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Coughing Baby Too

A 1-year-old baby girl was brought to your office in January because of fever, rhinorrhea, and a harsh, "barking" cough. The cough did not produce any sputum. The child's mother said that the baby's appetite was "o.k." and that she had not been vomiting. The mother also said that this was the first time the baby had ever been sick.

Question 1 - Single Best Answer

What is rhinorrhea?   Bugs Database

watery eyes
runny nose
excessive salivation
sneezing
watery diarrhea

Question 2 - Single Best Answer

All of the following could, under certain circumstances, be a cause of the baby's symptoms. Which would be most likely in this baby?   Bugs Database

Bordetella pertussis
measles virus
respiratory syncytial virus
Chlamydia trachomatis
papilloma virus

Further physical examination shows that the child's temperature was 38.4. She was not in acute distress although there was persistent stridor during inspiration. Her throat was slightly red. On lung examination, upper airway sounds were prominent but there were no crackles or subcostal retractions.

Question 3 - Single Best Answer

What is stridor?   Bugs Database

high-pitched musical sound heard during inspiration
gasping for breath
bubbling sound in the lungs
visible sinking-in of the soft tissue between the ribs

Question 4 - Single Best Answer

The absence of crackles is an indication that?   Bugs Database

the baby has measles
the baby has croup
the baby is not allergic
the baby does not have pneumonia

Question 5 - Single Best Answer

What other sign would you look for if you thought the baby had measles?   Bugs Database

vesicular rash
maculopapular rash
conjunctivitis
otitis media
Koplik spots

Question 6 - Single Best Answer

You note no other symptoms, and decide that the child has croup (laryngotracheobronchitis). What are the defining symptoms of croup?   Bugs Database

fever and cough
barking cough and stridor
stridor and crackles
rash and fever
runny nose and cough

Question 7 - Single Best Answer

Which of the following cause croup?   Bugs Database

adenoviruses and AAV
rubella and rubeola viruses
RSV and parainfluenza virus
rhinoviruses and coronaviruses
parvoviruses

Question 8 - Single Best Answer

Which of the following diseases caused by Haemophilus influenza (H. flu) might be confused with croup?   Bugs Database

influenza
meningitis
pneumonia
epiglottitis
otitis media

Question 9 - Single Best Answer

What three bacteria (besides Haemophilus influenza) might have been considered in your differential?   Bugs Database

Corynebacteria diphtheria, Mycoplasma pneumonia, Bordetella pertussis
Treponema pallidum, Streptococcus pneumonia, Streptococcus pyogenes
Corynebacterium diphtheria, E. coli, Streptococcus agalactiae
Listeria monocytogenes, Streptococcus agalactiae, Chlamydia trachomatis

Question 10 - Single Best Answer

Should you worry about the baby's red throat?   Bugs Database

definitely yes
definitely no
probably yes
probably no

Question 11 - Single Best Answer

If you were worried by the throat what would you be worried about?   Bugs Database

S. pneumonia
S. pyogenes
herpes virus
child abuse

Question 12 - Single Best Answer

What family do parainfluenza and RSV belong to?   Bugs Database

orthomyxoviridae
paramyxoviridae
parvoviridae
togaviridae
enteroviridae

Question 13 - Single Best Answer

How would you tell if the baby was infected with RSV or paraflu -- they both cause similar symptoms in this age group?   Bugs Database

serology
virus isolation
viral antigen detection using fluorescent antibodies
Gram stain

The baby was found to be infected with Respiratory Syncytial Virus.

Question 14 - Single Best Answer

How would you treat the baby?   Bugs Database

hyperimmune serum globulin
RSV vaccine
intravenous ribivarin
aerosolized ribivarin
humid air and supportive care

Question 15 - Single Best Answer

Flu virus has a segmented genome, while parainfluenza does not. Epidemiologically, what is the significance of this?   Bugs Database

paraflu can only infect children
flu can only infect adults
only paraflu is spread by aerosolization
paraflu has stable antigenic types, flu does not
flu has stable antigenic types, paraflu does not

   

 Location: http://medinfo.ufl.edu/year2/mmid/a36aq.html
  Updated: October 6, 2005

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