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SHAMPOOS, TATTOOS, AND BARBEQUES—What’s new in the world of infectious diseases? “Flies spread disease, keep yours zipped.” ---Anonymous Quiz • The average person, during a single 24hour period, deposits in his or her underwear an amount of fecal bacteria equal to: a) the weight of a quarter of a peanut b) the weight of Milk Dud c) the weight of a chocolate chip cookie d) the weight of a Oscar Meyer wiener QUIZ • If you had to make a choice, which of the following would you lick? a) the kitchen cutting board b) the top of your desk at work c) the top of the toilet seat d) your underwear QUIZ • Which stall in the ladies room is contaminated with the most bacteria? a) the stall nearest the door b) the middle stall c) the stall at the end of the row QUIZ • A Florida middle-school science student found that ___ percent of her local fastfood restaurants had more bacteria in their soft-drink ice than in the water from their toilets. Yuck. (March 3, 2006—The Week) a) 10% b) 30% c) 50% d) 70% The 2 most important fundamental aspects of infectious disease prevention and control… • Hand washing • Vaccination • Should you shake hands with a man who has just exited the men’s room? Handwashing • Use of alcohol-based gels for hand washing • C. difficile and soap and water (Canada; quinolones) • Screensavers and compliance Cruisin’ • • • • • Noroviruses Diarrhea-associated illness on cruise ships In the community In nursing homes Use soap and water NOT alcohol-based hand washes How long? • How long should you wash your hands to remove 99.9% of the pathogens?_____ • How long should you wash your hands to remove 95% of the pathogens?_____ • How long should you wash your hands to remove coliform bacteria?____ • How long do we have to talk about washing our hands? How long? • How long does the flu virus live on a doorknob? • How long does the cold virus live in a hotel room? • How long does TB live in sputum? • How long does MRSA live on a keyboard? • How long can Legionella pneumoniae live on a showerhead? When is the last time you cleaned your showerhead? How long? • How long does herpes simplex live on a toilet seat? • “Hey Nurse, can I get …” • How long does E.Coli O157:H7 live on a stainless steel countertop? • How long does the SARS virus live in diarrhea? The 2nd most important fundamental aspect of preventing infectious diseases: • Vaccinate • Vaccinate • Vaccinate Vaccines… • Kids receive a plethora of vaccines prior to the age of 2 to prevent a myriad of childhood diseases… To develop immunity you either vaccinate or you… • Suffer the infection What’s on the horizon in the world of vaccines? Using foods as vaccines… • • • • • Potatoes Tomatoes Bananas Spinach Rice capsules Or using shampoos as vaccines… Vaccine miracles…meningitis • H. flu meningitis—what are the numbers? 40-100 cases/100,000 of invasive H. flu in 1989; vaccine in 1990— • 0.2 cases/100,000 today • Reduction of 99.8% • Strep pneumoniae meningitis—what are the numbers? 77% decline in kids; 60% decline in adults • Lumbar punctures in kids—before, during, after…too many… • And the story continues… Let’s look at the numbers • Declines of greater than 99% in cases of diphtheria (100&), measles (99.9%), polio (100%), rubella (99.9%), smallpox (100%), and invasive HiB infection (99.8%). • Reductions of greater than 90% in mumps (95.9%), tetanus (92.9%), pertussis (92.2%). • Notable reductions in HAV (87.0%), HBV (80.1%), varicella (85%), invasive pneumococcal disease (34.1%). • Reductions in mortality have been comparable to or greater than reductions in morbidity for all these illnesses, with the exception of invasive pneumococcal disease (25.4%) (Roush SW et al. Historical comparisons of morbidity and mortality for vaccine-preventable diseases in the United States. JAMA 2007 Nov 14; 298:2155. Vaccines to prevent diseases… • Gardisil to prevent cervical cancer (HPV 16, 18) and warts caused by HPV-6 and11; new info on HPV-16 and oral cancers • When will boys get the HPV vaccine? • Vaccines to prevent heart attacks • Vaccines to prevent amyloid plaque formation in the brain (in clinical trials) • Vaccines to prevent UTIs, STDs (Chlamydia) Do vaccines trigger chronic disease? • MS? NO… • Autism? NO… • Crohn’s disease? NO… • Don’t believe everything you read on the Internet… • Ethyl mercury vs. methyl mercury • Madsen KM Et al. A population-based study of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination