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Quick Guide for Clinicians - Communicable Disease Control and
Quick Guide for Clinicians - Communicable Disease Control and

... including making PEP recommendations for antibiotic therapy, vaccination or both. *High risk close contacts for PEP are infants <1 year old, 3rd trimester pregnant women, and persons who may expose them, including health care workers. *Clinicians may be asked to provide PEP and/or vaccinations to hi ...
5. Describe assessment, treatment & teaching for STDS
5. Describe assessment, treatment & teaching for STDS

... for symptom relief High reoccurrance rate ...
microbiology
microbiology

... Which of the following is the Vector for Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever? Tick What has been responsible for the greatest increase in life expectancy? Control of Infectious Disease Which of the following is most apt to be found in a muscle biopsy? Trichimonis Which of the following is not a water borne ...
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases

... Mumps is a viral disease caused by the mumps virus. It is spread through air droplets from the  cough or sneeze of an infected person. Symptoms include fever, swelling and pain of the salivary  glands, headache, muscle pain, weakness and decreased appetite. Complications of mumps are  rare, but can  ...
Thorpe Lab - Tufts University
Thorpe Lab - Tufts University

... In the immunocompetent individual: Severe diarrhea, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, fever, leading to metabolic abnormalities and dehydration, requiring medical care. In the immunocompromised individual: Prolonged and more severe symptoms as described above. Severe diarrhea may be difficult to tre ...
Meningitis
Meningitis

... brain damage, coma, and death  Survivors can suffer long-term hearing loss, mental retardation, paralysis, and seizures ...
Full Text - Ibrahim Medical College
Full Text - Ibrahim Medical College

... These magic bullets saved millions of lives from deadly infectious agents. However, by the beginning of 1960s, the enthusiasm soon faded away as many of the organisms like Staphylococcus aureus, a gram positive bacterium, became resistant to penicillin due to its capability to produce penicillin des ...
Food Born Pathogens
Food Born Pathogens

... Most of these symptoms can be taken care of without the intervention of a medical assistant. If you know for a fact that they are caused by food borne pathogens, it is best to seek out a doctor so they can properly identify and treat the one that infects you! ...
Emerging Infections
Emerging Infections

... because humans have little or no resistance to the virus, health authorities are watching this disease very carefully. ...
Biological Terrorist Agents Part 1
Biological Terrorist Agents Part 1

... to human. Tularemia remains infectious in the blood for about two weeks and in lesions for a month. The disease can occur at any time of the year, but is most common in the early winter during rabbit-hunting season and in the summer when tick and deerfly activity is at its peak. Tularemia contracted ...
Bacteria Wanted Poster Research Project
Bacteria Wanted Poster Research Project

... Students select a pathogen from the list below or assigned by the teacher. They will then produce a wanted poster with the given parameters and present it to the class. ...
overview of microbes
overview of microbes

... is the result of pressure from larger meatpacking operations. The president of the National Cattlemen's Beef Association told the Washington Post that "If testing is allowed at Creekstone, we think it would become the international standard and the domestic standard, too." Creekstone Farms says test ...
Freeman 1e: How we got there
Freeman 1e: How we got there

... whooping cough. From an average of less than 2000 pertussis cases per year in the 1970s, the number of cases has now risen to over 8000 per year. Inadequately immunized children are at high risk for acquiring pertussis. ...
Ambulatory Care Lecture: Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Ambulatory Care Lecture: Inflammatory Bowel Disease

... – lymphoma – infections ...
Screening Algorithm for Special Pathogen Diseases Continue with
Screening Algorithm for Special Pathogen Diseases Continue with

... ① Identify Exposure History ...
Bacterial Vaginosis - Alberta Health Services
Bacterial Vaginosis - Alberta Health Services

... Every female has bacteria that normally live in the vagina. Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance of the bacteria. BV is not a sexually transmitted infection (STI), but it’s more common in sexually active females. How do I get BV? BV may be linked to having: • multiple sex partners (ma ...
Chapter 21 - Georgia Highlands College
Chapter 21 - Georgia Highlands College

... bacteria surrounded by macrophage and lymphocytes e) The bacteria can survive in the tubercle for many years 3) Most individuals recover completely from this infection ...
Session 13 - Teaching Slides
Session 13 - Teaching Slides

... By the end of this session, participants should be able to:  Recognize clinical signs/symptoms suspicious for TB in HIV-infected children  Propose the appropriate work-ups and treatment for TB ...
Fitzhugh - ID Board Review
Fitzhugh - ID Board Review

... • Sx: cranial neuropathies with symm descending weakness. Five D’s: diplopia, dysphonia, dysarthria, dysphagia, descending paralysis • Tx: supportive, including mechanical ventilation prn. • Antitoxin: trivalent for adults, botulism immune globulin for infants. Of note, pentavalent antitoxin availab ...
Parvovirus in Dogs
Parvovirus in Dogs

... Advances in parvovirus vaccines have resulted in improved vaccines that provide effective protection despite some maternal antibodies. It is advised that the exposure of puppies be minimized until vaccines given at 16 weeks of age have been administered. What is the prognosis? The initial damage to ...
The Gram Positive Bacilli of Medical Importance Chapter 19
The Gram Positive Bacilli of Medical Importance Chapter 19

... cooking/ reheating • Ingestion of toxin-containing food causes nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, diarrhea; 24 hour duration • No treatment • Increasingly reported in immunosuppressed article ...
Click here to learn more about TB in South Carolina
Click here to learn more about TB in South Carolina

... inhalation of the aeroslized droplets by another person. This can occur while talking, singing, sneezing or coughing. ...
Antibiotic Update for INPs
Antibiotic Update for INPs

... of bacterial infection. • If there is evidence of a bacterial infection, use local guidelines to initiate prompt effective antibiotic treatment. • Document on the drug chart AND in the medical notes: ...
E. Coli
E. Coli

... 0 157:H7 falls into this group; it first became noticed in the 1980’s with a large outbreak from undercooked hamburger at a fast-food restaurant. It is associated with bloody diarrhea and hemolytic-uremic syndrome, a severe problem with the kidneys. D. Enteroinvasive E. Coli (EIEC) – This bacteria i ...
Protein-Losing Gastro- Enteropathy (PLGE)
Protein-Losing Gastro- Enteropathy (PLGE)

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Traveler's diarrhea

Traveler's diarrhea (TD), sometimes tourist diarrhea or traveler's dysentery, is a stomach and intestinal infection, and the most common illness affecting travelers. It is defined as three or more unformed stools passed by a traveler within a 24-hour period. It is commonly accompanied by abdominal cramps, nausea, and bloating. The diagnosis does not imply causative organism, but enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is the most common pathogen. Bacteria are responsible for roughly 80% of cases; most of the rest are caused by viruses and protozoans.Although most travelers with TD recover within a few days with little or no treatment, symptoms can sometimes be severe enough to require medical intervention. In those who are immunocompromised or otherwise prone to serious infections, TD is a significant concern and occasionally even life-threatening.
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