Infectious Disease Clinical Training Manual
BACTERIA - Prokaryotes, divide by binary fission, 0.5-5 µm diameter - Gram-positive (thicker peptidoglycan, purple stain): Staphylococci, Streptococci, Clostridia, Listeria, Bacillus - Gram-negative (thin peptidoglycan, pink stain): E. coli, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas, Enterobacteriaceae,...
Infectious Disease Clinical Training Manual
Small Hospital/Clinic Reference Guide
1. PRINCIPLES OF INFECTIOUS DISEASE
Microbial Classification and Characteristics
BACTERIA
- Prokaryotes, divide by binary fission, 0.5-5 µm diameter
- Gram-positive (thicker peptidoglycan, purple stain): Staphylococci, Streptococci, Clostridia, Listeria, Bacillus
- Gram-negative (thin peptidoglycan, pink stain): E. coli, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas, Enterobacteriaceae, Neisseria, Vibrio
- Acid-fast (waxy cell wall): Mycobacterium tuberculosis, M. avium, Nocardia
- Atypical (minimal/no cell wall): Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella
VIRUSES
- Obligate intracellular parasites, contain RNA or DNA core surrounded by protein coat and lipid envelope
- Enveloped (susceptible to alcohol, soap, drying): influenza, measles, mumps, varicella-zoster, CMV, HIV, SARS-CoV-2
- Non-enveloped (resistant to environmental stress, drying): poliovirus, adenovirus, rotavirus, norovirus, rhinovirus
FUNGI
- Eukaryotes with cell wall (chitin/glucans), reproduce by spores
- Yeasts (C. albicans, C. auris, Cryptococcus): single-cell, reproduce by budding
- Molds (Aspergillus, Mucor, Rhizopus): filamentous, reproduce by spores
- Dimorphic (H. capsulatum, C. immitis, B. dermatitidis): yeast form in body, mold form in environment
PARASITES
- Protozoa (single-cell): Plasmodium (malaria), Toxoplasma, Giardia, Entamoeba, Cryptosporidium
- Helminths (worms): Roundworms (Ascaris, hookworms), tapeworms (Taenia), flukes (Schistosoma)
- Ectoparasites: Scabies mite, head/body lice
Host Defenses and Pathophysiology
Innate Immunity
- Physical barriers: epithelium, mucus, cilia, stomach acid, normal flora
- Complement cascade: C1-C9, MAC (membrane attack complex), opsonization, inflammation
- Phagocytes: neutrophils (PMN, kill via ROS and granules), macrophages, dendritic cells
- Pattern recognition: TLRs (toll-like receptors), NOD-like receptors, lectins
- Inflammatory mediators: TNF, IL-1, IL-6, chemokines
Adaptive Immunity
- T cells: CD8+ cytotoxic (kill infected cells), CD4+ helper (coordinate immune response, IL-2/IFN-γ production)
- B cells: produce antibodies (IgM, IgG, IgA, IgE), memory B cells
- Antibody functions: opsonization, neutralization, complement fixation, ADCC
- Mucosal immunity: IgA secretion, GALT (gut-associated lymphoid tissue), MALT
Virulence Factors
- Adherence: pili, fimbriae, adhesins (e.g., pneumococcal PspA)
- Invasion: IgA protease, hyaluronidase, collagenase, invasins
- Toxins: exotoxins (diphtheria, tetanus, cholera), enterotoxins, endotoxins (LPS)
- Immune evasion: capsule (antiphagocytic), antigenic variation, molecular mimicry
- Biofilms: matrix of EPS, reduced antibiotic penetration, persister cells
Antibiotic Mechanisms of Action and Resistance
MOA Classes
Cell Wall Inhibitors
- Beta-lactams (penicillins, cephalosporins, carbapenems): inhibit transpeptidase → PBP2a/3 inactivation → cell wall lysis
- Vancomycin: inhibits D-Ala-D-Ala cross-linking
- Action: bactericidal
Protein Synthesis Inhibitors
- 30S subunit: aminoglycosides (streptomycin, gentamicin), tetracyclines, chloramphenicol
- 50S subunit: macrolides (erythromycin), linezolid, clindamycin
- Action: bacteriostatic (except aminoglycosides = bactericidal)
Nucleic Acid Inhibitors
- DNA gyrase inhibitors: fluoroquinolones (cipro, levofloxacin)
- Topoisomerase IV inhibitors: fluoroquinolones (particularly in Gram-positive)
- RNA polymerase inhibitors: rifampin
- Antimetabolites: TMP-SMX, metronidazole (anaerobe DNA damage)
- Action: bactericidal (FQ, rifampin) or bacteriostatic (TMP-SMX)
Metabolic Inhibitors
- Metronidazole: forms DNA adducts in anaerobes
- Sulfonamides: PABA competitive inhibition
Resistance Mechanisms
- Enzymatic inactivation: β-lactamases (TEM, SHV, CTX-M), aminoglycoside modifying enzymes (APH, AAC, ANT)
