Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #iddailypearl

Most recents (10)

#idboardreview patient on chronic steroids with bilateral lung nodules and skin lesions. Skin AFB stain shown. dx? #meded #idmeded #IDtwitter
#Nocardia species form long, branching, beaded filaments. Organisms that stain with #modified #AFB:
Mycobacterium species
Legionella micdadei (in specimens only)
Nocardia species
Rhodococcus species
Tsukamurella species &
Gordonia species
#iddailypearl
Read 3 tweets
#idboardreview 60 F with Myelodysplastic syndrome presents w/ L knee pain, rash on unilateral sole, PET: L iliac artery uptake. Knee fluid 80k 98% PMN, gram stain gram negative cocobacilli. dx? #meded #idmeded #idtwitter ImageImage
Endovascular Infection #Kingella #kingae Complicated by Septic Arthritis in Immunocompromised Adult Patient Ref wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/26…
#Kingella kingae gram-negative coccobacillus,normal flora of upper respiratory tract. Causative agent of osteoartricular infections in kids<4 years. Rarely HACEK IE in adults
R.f poor oral hygiene, pharyngitis, & mucosal ulcerations
Read 6 tweets
Images of Infectious Diseases

2 months after visiting family and friends in Manila:

39M. No PMH. One week of fever, chills, cough, pleuritic chest pain, RUQ pain.

Now complains of blurred vision due to endophthalmitis.

Your DDx? #MayoIDQ and case details to follow… Image
2/
39M. No PMH. HIV-. No IDU.
PE: jaundice, endophthalmitis, no dental issues, b/l rales, new systolic murmur, tender RUQ
WBC 18.3 Alk phos 250.
CT chest / abdomen (photo)
TEE: mitral valve vegetation
Which of the following is the most likely pathogen? #MayoIDQ
3/
Let us use this case to highlight clinical pearls about liver abscess:

Two major categories
1. Pyogenic liver abscess
2. Amoebic liver abscess

In this case, there are factors that favor pyogenic liver abscess: endocarditis, septic pulmonary emboli and endophthalmitis
Read 9 tweets
1/
Are you an @ID_fellows? Planning a future in ID?

In honor of #IDWeek2021 Fellows Day and our newest ep, let's 🔗to some ID learning tools! Use these to study for boards or just save to reference thru your training!

@ID_fellows #IDTwitter #IDMedEd

2/ For those studying for ID boards - have you taken a peek at the blueprint/content outlines? Good place to start.

⭐️Don't forget to look at your ITE missed Qs/topics to help identify places for improvement⭐️

ABIM: abim.org/Media/mucpauyz…

ABP: abp.org/sites/abp/file…
3/ @SAIRABT + @swinndong discussed the most impt resource = daily pt care+fellowship didactics!

What do you use to remember #IDMedEd you've learned?
Are you a notebook person?

How about taking those notes and adding #IDDailyPearl to share your knowledge with #IDTwitter!
Read 13 tweets
#IDDailyPearl quick Tweetorial on ART in the setting of severe renal impairment (GFR <30, not in dialysis). @erodedbyewaves and @ewelford
When CrCl <30, technically should stop TAF and FTC/3TC. TAF can be used down to CrCl 15 not on dialysis (think HBV monoinfection tx data) BUT technically FTC or 3TC should be renally-dosed at these lower CrCl.
I've seen FTC and/or 3TC continued at these lower CrCl levels since risk of lactic acidosis and/or other AE is still low but technically would not be "appropriate"
Read 11 tweets
2/Today, we'll focus on superficial fungal infections, pathogens, and treatments, specifically:

💠 Dermatophytes
💠 Tinea versicolor
3/Dermatophytes👉a label given to 3 genera that cause skin disease in humans & animals:

🔹 Trichophyton
🔹 Microsporum
🔹 Epidermophyton

📷@DocWoc71 Image
Read 19 tweets
I know giving q4h penicillin G for a viridans group streptococcus endocarditis feels very classic and elegant, but man is it ever awful for the patient in hospital. They can’t go anywhere because they’re getting antibiotics so often! #IDDailyPearl
So here’s my food for thought question: assuming we don’t do oral treatment, and given that endocarditis is actually pretty rare, why don’t we give ceftriaxone rather than Pen G given the inherent issues with the latter? I’m only meaning to spark discussion. No agenda :)
It’s good stewardship bcz there little ecologic effect treating a rare entity. Less problems with PICC blockage. Easy to give daily dosing. Better quality of life for patient for time you’re giving it. No need for dosing acrobatics. No renal adjustment. Easy to remember dose.
Read 3 tweets
Images of Infectious Diseases

74M Iowa farmer s/p Dacron graft repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm

2y later: back pain
MRI (photo) + enhancement of graft + aneurysm

Surgery (photo): bacteria, fungi/TB cultures (-)

DIF with anti-Coxiella Ab in fibroblasts (photo).
(MCQ next) Image
In a 74M farmer with multilevel vertebral osteomyelitis and soft tissue abscess contiguous with vascular graft and mycotic aneurysm, which serological pattern is most consistent with a diagnosis of chronic Q fever? #MayoIDQ (PI phase 1; PII phase 2 titers)
1/
Case diagnosis: Chronic #Coxiella burnetti infection (#QFever): vascular graft, vertebral osteomyelitis, soft tissue abscesses

MCQ answer: choice B

Description reported by @AbinashVirkMD, @DOCElie and colleagues

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…
Read 10 tweets
1/18

I bet you are wondering, what's all the fuss with #candidemia? Why do we care? How to diagnose? How to treat?

Get ready for a thanksgiving treat!

Inspired by @DxRxEdu
2/

In the US, invasive candidiasis is the most common fungal infection in hospitalized patients (4th most common infection overall)

1. C. diff
2. Staph aureus
3. E. Coli
4. Candida

www-nejm-org.proxy1.library.jhu.edu/doi/pdf/10.105…
3/

Which of the following is a risk factor for developing #candidemia?
Read 18 tweets
1/ Why tuberculosis has a preferential apical localization?
Is it the host? Is it the pathogen?
To answer this question, let’s review some cool stuff
#MedTwitter #IDTwitter #IDMedEd #IDDailyPearl

Follow the thread
2/ Arnold Rich stated: “There is no more puzzling circumstance in the pathogenesis of pulmonary tuberculosis […] than the peculiar fact that in the adult the disease begins almost invariably in the upper portion of the upper lobe“
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6839825
3/ M. tuberculosis is an obligate aerobe (they have an absolute requirement of O2 to grow).
*Tubercle bacilli respire maximally in vitro at O2 concentrations of 20-40%
*Experimental infections in animals are inhibited by very low O2 concentrations
Am Rev Tuberc 1939; 40:157-68
Read 9 tweets

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