WBR0049: Difference between revisions
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{{WBRQuestion | {{WBRQuestion | ||
|QuestionAuthor=William J Gibson (Reviewed by {{Rim}}) | |QuestionAuthor=William J Gibson (Reviewed by {{Rim}} and Yazan Daaboul) | ||
|ExamType=USMLE Step 1 | |ExamType=USMLE Step 1 | ||
|MainCategory=Microbiology | |MainCategory=Microbiology | ||
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|MainCategory=Microbiology | |MainCategory=Microbiology | ||
|SubCategory=Pulmonology, Infectious Disease | |SubCategory=Pulmonology, Infectious Disease | ||
|MainCategory=Microbiology | |||
|MainCategory=Microbiology | |MainCategory=Microbiology | ||
|MainCategory=Microbiology | |MainCategory=Microbiology | ||
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|MainCategory=Microbiology | |MainCategory=Microbiology | ||
|SubCategory=Pulmonology, Infectious Disease | |SubCategory=Pulmonology, Infectious Disease | ||
|Prompt=A 57-year-old man is brought to the emergency | |Prompt=A 57-year-old man is brought to the emergency department by his wife for a 3-day history of increasing fever, nausea, vomiting, cough and malaise. The wife explains they recently returned from a cruise trip at a nearby lake. On admission, his temperature is 103°F (39.5°C), his heart rate is 86/min, and his respiratory rate is 25/min. Initial work-up reveals the following set of electrolytes in this patient: Na=129 mEq/L, K=4.5 mEq/L, Cl=108 mEq/L, and HCO3=21 mEq/L. Which of the following media could be used to isolate the causal organism? | ||
|Explanation=The patient | |Explanation=The patient is most likely suffering from [[Legionnaires' disease]], a severe pulmonary infection caused by [[''Legionella pneumophila'']], a gram-negative rod. Legionnaires' disease typically affects smokers, older individuals, or people who are immunocompromised. Healthy individuals often have a less severe flu-like ''Legionalla'' infection called [[Pontiac fever]]. Legionnaire’s disease requires treatment with antibiotics and aggressive pulmonary management to resolve. | ||
''Legionella'' should be suspected in patients who were recently exposed to water sources, such as rivers, lakes, or even airconditioning systems. It classically causes a fever-heart rate dissociation, whereby the patient is febrile but not as tachycardic as expected in a febrile patient. Additionally, hyponatremia is characteristically observed in patients with ''Legionella'' infection. A mild but clinically insignificant decrease in bicarbonate may be evident in this patient as a compensatory mechanism of the patient's hyperventilation. | |||
It grows on charcoal yeast extract using iron and cysteine. Because gram stains poorly in cultures of "Legionella", silver stain is used instead. More rapid urinary antigen for ''Legionella" is also available. Depending on age and medical condition, Legionnaire’s disease has between a 5% and 30% mortality rate. | |||
|AnswerA=Eaton’s Agar | |AnswerA=Eaton’s Agar | ||
|AnswerAExp=Eaton’s agar is used to culture [[Mycoplasma pneumoniae]]. | |AnswerAExp=Eaton’s agar is used to culture [[''Mycoplasma pneumoniae'']]. It causes a mild gradually worsening atypical pneumonia, not the acute-onset severe pulmonary infection seen in this patient. | ||
|AnswerB=Charcoal yeast extract | |AnswerB=Charcoal yeast extract | ||
|AnswerBExp=Charcoal yeast extract is used to culture [[Legionella pneumophila]], the organism responsible for [[Legionnaire's disease]]. | |AnswerBExp=Charcoal yeast extract is used to culture [[Legionella pneumophila]], the organism responsible for [[Legionnaire's disease]]. | ||
|AnswerC=Tellurite Agar | |AnswerC=Tellurite Agar | ||
|AnswerCExp=Tellurite agar is used to culture [[Corynebacterium diphtheriae]]. C. | |AnswerCExp=Tellurite agar is used to culture [[''Corynebacterium diphtheriae'']]. ''C. diptheriae'' is largely eliminated from developed countries and would therefore be unlikely in this patient. C. diptheria infection causes severe pharyngitis accompanied by the development of pseudomembranes that coat the throat and tonsils. The pulmonary symptoms and [[fever]] observed in this patient are inconsistent with C. diptheria infection. | ||
|AnswerD=Maconkey’s Agar | |AnswerD=Maconkey’s Agar | ||
|AnswerDExp=Maconkey’s agar is used to culture a variety of organisms. Lactose-fermenting enterics (eg [[E. | |AnswerDExp=Maconkey’s agar is used to culture a variety of organisms. Lactose-fermenting enterics (eg [[''E. coli'']]) will appear as pink colonies. | ||
|AnswerE=Sabouraud’s Agar | |AnswerE=Sabouraud’s Agar | ||