- Target modification: PBP alterations (MRSA, pneumococci), ribosomal mutations (macrolide-resistant Streptococcus), gyrA/topoisomerase mutations (FQ-resistant)
- Reduced uptake: altered porins (β-lactam, FQ resistance), efflux pumps (MRSA, P. aeruginosa, A. baumannii)
- Production of alternative pathways: thyA mutations (TMP-SMX resistance), folate production (sulfonamide resistance)
- Horizontal gene transfer: plasmids, transposons, integrons (disseminate resistance genes)
Common Resistance Patterns
- MRSA: mecA gene → altered PBPs (PBP2a), requires vancomycin/linezolid
- ESBL: CTX-M, SHV, TEM genes → 3rd-gen cephalosporin resistance, treated with carbapenems
- CRE (carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae): KPC, NDM, OXA carbapenemases, polymyxins/colistin options
- VRE (vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus): vanA/vanB operons, requires linezolid/daptomycin
- MDR Pseudomonas/Acinetobacter: multiple efflux systems, often requires combination therapy
- MDR Tuberculosis: rpoB mutations (isoniazid, rifampin), inhA overexpression (isoniazid)
Empiric vs Targeted Therapy
Empiric Therapy Principles
- Start immediately in sepsis/severe illness (don’t wait for culture)
- Broaden spectrum initially: cover Gram+, Gram-, and anaerobes based on source
- Culture first, then antibiotics (blood, CSF, urine, wound)
- Use local resistance patterns and patient risk factors
- Duration: shift to targeted therapy once organism/sensitivities known (typically 48-72h)
De-escalation Strategy
- Review cultures daily; narrow spectrum when susceptibilities return
- Reduce to single agent when possible (monotherapy vs combination therapy)
- Reduce duration to shortest effective course (most infections 7-14 days, not 21+)
- Consider oral step-down when clinically improved and tolerating PO
Targeted Therapy
- Culture-directed: use most narrow-spectrum, least toxic, most cost-effective option
- Source control and organism identification drive selection
- Single agent preferred (except bacteremia/endocarditis, sepsis requiring combination)
- Adequate CNS penetration if meningitis (vancomycin, 3rd-gen cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones)
Culture Interpretation and Laboratory Diagnosis
Specimen Collection
- Timing: cultures before antibiotics in all sepsis/serious infection
- Volume: blood (10mL per bottle, 2-3 sets), CSF (10mL minimum), urine (midstream, >10⁵ CFU/mL significant)
- Contamination prevention: skin antisepsis (chlorhexidine > povidone-iodine), sterile containers
- Transport: no delay, keep cold for respiratory specimens
Culture Interpretation
- Single organism from sterile site (blood, CSF, synovial fluid) = pathogenic
- Coagulase-negative Staph, diphtheroids from blood = likely contaminant (unless immunocompromised, prosthetic valve)
- Multiple organisms from single culture = likely contamination
- Culture results + clinical context + gram stain inform treatment
Gram Stain Morphology
- Gram+ cocci in clusters: Staphylococcus
- Gram+ cocci in chains: Streptococcus
- Gram+ rods: Bacillus, Clostridium, Listeria (may appear coccobacillary)
- Gram- rods (enteric): Enterobacteriaceae, E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus, Serratia
- Gram- rods (non-fermenting): Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii
- Gram- cocci: Neisseria (kidney bean-shaped, intracellular in PMNs)
- Curved Gram- rod: Vibrio, Campylobacter
- Branching filaments: Nocardia, Actinomyces
Diagnostic Modalities
- Blood cultures: gold standard for bacteremia, may take 48-72h, need 2-3 sets
- Gram stain: rapid (30 min), guides empiric therapy
- PCR: rapid, organism/resistance gene identification, improved molecular diagnostics
- Antigen detection: strep throat (rapid), urinary antigens (Streptococcus, Legionella), serology
- Viral cultures/NAATs: respiratory panels (multiplex RT-PCR for influenza, RSV, SARS-CoV-2, rhinovirus, parainfluenza, MPV, adenovirus, enterovirus)
- Susceptibility testing: disk diffusion (Kirby-Bauer), E-test, automated systems (VITEK, Phoenix), guide targeted therapy
2. ANTIBIOTIC GUIDE
PENICILLINS
Spectrum: Gram+, some Gram-, respiratory anaerobes; narrow spectrum