and autism. N Engl J Med 2002 Nov 7;347:1477-82. • Lancet 2004;364:9438 What vaccines do you need as an adult • Tdap (tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid, and acellular pertussis)Boostrix (ages 11-18) and Adacel (ages 11 to 64)—every 10 years • Pertussis “whooping cough”—introduced in the 1940s; average of 175,000 cases per year; 1980-1990 an average of 2,900 cases per year • On the rise—9,771 cases in 2002 • The “100-day” cough • Immunity waning, kids not getting vaccinated because of the “fear” of autism, parental denial of continuing risks of infectious diseases What vaccines do you need as an adult? • • • • Flu every year Hepatitis B (x3)(if you haven’t had it as a child) Pneumococcal vaccine after age 50 Zostavax after age 60 to prevent shingles (14x stronger than Varivax—the kids version) Parvovirus B19--1975 • “Fifth disease” in kids “slapped cheek” • Migratory arthritis • Fetal wastage during pregnancy • Aplastic crisis in patients with hemolytic anemia Staphyloccocal TSS--1981 • • • • • The tampon wars Who won? Proctor and Gamble and RELY Super, dooper, dooper absorbent tampons 39 deaths; hundreds ill You could get it in, but ya’ couldn’t get it out! Lyme disease--1982 • Tick-borne--spirochete—Borrelia burgdorferi • 24-36 hours for the spirochete to make it’s way from the stomach of the tick to the salivary gland of the tick and into the host • Bull’s eye lesion • Arthritis • Neuritis • Doxycycline “Tickacillin” Helicobacter pylori—1983 • Dr. Barry Marshall and Dr. Robin Warren and the tale of H. pylori • Antibiotics to RX • Antibodies will last for at least 3 years in the blood so that re-infection will be picked up by breath test or stool antigens for H. pylori • Or endoscopy (if you have insurance) H. pylori • • • • • How do we get it? Is it “normal flora”? Common housefly may be a vector… Municipal water systems Kissing your “shweethaht” in the mornin’ (reflux)--??? Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1983 • What do we know? • 2 receptors are necessary for the HIV virus to enter the T4 lymphocyte • Natural immunity • Worldwide 33 million • 67% in Sub-Saharan Africa with 3/4th of deaths for 2003 • New drugs, no vaccine GABHS mutations--1985 • Group A Beta Hemolytic strep, new strains • M1, M3, M18 • Resurgence of Rheumatic Heart disease, necrotizing fasciitis, Streptococcal TSS Hepatitis C virus--1989 • Blood transfusions prior to 1992 (1 in every 3,000 units prior to 1992) • Hemodialysis patients • IV drug use • Sexual transmission with multiple partners • Vietnam veterans • Intranasal cocaine use • Tattoos, piercings Guys tattoos… • Out there… • Everywhere… • Showin’ them off Kaposi’s sarcoma…1995 • The 8th member of the Herpes “family”— HHV-8 • STD • It is NOT an AIDS defining illness as it can be transmitted without having HIV Avian Flu (H5N)--1997 • 1997 strain from birds hops to humans—6 people die in Hong Kong • 2003—the strain re-emerges, killing one man in Hong Kong • 2005—SE Asia, west to Europe, Turkey, Africa; infected more than 130 people, killing more than 65 • Bird to person; person to person… • Deep lung tissues—hard to spread via respiratory route • The Center for Disease Control has released a list of the symptoms of bird flu. If you experience any of the following, please seek medical treatment immediately. Know the symptoms of bird flu… • • • • • • 1) High fever 2) Congestion 3) Nausea 4) Fatigue 5) Aching in the joints 6) And…an irresistible urge to s#!t on someone’s windshield. West Nile Virus…1998-1999 • • • • • • • • Mosquito-borne illness Hitching a ride form Africa to NYC (Queens) Has since spread throughout the U.S. “Where the crow flies and dies…” and the blue jays, and the red, red robins… 3-15 day incubation period Polio-type picture, encephalitis Other modes of transmission? Blood transfusions? (blood screened on pooled samples from 6-16 donors since 2003) (23 cases in 2002 to 0 in 2005; 2 cases in 2006)(MMWR 2007 Feb 2;56:76-9) Breast milk? SARS--2003 • What do we know? • Mutation of the corona virus • Most contagious around the 10th day during hospitalization • Explains the high rate of SARS in HCWs • Hong Kong tourism slogan 8 TRENDS IN INFECTIOUS DISEASES • • • • • • • • Everything global—warming, travel, economics Increased food-borne illnesses Zoonoses Increased population of immunocompromised patients Sexual promiscuity Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) Infectious disease