |
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Definition
stop the offending agent - if due to antibx use |
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Term
what antibx will work against c. diff? how should they be used? |
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Definition
metronidazaole and vancomycin (oral or gentle rectal enema - *NO IV*) if recurrent. oral drugs should never be administered concurrently. pts can't be on metronidazole longer than 20 days due to peripheral neuropathy risk. nitazoxanide can also be used (good for crypto). |
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Term
what are indications for sx in c. diff pts? |
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Definition
acute abdomen, sepsis, MOFS, hemorrhage, toxic dilatation, perforation, and deterioration despite medical therapy |
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Term
what is the rate of recurrence in c. diff pts? what is this thought to be due to? |
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Definition
~20%. recurrence is thought to be due to persistence of c. diff spores, which can be helped by tapering doses over one month and probiotics. recurrence is not thought to be due to resistance b/c the antibx kill just the vegetative forms, not the spores. |
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Term
which is more severe, a recurrent or primary c. diff infection? |
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Definition
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Term
how does one c. diff recurrence affect the likelihood of more? are there other factors which affect this likelihood? |
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Definition
pts w/one recurrence are 65% more likely to have further recurrences. other risk factors for recurrence include female gender, springtime onset, and exposure to additional antibx |
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Term
why does colonic perforation risk increase with recurrence? |
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Definition
b/c toxic megacolon risk also increases |
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Term
what are indications for sx in recurrent c. diff pts? |
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Definition
abdominal pain/megacolon and high WBC counts |
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Term
what characterizes norovirus? common/less common symptoms? onset? |
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Definition
norovirus is the most common cause of infectious gastroenteritis in the total population. common symptoms: vomiting, diarrhea, some stomach cramping. less common symptoms: low-grade fever, chills, headache, myalgias, nausea, and fatigue. it has a sudden onset and lasts 1-2 days. |
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Term
what are virulence factors for norovirus? |
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Definition
norovirus is resistant to chlorination/freezing, it can persist in the environment, and only requires low inocula to infect (<100 particles). it is a notorious cause of cruise ship outbreaks. |
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Term
how are most norovirus outbreaks spread? |
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Definition
p2p and environmental contamination, rather than food. |
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Term
how is norovirus transmission risk reduced? |
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Definition
frequent hand-washing and abstaining from eating sketchy shellfish |
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Term
how is infectious diarrhea managed? |
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Definition
initiate rehydration, ascertain how the illness began, perform selective fecal studies and depending on results, institude selective therapy for shigella, salmonella, campylobacter |
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Term
why should anti-motility drugs not be given for dysentery? |
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Definition
b/c these remove fluids as they work |
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Term
what vaccines are available to prevent some forms of infectious diarrhea? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the first step in management of infectious diarrhea? |
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Definition
distinguish inflammatory status |
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Term
what characterizes tx for inflammatory diarrhea? |
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Definition
avoid anti-motility drugs, always treat c. diff/ambebiasis/enteric fever/shigella/STDs |
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Term
what characterizes tx for non-inflammatory diarrhea? |
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Definition
rehydration is most important, loperamide can help, anti-cholinergics are contraindicated due to megacolon risk. always treat: cholera, giardiasis, and traveler's diarrhea |
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Term
when should fecal testing be considered? |
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Definition
when diarrhea lasts longer than a day, esp if accompanied by fever, bloody stools, systemic illness, recent antibx use, day care attendance, hospitalization, dehydration, or food handlers |
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Term
what should also be considered when testing stools from diarrheal pts? |
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Definition
serum chemistry, CBC, blood cx, urinalysis, KUB, anoscopy or flex sigmoidoscopy |
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Term
what is the best tx option for shigella? |
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Definition
azithromycin - also TMP/SMZ, floroquinolones |
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Term
what is the best tx option for campylobacter? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the best tx option for yersinia? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the best tx option for c. diff? |
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Definition
metronidazole or vancomycin |
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Term
what is the best tx option for giardia? |
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Definition
metronidazole, tinidazole, and nitazoxanide |
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Term
what is the best tx option for cryptosporidium? |
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Definition
nitazoxanide, paromomycin |
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Term
what is the best tx option for cyclospora? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the best tx option for entamoeba histolytica? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the best tx option for e. coli? |
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Definition
quinolone or azithromycin. stay away from antibx for enterohemorrhagic |
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Term
what is controversial about treating e. coli 0157:H7? |
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Definition
treatment with TMP/SMZ, fluoroquinolones or beta-lactams increases the risk of HUS, unless given within 3 days of onset of diarrhea - most severe in children |
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