Mechanism: Beta-lactam cell wall inhibitor (bactericidal)
Key Drugs and Dosing
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Penicillin V | 250-500mg PO QID | 12.5-25 mg/kg QID (max 250mg/dose) | Strep throat, rheumatic fever prophylaxis |
| Penicillin G | 2-4MU IV Q4-6H | 25,000-40,000 units/kg Q4-6H | Meningitis, syphilis, severe infections |
| Amoxicillin | 500-1000mg PO TID | 25-45 mg/kg/day divided TID | Otitis media, strep throat, community UTI |
| Ampicillin | 500mg-1g IV/IM Q4-6H | 25-50 mg/kg Q4-6H | Listeria meningitis, ampicillin-susceptible Enterobacteriaceae |
| Amoxicillin-clavulanate | 875/125mg PO BID | 22.5/3.125 mg/kg BID | Skin infections, otitis media with Staph, H. influenzae |
Indications: Streptococcal infections, penicillin-susceptible pneumococcus, syphilis, rheumatic fever prophylaxis, endocarditis (streptococci)
Side Effects: Rash (5-8%, nonallergic in many), anaphylaxis (0.1% true penicillin allergy), C. difficile, seizures (high-dose penicillin G CNS), drug fever
Notes: Cross-reactivity with cephalosporins ~2% in non-anaphylactic allergy; avoid if immediate hypersensitivity reaction
CEPHALOSPORINS
Spectrum: Gram+ and Gram- coverage; spectrum increases by generation
Mechanism: Beta-lactam (cell wall) with greater stability against many beta-lactamases
1st Generation (primarily Gram+, some Gram-)
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cephalexin | 500mg-1g PO QID | 25-50 mg/kg/day QID | Skin/soft tissue, UTI prophylaxis, susceptible strep/Staph |
| Cefazolin | 1-2g IV Q6-8H | 25-100 mg/kg/day Q6-8H | Surgical prophylaxis, skin/soft tissue, susceptible Gram+ infections |
2nd Generation (Gram+ + increased Gram-, some anaerobic)
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cefuroxime | 750mg-1.5g IV Q8H | 50-100 mg/kg/day Q8H | Meningitis (better CNS penetration than 3rd gen cephs), Lyme disease, serious respiratory infections |
| Cefoxitin | 1-2g IV Q4-6H | 80-160 mg/kg/day Q4-6H | Anaerobic coverage (abdominal, gynecologic), intra-abdominal surgery |
| Cefotetan | 1-2g IV Q12H | 40-80 mg/kg/day Q12H | Surgical prophylaxis, anaerobic infections |
3rd Generation (excellent Gram-, variable Gram+, CNS penetration)
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ceftriaxone | 1-2g IV/IM Q12H | 50-100 mg/kg/day Q12H (max 4g/day) | Meningitis, Gram- infections, gonorrhea, empiric sepsis, Lyme disease |
| Cefotaxime | 1-2g IV Q4-6H | 100-200 mg/kg/day Q4-8H | Meningitis (similar to ceftriaxone), sepsis, CNS infections |
| Ceftazidime | 1-2g IV Q8H | 30-50 mg/kg Q8H | Pseudomonas aeruginosa, CRE (less effective, use with caution), febrile neutropenia |
4th Generation (Gram+ + excellent Gram- including Pseudomonas, anaerobes)
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cefepime | 1-2g IV Q8-12H | 50 mg/kg Q8-12H | Pseudomonas, febrile neutropenia, serious aerobic Gram- infections, alternatives to carbapenems |
Indications by Class:
- 1st gen: community UTI, skin/soft tissue, surgical prophylaxis
- 2nd gen: serious respiratory infections, meningitis (cefuroxime), anaerobic mixed infections
- 3rd gen: empiric sepsis, Gram- meningitis, serious Gram- infections
- 4th gen: Pseudomonas, resistant Gram- bacteria, febrile neutropenia
Side Effects: Rash (non-allergic, 1-3%), anaphylaxis (rare, 0.001-0.1%), C. difficile, hypoprothrombinemia (3rd/4th gen), false positive Coombs test
Notes: 1-2% cross-reactivity with penicillins in non-severe allergy; higher risk in 1st gen cephalosporins; avoid in immediate hypersensitivity
FLUOROQUINOLONES
Spectrum: Broad Gram+/Gram-, atypical organisms (Legionella, Mycoplasma), anaerobic coverage variable
Mechanism: DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV inhibition → DNA damage and cell death (bactericidal)
Key Drugs and Dosing
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ciprofloxacin | 500-750mg PO BID; 400mg IV Q12H | 20-30 mg/kg/day BID (age <18 limited use) | Gram-, UTI, bacterial gastroenteritis, CF respiratory, Pseudomonas UTI |
| Levofloxacin | 500-750mg PO/IV QD | 10-20 mg/kg/day QD | Community pneumonia, UTI, prostatitis, atypical organisms |
| Moxifloxacin | 400mg PO/IV QD | Not routinely used in children | CAP with atypical coverage, anaerobic coverage superior to other FQs |