and chronic inflammation Bioterrorism Global warming and mosquitoes… • Carry over 100 diseases • With global warming they are moving further away from the equator • Malaria (“mal aria”)—bad air • Dengue fever—”breakbone” fever Global travel • When in Rome, don’t do as the Romans do!! Water in cocktails? Water to plump up vegetables at roadside vendors? Ice in drinks? Ice on the airplane coming home? Splurge for bottled water! Multidrug resistant TB (MDR-TB)… • TB on airplanes • Countries with the highest rate of MDR-TB and immigration to the US (Russia, Romania, Mexico) • Elderly, prison population, HIV+, homeless (shelters vs. street living) • Extensive Drug Resistant TB (XDR-TB) • “If you have consumption…go up on the mountain…” • Vitamin D and the immune system Global economics… • 1985—Houston, Texas ordered used tires from SE Asia • What were they thinking? • The tires were delivered right along with the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes Aegypti) • Caused an outbreak of Dengue (breakbone) fever in SE Texas and LA in 1985 • Other issues in global economics brings us to another emerging trend in infectious diseases— Food-borne illnesses… • 1990 only 13 food-borne illnesses to worry about • Today there are 8 x that many • Why? • Distribution around the world • Centralization of food processing plants Food-borne illness… • Guillain-Barré syndrome and under-cooked chicken—Campylobacter jejuni • How long after the exposure will I see symptoms? • What temperature should I cook my chicken to? • White meat? • Dark meat? • BUY an instant read thermometer TODAY… Food-borne illness… • • • • • Undercooked chicken, eggs and … Cantaloupe from Honduras Peanut butter Salmonella Pasteurized eggs for “seizure” salad (Caesar salad) • No more sunny-side up, especially for high-risk patients The Hamburger Bug E. Coli O157:H7 • Mid-70’s, mutation in Venezuela • Shigella + E. Coli exchanged genes in a cow’s bowel • Moved up through Central America into Southern Texas in the early ’80’s (1982 first identified) • 3rd most deadly toxin in the world • 10-100 pathogens to make you ill or kill you— enterohemorrhagic diarrhea • #1 cause of acute renal failure in kids • 1993-Seattle-Tacoma deadly outbreak at Jack-in-the-Box restaurants • Mickey D’s—30 outbreaks per year • Supportive Treatment The Hamburger Bug E. Coli O157:H7 • COOK your burgers to 160º F • Hamburgers are pretty safe these days— well, as safe as the 16 y.o. pimply kid talking on his cell phone, flippin’ the burgers • Biggest concern is produce—lettuce, spinach The green leafys… • Between 1986 and 1995, Americans ate 17 percent more leafy greens than in the previous decade, yet food poisoning from those leafy greens rose more than 60 percent. In the subsequent decade (19962006) food poisonings rose 39 percent compared to a 9 percent rise in consumption (CDC, Atlanta, March 2008 Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases) How about a hot dog? • Listeria monocytogenes • Hot dogs, bologna, deli meats • Also soft cheeses, brie, feta, camembert • The very young, the very old and the… No, thanks, I’ll have the salmon sushi… • Oh no you won’t…1 in 10 salmon “sushi’s) have parasites… Pets and zoonoses • Can your pet make you sick? • Cuddly puppies and Campylobacter jejuni Zoonoses… • Kitty litter and toxoplasmosis What about feline leukemia, feline AIDS, and feline distemper? NO… The reptiles and Salmonella • Snakes • Turtles • Iguanas Zoonoses • MRSA from dogs, cats and other pets. Patients with MRSA can pass the infection to their animals through normal daily contact, which in turn, passes it right back to the person, leading to human reinfection • All carriers in the household should be tested for and treated in order to eradicate this vicious cycle of reinfection. Dogs that visit health care facilities to boost the morale of patients may also be bringing MRSA directly to the patients. (Enoch DA) Zoonoses • MRSA: From pigs to people. A new MRSA strain, NT-MRSA (non-typeable) emerged in 2003 in the Netherlands. Several infections were identified with this strain in 2004 and 2005, seemingly linked to pig farms. After further investigation, the presence of NT-MRSA was significantly associated with contact with pigs and cattle. (van Loo I et al) Increased population of immunocompromised patients… • • • • • Diabetics HIV+ Cancer patients Transplant patients The elderly Sexual promiscuity… • • • • • • • HIV HPV HSV HBV HCV* (less