|AnswerEExp=Sabouraud’s agar is used to culture [[fungi]]. | |AnswerEExp=Sabouraud’s agar is used to culture [[fungi]]. | ||
|EducationalObjectives=[[Legionella pneumophila]] causes acute respiratory disease and | |EducationalObjectives=[[''Legionella pneumophila'']] causes acute respiratory disease called Legionnaires' disease, classically associated with fever-heart rate dissociation and hyponatremia. Itcan be cultured using charcoal yeast agar. | ||
|References=First Aid 2014 page 138 | |References=Schuetz P, Haubitz S, Christ-Crain M, et al. Hyponatremia and anti-diuretic hormone in Legionnaires' disease. BMC Infect Dis. 2013;13:585 | ||
First Aid 2014 page 138 | |||
|RightAnswer=B | |RightAnswer=B | ||
|WBRKeyword=Legionairre's disease, Microbiology, Bacteria, Pneumonia, Laboratory | |WBRKeyword=Legionairre's disease, Microbiology, Bacteria, Pneumonia, Laboratory | ||
|Approved=Yes | |Approved=Yes | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 16:28, 1 August 2014
Author | [[PageAuthor::William J Gibson (Reviewed by Rim Halaby, M.D. [1] and Yazan Daaboul)]] |
---|---|
Exam Type | ExamType::USMLE Step 1 |
Main Category | MainCategory::Microbiology |
Sub Category | SubCategory::Pulmonology, SubCategory::Infectious Disease |
Prompt | [[Prompt::A 57-year-old man is brought to the emergency department by his wife for a 3-day history of increasing fever, nausea, vomiting, cough and malaise. The wife explains they recently returned from a cruise trip at a nearby lake. On admission, his temperature is 103°F (39.5°C), his heart rate is 86/min, and his respiratory rate is 25/min. Initial work-up reveals the following set of electrolytes in this patient: Na=129 mEq/L, K=4.5 mEq/L, Cl=108 mEq/L, and HCO3=21 mEq/L. Which of the following media could be used to isolate the causal organism?]] |
Answer A | AnswerA::Eaton’s Agar |
Answer A Explanation | [[AnswerAExp::Eaton’s agar is used to culture ''Mycoplasma pneumoniae''. It causes a mild gradually worsening atypical pneumonia, not the acute-onset severe pulmonary infection seen in this patient.]] |
Answer B | AnswerB::Charcoal yeast extract |
Answer B Explanation | [[AnswerBExp::Charcoal yeast extract is used to culture Legionella pneumophila, the organism responsible for Legionnaire's disease.]] |
Answer C | AnswerC::Tellurite Agar |
Answer C Explanation | [[AnswerCExp::Tellurite agar is used to culture ''Corynebacterium diphtheriae''. C. diptheriae is largely eliminated from developed countries and would therefore be unlikely in this patient. C. diptheria infection causes severe pharyngitis accompanied by the development of pseudomembranes that coat the throat and tonsils. The pulmonary symptoms and fever observed in this patient are inconsistent with C. diptheria infection.]] |
Answer D | AnswerD::Maconkey’s Agar |
Answer D Explanation | [[AnswerDExp::Maconkey’s agar is used to culture a variety of organisms. Lactose-fermenting enterics (eg ''E. coli'') will appear as pink colonies.]] |
Answer E | AnswerE::Sabouraud’s Agar |
Answer E Explanation | [[AnswerEExp::Sabouraud’s agar is used to culture fungi.]] |
Right Answer | RightAnswer::B |
Explanation | [[Explanation::The patient is most likely suffering from Legionnaires' disease, a severe pulmonary infection caused by ''Legionella pneumophila'', a gram-negative rod. Legionnaires' disease typically affects smokers, older individuals, or people who are immunocompromised. Healthy individuals often have a less severe flu-like Legionalla infection called Pontiac fever. Legionnaire’s disease requires treatment with antibiotics and aggressive pulmonary management to resolve.
Legionella should be suspected in patients who were recently exposed to water sources, such as rivers, lakes, or even airconditioning systems. It classically causes a fever-heart rate dissociation, whereby the patient is febrile but not as tachycardic as expected in a febrile patient. Additionally, hyponatremia is characteristically observed in patients with Legionella infection. A mild but clinically insignificant decrease in bicarbonate may be evident in this patient as a compensatory mechanism of the patient's hyperventilation. It grows on charcoal yeast extract using iron and cysteine. Because gram stains poorly in cultures of "Legionella", silver stain is used instead. More rapid urinary antigen for Legionella" is also available. Depending on age and medical condition, Legionnaire’s disease has between a 5% and 30% mortality rate. |
Approved | Approved::Yes |
Keyword | WBRKeyword::Legionairre's disease, WBRKeyword::Microbiology, WBRKeyword::Bacteria, WBRKeyword::Pneumonia, WBRKeyword::Laboratory |
Linked Question | Linked:: |
Order in Linked Questions | LinkedOrder:: |