| Ofloxacin | 300-400mg PO/IV BID | 5-10 mg/kg BID | UTI, prostatitis, respiratory infections |
Indications: Gram- UTI, travelers’ diarrhea, COPD exacerbations, community-acquired pneumonia (levofloxacin, moxifloxacin), Pseudomonas aeruginosa UTI, atypical respiratory infections, cost-effective oral therapy for susceptible Gram- infections
Side Effects: Tendinitis/tendon rupture (especially Achilles, risk with age >60, steroids, renal failure), QT prolongation (especially moxifloxacin), CNS effects (dizziness, insomnia, seizures in epilepsy), photosensitivity, C. difficile, dysglycemia
Resistance: gyrA/topoisomerase mutations common in E. coli (40-50% resistance in some regions), Pseudomonas efflux pumps, emerging resistance in Gram-negative bacteria
Notes: Avoid in pregnancy/nursing; avoid in children except serious infections (cartilage effects not clinically significant in humans); QT risk with baseline prolongation
MACROLIDES
Spectrum: Gram+, atypical (Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella), some anaerobes; poor Gram-
Mechanism: 50S ribosomal subunit inhibition (bacteriostatic)
Key Drugs and Dosing
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Erythromycin | 500mg-1g PO QID; 500mg IV Q6H | 12.5 mg/kg QID | Pertussis, atypical CAP, enterococcal endocarditis prophylaxis |
| Azithromycin | 500mg day 1, then 250mg QD (5 days); 500mg IV QD | 10 mg/kg day 1, 5 mg/kg QD (3-5 days) | Atypical pneumonia, STIs (Chlamydia), Mycobacterium avium prophylaxis, CAP |
| Clarithromycin | 500mg PO BID; 500mg IV Q12H | 7.5 mg/kg BID | MAC prophylaxis, Helicobacter pylori, atypical pneumonia, Mycobacterium avium |
Indications: Atypical CAP (Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella), Chlamydia trachomatis, MAC prophylaxis in AIDS, Helicobacter pylori eradication, pertussis, G. trachomatis urethritis
Side Effects: GI upset (nausea, diarrhea), QT prolongation (especially erythromycin IV, azithromycin with cardiac disease), hepatotoxicity (rare), drug interactions (CYP3A4 inhibition), C. difficile
Resistance: Ribosomal methylation (erm genes), efflux pumps; increasing resistance in Streptococcus and Staphylococcus
Notes: Erythromycin has most QT risk; azithromycin Z-pack (5-day therapy) convenient for outpatient; interactions with statins, warfarin, digoxin
TETRACYCLINES
Spectrum: Broad, including atypical organisms (Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Rickettsiae), anaerobes, MRSA, Spirochetes
Mechanism: 30S ribosomal subunit inhibition (bacteriostatic)
Key Drugs and Dosing
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Doxycycline | 100mg PO/IV BID | >8 years: 2.2 mg/kg BID (max 100mg/dose) | Lyme disease, atypical pneumonia, Chlamydia, anaerobes, rickettsial diseases, MRSA, acne |
| Tetracycline | 500mg PO QID | >8 years: 25-50 mg/kg/day QID | Similar spectrum; more GI upset than doxycycline |
| Minocycline | 100mg PO BID | >8 years: 4 mg/kg initially, then 2 mg/kg BID | Similar indications; better CNS penetration; photosensitivity risk |
Indications: Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, atypical pneumonia, Chlamydia trachomatis/psittaci, anaerobes, MRSA skin infection, spirochetes (syphilis), Q fever, Brucella
Side Effects: GI upset, photosensitivity (especially doxycycline), esophageal ulceration (take with water, upright position), teeth discoloration and enamel dysplasia (<8 years, pregnancy), hepatotoxicity (expired tetracycline), pseudotumor cerebri, C. difficile
Notes: Avoid in pregnancy; avoid in children <8 years except critical circumstances; doxycycline is most commonly used (better absorption, less frequent dosing, fewer GI effects); take on empty stomach or with non-dairy food
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Spectrum: Gram- rods, Gram+ and Gram- cocci (synergistic with beta-lactams), some anaerobes; poor Gram+ monotherapy
Mechanism: 30S ribosomal subunit inhibition; bactericidal (oxygen-dependent uptake)
Key Drugs and Dosing
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gentamicin | 5-7 mg/kg IV QD (or 1.5-2 mg/kg IV Q8H); levels monitored | 2.5 mg/kg Q8H (or 7.5 mg/kg QD), TDM | Gram- sepsis (with beta-lactam), Gram+ endocarditis (with PCN/ceph), synergy |