than 5%) H_V Chlamydia and GC Sexual promiscuity… • Immature vagina including an alkaline pH in teenagers • Know your partner • Do condoms protect from STDs? YES • But not the “natural feel” condoms Does circumcision protect? • To circumcise or not to circumcise—that is the question… • YES • (Auvert B. PLoS Medicine, November 2005; Science News 10/29/05, Vol. 168) The pH of body fluids is protective • Stomach—pH 2 • Vaginal—pH 4.5 • Urine—pH 4 • Semen—pH 7 When our ovaries die… • Increased risk of vaginal infections and urinary tract infections • Fastest rising group with STDs is the elderly! • 300% increase in the past 10 years…WHY? the Pfizer Riser (Viagra)… and friends • • • • November 1, 1998 Before 11/1/98? After 11/1/98? Levitra, Cialis One last note on STDs… • A high risk group • Long-haul truckers play a significant role in the transmission of disease in Africa and maybe here in the U.S. • Some stats: 1/3 have frequent sex with prostitutes on the road and greater than 80% don’t use condoms • Why? “Because condoms don’t protect you and AIDS is only a disease found in gay men.” Whoa. Healthcare-associated infections • MRSA • MRSA in the community About 2.3 million people in the U.S. carry methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in their nasal passages. MRSA prevalence is highest among females and individuals older than age 60. HA-MRSA • Discovered in the 19th century, Staphylococcus aureus was shown to be susceptible to penicillin in the mid-20th century. • Methicillin-resistant S aureus (MRSA) strains developed not long after the introduction of the antibiotic methicillin itself in the mid 1960s. Hospital-acquired MRSA (HAMRSA) has been a dominant heath care associated infection in hospitals for several decades. • Although methicillin is no longer available as an antibiotic, the acronym MRSA has survived and signifies those strains of S aureus resistant to all beta-lactam drugs (penicillins, cephalosporins, and carbapenems). HA-MRSA • MRSA is on the rise in the U.S. w/ a prevalence of 4.6 known cases per 100 patients. (true prevalence of MRSA was probably far greater than this estimate as only 30% of hospitals responded to survey) • The primary sites of infection are skin/soft tissue (28%), lung (17%), bloodstream (13%), urinary tract (10%), and surgical site (8%). Approximately 70% are believed to be healthcare-associated (acquired during hospitalization) and most cases occurred outside the ICU. • HA-MRSA targets the hospitalized vulnerable patients (the elderly, the nursing home patient, mechanical ventilation, stay in an ICU, long hospitalization, current or recent hospitalization, catheterization) CA-MRSA • Beginning in the 1990s, and accelerating at the speed of light, a new strain of MRSA, which has its onset in the community, not in the hospital, is wreaking havoc in the primary care setting, emergency rooms, prisons, day care centers, and high school gyms and locker rooms. This new strain, dubbed CA-MRSA (community-acquired MRSA) is significantly different CA-MRSA • CA-MRSA targets patients of any age, including the young and healthy, throughout the community. The primary risk factor for CA-MRSA is the combination of exposure to the pathogen and the opportunity to invade through the skin. A frank cut or abrasion is a perfect entry point, but is not absolutely necessary. Exposure can begin with the person’s own nose and skin, typical sites for CA-MRSA colonization. Up to half of the U.S. population may be colonized asymptomatically with S aureus, while a smaller percentage (from 1%-10%) is colonized with MRSA. • Transmission is fairly easy with CA-MRSA. Environments are more likely to have skinto-skin contact and athletes and active children are at risk because of potential abrasions and cuts. Combining such an injury with the sharing of a colonized or infected team member’s towel is an example of how infection can not only be contracted but spread. Family members of infected persons are also at risk. Diagnosis—new tests • Spectra MRSA—nasal test with results within 24 hours; + predictive value of 98% • MRSA rapid blood test—2 hours (vs. 2 days) for MRSA or other staph strains; 100% predictive for MRSA, 98% for other strains (BD GeneOhm StaphSR Assay) • MRSA-related skin abscesses are treated by incising and draining the abscess followed by antibiotic therapy. • TMP/SMX (trimethoprim/sulfa; Bactrim; Septra) twice a day and clindamycin (Cleocin) four times a day