Micropara Chapter 17
Micropara Chapter 17
Micropara Chapter 17
Program/yr/blk: BS in Nursing – 1C
I. Case Study:
a. What is the most probable diagnosis and the most likely etiology agent?
--- Adult syphilis is the most probable diagnosis and the most likely etiology agent is
primary syphilis cause by Triponema pallidum as it is hard, painless papule that later
becomes an ulcer with smooth or well-delineated border.
b. Give two other condition that can present with a lesion like what is presented by the
patient. How are they different from the case presented?
--- Gonorrhea is the second most common sexually transmitted disease infection
worldwide. It is caused by Neisseria gonorrhea. It takes 2-21 days to show the full
effect. Its symptoms are pain during urination, infection of the anus or sore throat, and
pain and bleeding in the rectum. It is transmitted through sexual contact with the penis,
vagina, mouth or anus of an infected partner. While syphilis is a caused by treponema
pallidum. It takes a long period of time until shows full effect. It occurs in four stages.
The symptoms are body rashes, mild fever, fatigue, sore throat, hair loss, swollen
glands, headache, and muscle pains. And transmitted through direct sexual contact,
congenitally, and through blood confusion.
SYPHILIS GONORRHEA
CONGENITAL YES NO
TRANSMISSION
NEONATAL NO YES
TRANSMISSION
SYSTEMIC SPREAD YES NO
d. In a patient with HIV infection, what is the specific target of the virus and what will be
the effect on the infected person?
--- HIV is the virus causes AIDS and targets the CD4+T cells as well as the
macrophages of the host. The effect of this virus is chronic in the latter years with
evidence of opportunistic infections and malignance. It is defined as clinical conditions
such as Wasting syndrome, dementia, soft tissue cancer, and some severe infections
that can cause death.
e. What is the reverse transcriptase and what is its importance in the management of
HIV infection?
--- The process in cells by which enzymes makes a copy of DNA from RNA is called
reverse transcriptase. It is present in some retroviruses as well. Non-nucleoside reverse
transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) prevent HIV from replacing by blocking RT.
a. Enumerate and explain briefly the factors that can predispose the development of UTI
--- Sexual activity is one of the most common lifestyle risk factors for UTIs, particularly
for women. It’s thought that sexual intercourse may transport from the genitals and anus
into the urethra and, in turn, lead to infection.
--- Catheterization, in patient with comorbid condition, failure in infection prevention and
control frequently begins with indwelling urinary catheterization. Poor hand hygiene,
aseptic technique, and catheter placement all contribute to UTI’s. Unnecessary or
excessive catheterization is another risk factor, will poor urethral orifice asepsis being a
risk factor.
b. Differentiate lower UTI from upper UTI as the clinical manifestations. How do bacteria
reach the kidneys?
--- Upper UTI’s mainly refers to the kidney and the tube that lead from the kidneys into
the urinary bladder can cause pyelonephritis.
--- Lower UTI’s which is the tube that leads from the bladder, cystitis refers to
inflammation of bladder and urethritis refers to inflammation of urethra.
--- Hematogenous spread and through ascending infection from the lower urinary tract.
The proper way of collecting urine specimens is through getting clean voided midstream
urine in the morning. Patient should instructed gently cleanse the urethral meatus using
swab and then rinse.
e. What possible complications can arise in person with untreated and repeated urinary
tract infection?
Recurrent infection specially in women who experience two or more UTI’s in a
six-month period or four within a year.
Permanent kidney damage from an acute or chronic kidney infection
(PYELONEPHRITIS) due to an untreated UTI.
Increase risk in pregnant women in delivering low birth weight or premature
infants.
Urethral narrowing (stricture) in men from recurrent urethritis, previously seen
with gonococcal urethritis.
Sepsis, a potentially life-threatening complication of an infection, especially if the
infection works its way up your urinary tract to your kidney.