| Tobramycin | 5-7 mg/kg IV QD; levels monitored | 2.5 mg/kg Q8H | Similar to gentamicin; preferred in cystic fibrosis for Pseudomonas |
| Amikacin | 15-20 mg/kg IV QD (or 5-7.5 mg/kg Q8H); levels monitored | 7.5 mg/kg Q8H (or 15-20 mg/kg QD) | Resistant Gram-, Nocardia; less ototoxicity than gentamicin |
Indications: Gram- sepsis (always with beta-lactam), endocarditis (synergy with penicillin/vancomycin for streptococci/Staphylococcus), febrile neutropenia, seriously ill patients with Gram- infections, Pseudomonas cystic fibrosis
Side Effects: Nephrotoxicity (dose, duration, volume depletion, concurrent nephrotoxic agents), ototoxicity (permanent, dose and duration, higher with loop diuretics), vestibular dysfunction, neuromuscular blockade (rare), anaphylaxis (rare)
Pharmacokinetics: Require therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM); peak levels: gentamicin/tobramycin 5-10 µg/mL, amikacin 15-30 µg/mL; trough <1 µg/mL (gentamicin/tobramycin) or <4-5 µg/mL (amikacin)
Notes: Require renal dose adjustment; always use with beta-lactam for coverage; once-daily dosing preferred (less nephrotoxicity); synergy with cell wall inhibitors
CARBAPENEMS
Spectrum: Broadest beta-lactam spectrum; Gram+/Gram-/anaerobes including CRE-producing ESBL
Mechanism: Beta-lactam (cell wall) with high stability against most beta-lactamases
Key Drugs and Dosing
| Drug | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meropenem | 500mg-1g IV Q8H | 20-40 mg/kg Q8H | Meningitis, serious polymicrobial infections, CRE with resistance, febrile neutropenia |
| Imipenem-cilastatin | 500mg IV Q6H (cilastatin prevents renal breakdown) | 15-25 mg/kg Q6H | Similar spectrum; more seizure risk than meropenem; less meningitis use |
| Ertapenem | 1g IV/IM QD | 15 mg/kg BID (if >3 months) | Community infections with ESBL, intra-abdominal/gynecologic infections, complicated skin infections |
Indications: Suspected ESBL Enterobacteriaceae, serious polymicrobial infections, meningitis with resistant Gram+, CRE (limited carbapenem-susceptible strains), febrile neutropenia when beta-lactam allergy unlikely, serious hospital-acquired infections
Side Effects: Rash, nausea, diarrhea, seizures (especially imipenem, high doses, renal failure), C. difficile, hypersensitivity (cross-reactivity with penicillin ~1-3%), phlebitis (IV site)
Resistance: Carbapenemases (KPC, NDM, OXA, VIM) confer broad resistance; test for carbapenem susceptibility
Notes: Reserve for serious infections or documented resistance; avoid overuse; imipenem requires cilastatin co-dosing; seizure risk increases with elevated drug levels
VANCOMYCIN and LINEZOLID
Spectrum: Gram+ (including MRSA, resistant streptococci), some Gram- (limited), anaerobes (vancomycin)
Mechanism: Vancomycin inhibits D-Ala-D-Ala transpeptidase (different site from beta-lactams); Linezolid inhibits 50S ribosome (bacteriostatic)
VANCOMYCIN
| Indication | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose |
|---|---|---|
| Endocarditis | 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H (target trough 15-20 µg/mL) | 10-15 mg/kg Q6-8H |
| Meningitis | 15-20 mg/kg IV Q4-6H (higher dosing, target trough 15-20 µg/mL) | 10-20 mg/kg Q6H |
| MRSA infection | 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H (target trough 10-15 µg/mL) | 10-15 mg/kg Q6-8H |
| C. difficile | 125mg PO QID x 10 days | 5-10 mg/kg PO QID |
Indications: MRSA, ampicillin-resistant Listeria (with gentamicin), penicillin-resistant pneumococcus, beta-lactam allergy with Gram+ infection, endocarditis (MRSA, resistant streptococci), C. difficile (oral form)
Side Effects: Nephrotoxicity (require renal dosing, monitor creatinine), ototoxicity (especially with aminoglycosides, high trough levels), “red man syndrome” (infusion reaction, flushing, chills; prevent with premedication—diphenhydramine, acetaminophen, slow infusion), phlebitis, thrombophlebitis
Pharmacokinetics: TDM essential; trough levels 10-20 µg/mL; renal clearance dependent; monitor renal function, Cr
LINEZOLID
| Indication | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose |
|---|---|---|
| MRSA, VRE | 600mg PO/IV BID | 10 mg/kg BID |