are appropriate. • Eradicate nasal colonization with Rifampin 300 mg twice and day and bactroban nasal ointment twice a day. • Other drugs used to treat MRSA include vancomycin (Vancocin), Linezolid (Zyvox), daptomycin (Cubicin), and quinupristindalfopristin (Synercid). Just as an FYI…Vancomycin costs approximately $29.00 a day; Linezolid (Zyvox) costs about $155 per day; daptomycin (Cubicin) coasts in the neighborhood of $120 per day; and, quinupristin/dalfopristin (Synercid) cha-chings in at a mere $265 per day. Yikes on the Synercid. • . • Educate the patient! MRSA is almost always transmitted by direct physical contact; however, known MRSA transmissions have occurred via towels, sheets, wound dressings, clothes, workout areas, sports equipment, and Fido and Fluffy. • Hand hygiene is of utmost importance in decreasing the transfer of one MRSA-infected patient to a non-MRSAinfected patient. Alcohol-based rubs are effective in killing MRSA and they reduce the time necessary for hand disinfection • Should screening be performed on ALL patients entering the hospital? Controversial—some studies say yes and others say it doesn’t make a difference (Chaberny) Postoperative infection prevention • Intranasal and oropharyngeal decontamination with chlorhexidine solutions 4x /d from hospital admission to removal of ng tube vs placebo • Postop nosocomial infections 19.8% vs 26.2% • Lower RT infections 9.3% vs. 15.8% • Bacteremias 1.9% vs. 3.6% • Deep SSIs 1.9% vs. 5.1% • Preventing one nosocomial infection required treating only 16 patients • Simple, inexpensive decontamination produces a clinically relevant reduction in postop infection and total hospital stay (9.5 days vs. 10.3) (Segers P) • Clostridium difficile (new strain vs. old strains) • Binary toxin vs. toxin A and B • Clostridium difficile in the community • Metronidazole susceptibility depending on the type of C.diff • Stool transplants Infectious disease and chronic inflammation… • • • • • • C. pneumoniae and atherosclerosis CMV? H. pylori? Hs-CRP and vasculitis (chronic inflammation) Drugs to reduce inflammation reduce MIs Flu vaccine for secondary prevention Periodontal disease and cardiovascular disease—FLOSS YOUR TEETH • KEEP YOUR TEETH CV risk factor: Measure waist size The more fat around the middle, the higher the risk of CV disease and chronic inflammation Is obesity caused by a virus? • Ladies--35 inches or less • Gentlemen--40 inches or less BIOTERRORISM… • Have a high index of suspicion if there is “clustering” of a common disease • Or, if there are a few cases of an uncommon disease • Bugs most likely to be used: Anthrax, Yersinia pestis (bubonic plague), smallpox, botulism…HAVE A PLAN!!! Survey of counties in U.S.-2002 • One county in Iowa had a 3-pronged plan of attack: 1) Call for help 2) Hope someone comes 3) Stack the bodies in the high school gym THANK YOU … “Support bacteria—they’re the only culture some people have.” Anonymous Barb Bancroft, RN, MSN, PNP www.barbbancroft.com [email protected] Bibliography • • • • • Chaberny IF et al. Impact of routine surgical ward and intensive care unit admission surveillance cultures on hospital-wide nosocomial methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus infections in a university hospital: An interrupted time-series analysis. J Antimicrob Chemother 2008 Sep 1. Enoch DA, et al. MRSA carriage in a pet therapy dog. J of Hosp Infect 2005;60:186-8)(Rabinowitz PM, et al. Pet-Related Infections. Am Fam Phys 2007;76(9):1314-22) Jarvis WR et al. National prevalence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in inpatients at U.S. health care facilities. Am J Infect Control 2007 Dec;35:631. Segers P et al. Prevention of nosocomial infection in cardiac surgery by decontamination of the nasopharynx and oropharynx with chlorhexidine gluconate: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA 2006 Nov 22; 296:2460-6. van Loo I et al. Emergence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus of animal origin in humans. Emerg Infec Dis 2007 Dec; 13:1834 Bibliography • Bailey RC et al. Male circumcision for HIV prevention in young men in Kisumu, Kenya: A randomized controlled trial. Lancet 2007 Feb 24: 369:643-56. • Gray RH et al. Male circumcision for HIV prevention in Rakai, Uganda: A randomized controlled trial. Lancet 2007 Feb 24: 369:657-66. • Newel ML and Bärnighausen T. Male circumcision to cut HIV risk in the general population. Lancet 2007 Feb 24: 369:617-9.