| Pneumonia/complicated skin | 600mg PO/IV BID | 10 mg/kg BID |
Indications: MRSA with poor venous access (oral availability), VRE, resistant Gram+ when vancomycin intolerant, excellent bone penetration (osteomyelitis), CNS penetration
Side Effects: Bone marrow suppression (thrombocytopenia, neutropenia; monitor CBC), serotonin syndrome (with other serotonergics), peripheral/optic neuropathy (prolonged use >2 weeks), lactic acidosis (rare), C. difficile
Notes: Expensive; monitor CBC; avoid with SSRIs/SNRIs if possible; reversible myelosuppression; good for prosthetic infections and CNS penetration
METRONIDAZOLE
Spectrum: Anaerobes (Bacteroides, Clostridium, Prevotella), Gram+ anaerobes, protozoa (Giardia, Entamoeba, Trichomonas)
Mechanism: Nitroimidazole forms DNA adducts in anaerobic organisms (bactericidal)
Dosing
| Indication | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose |
|---|---|---|
| Anaerobic infection | 500mg IV/PO Q6-8H | 7.5 mg/kg Q6-8H |
| Clostridium difficile | 500mg PO QID x 10 days (or vancomycin preferred) | 7.5 mg/kg QID |
| Giardia | 250mg PO TID x 5-7 days | 5 mg/kg TID |
| Trichomonas | 2g PO single dose (or 250mg TID x 7 days) | 15-25 mg/kg single dose |
Indications: Anaerobic infections (intra-abdominal, gynecologic, CNS), mixed aerobic-anaerobic infections, C. difficile (second-line to vancomycin), Giardia, Trichomonas, Entamoeba histolytica
Side Effects: Metallic taste, nausea, disulfiram-like reaction with alcohol, peripheral neuropathy (prolonged use), CNS effects (seizures, encephalopathy), dark urine, photosensitivity, pseudomembranous colitis (paradoxical)
Notes: Penetrates abscess well; good CNS penetration; avoid alcohol; peripheral neuropathy risk with prolonged therapy (>2 weeks)
TRIMETHOPRIM-SULFAMETHOXAZOLE (TMP-SMX)
Spectrum: Gram+/Gram-, including MRSA, Nocardia, Pneumocystis jirovecii, Toxoplasma, Cyclospora, Isospora
Mechanism: Sequential folate pathway inhibition (DHFR and DHPS inhibition); bactericidal
Dosing
| Indication | Adult Dose | Pediatric Dose |
|---|---|---|
| UTI | 1 DS tablet PO BID x 3 days (acute) | 4-6 mg/kg (TMP component) BID |
| Community infection | 1-2 DS tablets PO BID | 6-12 mg/kg (TMP component) |
| PCP prophylaxis | 1 DS tablet QD or TID per week | 150 mg/m² (TMP component) QD |
| PCP treatment | 15-20 mg/kg (TMP) IV Q6H | 15-20 mg/kg Q6H |
| Toxoplasma prophylaxis | 1 DS tablet QD | 150 mg/m² QD |
Indications: UTI (first-line in susceptible regions), MRSA skin infection, Nocardia, Toxoplasma prophylaxis/treatment in AIDS, Pneumocystis prophylaxis and treatment, Listeria (if penicillin allergic), traveler’s diarrhea
Side Effects: Rash (5-8%, nonallergic), hyperkalemia (especially with renal disease, ACE inhibitors), acute kidney injury (volume depletion), hepatotoxicity, bone marrow suppression (rare), SJS/TEN (severe, <0.5%), photosensitivity, C. difficile
Resistance: DHFR mutations (TMP resistance), DHPS mutations (sulfonamide resistance); emerging in E. coli (20-40% in many regions)
Notes: DS = double-strength (160/800 mg); SS = single-strength (80/400 mg); monitor renal function and K+; caution with sulfa allergy (cross-reactivity 3%)
3. INFECTIONS BY SYSTEM
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS
Community-Acquired Pneumonia (CAP)
Pathogens by severity:
- Outpatient: S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, respiratory viruses
- Hospitalized: add Gram- (E. coli, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas in severe/ICU)
- Aspiration risk: anaerobes (Peptostreptococcus, Prevotella, Fusobacterium)
Empiric therapy:
- Outpatient (mild-moderate): Amoxicillin 1g TID OR Doxycycline 100mg BID OR Azithromycin 500mg day 1, 250mg QD (reassess in 48-72h)
- Hospitalized: Ceftriaxone 1g IV Q12H + Azithromycin 500mg IV QD OR Levofloxacin 750mg IV QD (monotherapy if stable)
- ICU/severe: Ceftriaxone or Cefotaxime 1-2g IV Q12H + Vancomycin 15mg/kg IV Q8-12H + Levofloxacin 750mg IV QD (Pseudomonas coverage)
- Pediatric (outpatient): Amoxicillin 25-45 mg/kg/day TID OR Azithromycin 10 mg/kg day 1, 5 mg/kg QD
Duration: 5-7 days (if clinical improvement), can be longer in severe disease
Influenza
- Pathogens: Influenza A/B (H1N1, H3N2, Victoria, Yamagata lineages)
- Treatment: Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) 75mg PO BID x 5 days if started within 48h (reduces duration 1 day); pediatric oseltamivir by weight
- Prophylaxis: 75mg PO QD x 10 days post-exposure (contacts, residents in congregate living)
- Note: Antivirals reduce hospitalization/mortality in severe disease; circulating resistance rare
Tuberculosis (TB)
Diagnosis: AFB sputum smear (rapid but insensitive), mycobacterial culture (gold standard, 2-8 weeks), TB IGRA or TST, CXR (apical infiltrate, cavitation)
Initial Treatment (Drug-Sensitive TB):
- Intensive phase (2 months): Isoniazid 5 mg/kg (max 300mg) + Rifampin 10 mg/kg (max 600mg) + Pyrazinamide 25 mg/kg (max 2g) + Ethambutol 15-25 mg/kg QD
- Continuation phase (4 months): Isoniazid + Rifampin QD or twice weekly
- Pediatric: Isoniazid 10-15 mg/kg QD, Rifampin 15-20 mg/kg QD, Pyrazinamide 30-40 mg/kg QD, Ethambutol 15-25 mg/kg QD
MDR-TB (resistant to INH, RIF):
- Requires 2nd-line agents (fluoroquinolone + injectable [amikacin/streptomycin/capreomycin] + bedaquiline or linezolid)
- Duration: 20+ months, specialized TB centers, directly-observed therapy (DOT)
- Diagnosis: drug susceptibility testing (DST) required
Latent TB:
- Isoniazid 300mg QD x 9 months OR Rifampin 600mg QD x 4 months
- Pediatric: Isoniazid 10-15 mg/kg QD x 9 months
Special Considerations: Vitamin B6 supplementation (isoniazid neuropathy prevention), monitor LFTs (TB drugs hepatotoxic), DOT compliance critical
Pertussis
- Agent: Bordetella pertussis
- Diagnosis: PCR respiratory secretions (early), serology (late)
- Treatment: Azithromycin 500mg day 1, then 250mg QD x 4 days (shortens respiratory shedding if given early)
- Pediatric: 10 mg/kg day 1, 5 mg/kg QD (3-5 days)
- Prophylaxis: Azithromycin for contacts
- Note: Antibiotic does not shorten paroxysmal cough phase
URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS (UTI)
Acute Uncomplicated Cystitis (Acute Urethritis)
Pathogens: E. coli (85-90%), S. saprophyticus (5-10%), Klebsiella, Proteus, Enterococcus
Empiric therapy:
- Nitrofurantoin 100mg PO BID x 5-7 days (preferred in many regions) OR
- TMP-SMX 1 DS tablet BID x 3 days OR
- Cephalexin 500mg PO QID x 5-7 days OR
- Levofloxacin 250-500mg PO QD x 3 days
Pediatric (>3 months): Amoxicillin-clavulanate 22.5/3.125 mg/kg BID or Cephalexin 25-50 mg/kg/day QID x 5-7 days
Special Considerations: avoid FQ if possible; avoid nitrofurantoin if renal impairment (CrCl <30); nitrofurantoin concentrates in urine; symptoms may improve before culture results
Pyelonephritis (Acute Uncomplicated)
Pathogens: Same as cystitis
Empiric therapy:
- Outpatient (able to tolerate PO): Levofloxacin 750mg PO QD OR Ceftriaxone 1g IM/IV QD (initial dose, then PO step-down) x 7 days
- Hospitalized: Ceftriaxone 1g IV Q12H OR Cefotaxime 1-2g IV Q8H OR Levofloxacin 750mg IV QD
- Pediatric: Ceftriaxone 50-100 mg/kg/day Q12H IV/IM OR Amoxicillin-clavulanate 22.5/3.125 mg/kg Q8H (oral, if mild)
Imaging: Renal ultrasound if obstructive symptoms, concern for abscess, immunocompromised, or recurrent pyelonephritis
Duration: 7 days
Catheter-Associated UTI (CAUTI)
Pathogens: Polymicrobial (Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas, enterococci, Candida), biofilm formation
Treatment: Remove catheter if possible; treat only if symptomatic (asymptomatic bacteriuria does NOT require treatment in non-pregnant)
- Empiric: Ceftriaxone 1g IV Q12H (gram- + some Gram+) or Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375-4.5g IV Q6H (broader)
- Duration: 5-7 days after catheter removal
SKIN AND SOFT TISSUE INFECTIONS
Cellulitis (Non-Purulent)
Pathogens: Group A Streptococcus (GAS), S. aureus (including MRSA in some regions)
Empiric therapy:
- Non-MRSA endemic area: Cephalexin 500mg-1g PO QID OR Amoxicillin-clavulanate 875/125mg BID OR Ceftriaxone 1g IV Q12H (if systemic toxicity)
- MRSA-endemic or risk factors: Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 1-2 DS tablets BID (oral) OR Doxycycline 100mg BID (oral) OR Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H (IV)
- Pediatric (non-MRSA): Amoxicillin-clavulanate 22.5/3.125 mg/kg BID OR Cephalexin 25-50 mg/kg/day QID
- Pediatric (MRSA): Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 4-6 mg/kg (TMP) BID
Duration: 5-7 days (clinical improvement guides longer therapy)
Adjunctive: Elevation, NSAIDs for inflammation, monitor for abscess/drainage (might indicate need for incision/drainage)
Skin Abscess (Purulent)
Pathogens: S. aureus (including MRSA), streptococci
Treatment: Incision, drainage, and packing (critical); antibiotic therapy is adjunctive
- Small abscess (<5cm), immunocompetent, no systemic toxicity: I&D alone may suffice; if antibiotics given: TMP-SMX or doxycycline PO x 5-7 days
- Larger or systemic toxicity: I&D + Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H OR Cephalexin 500mg QID (non-MRSA) x 5-10 days
Necrotizing Fasciitis
Pathogens: GAS (streptococci alone), polymicrobial (S. aureus, anaerobes, Enterobacteriaceae), Vibrio (seawater exposure), Clostridium (gas gangrene)
Clinical: Pain out of proportion to exam, systemic toxicity, rapid progression, crepitus (gas in tissues)
Emergency Management:
- Immediate surgical debridement (life-saving)
- Empiric IV antibiotics (do not delay for imaging):
- Clindamycin 600mg IV Q6-8H (inhibits toxin production) + Penicillin G 2-4MU IV Q4-6H (GAS coverage) + Gentamicin 5-7 mg/kg IV QD (Gram- coverage)
- Alternative: Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H + Piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5g IV Q6H
- Pediatric: Clindamycin 13-16 mg/kg IV Q6-8H + Penicillin G 40,000 units/kg Q4-6H + Gentamicin 7.5 mg/kg Q8H
Duration: Depends on extent of debridement and clinical response; multiple debridements common; antibiotics 7-10+ days
GASTROINTESTINAL INFECTIONS
Clostridioides difficile Infection (CDI)
Diagnosis: GDH + toxin (2-step) or NAAT for tcdB gene on stool; colonoscopy if fulminant
Non-Severe (Cr <1.5x baseline, WBC <15):
- Vancomycin 125mg PO QID x 10 days (preferred) OR Fidaxomicin 200mg PO BID x 10 days (if recurrent)
- Metronidazole 500mg PO QID is no longer recommended (outdated due to reduced efficacy)
- Pediatric: Vancomycin 5-10 mg/kg PO QID x 10 days
Severe (Cr >1.5x baseline, WBC >15):
- Vancomycin 125mg PO QID x 10 days OR Fidaxomicin 200mg PO BID x 10 days
Fulminant (ICU, sepsis, megacolon, renal failure):
- Vancomycin 125-500mg PO QID + Metronidazole 500mg IV Q8H (metronidazole provides systemic levels)
- Surgical intervention (colectomy) if perforation, toxic megacolon
Recurrent CDI: Fidaxomicin preferred; consider fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) if >2 recurrences
Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis (SBP)
Pathogens: E. coli, Klebsiella, S. pneumoniae (low opsonic activity in cirrhotic ascites)
Diagnosis: >250 neutrophils/mm³ in ascitic fluid (or >500 PMN/mm³), positive culture (only 50% positive)
Treatment:
- Ceftriaxone 1-2g IV Q12H x 7 days (covers Enterobacteriaceae, streptococci)
- Albumin supplementation (1.5 g/kg on day 1, 1 g/kg on day 3) improves outcomes
- Pediatric: Ceftriaxone 50-100 mg/kg/day Q12H
Prophylaxis (in cirrhosis with ascites):
- Norfloxacin 400mg PO QD OR Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 1 DS tablet QD
- Duration: While ascites present and MELD >11 or total protein <1.5 g/dL
Acute Bacterial Peritonitis (Secondary)
Pathogens: Gram+ and Gram- (E. coli, Klebsiella, anaerobes), mixed infection
Treatment (after source control—drainage, repair of perforation):
- Ceftriaxone 1-2g IV Q12H + Metronidazole 500mg IV Q6-8H OR
- Piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5g IV Q6H (monotherapy)
- Pediatric: Ceftriaxone 50-100 mg/kg/day Q12H + Metronidazole 7.5 mg/kg Q6-8H
Duration: 3-7 days after source control completed
Viral Gastroenteritis
Pathogens: Rotavirus, Norovirus (outbreak/winter), Enteroviruses, Astrovirus, Sapovirus
Treatment: Supportive (oral/IV rehydration), no antimicrobials
- Antiemetics: Ondansetron 0.1-0.15 mg/kg IV/PO Q4-8H (pediatric)
- Antidiarrheals: Loperamide contraindicated in bloody diarrhea
HEPATITIS INFECTIONS
Hepatitis A
Diagnosis: Anti-HAV IgM, can test HAV RNA by PCR
Treatment: Supportive (no antiviral), fatigue/nausea management, avoid hepatotoxic substances
Prevention: HAV vaccine (2 doses, 6-18 months apart); post-exposure prophylaxis (IG or HAV vaccine if unvaccinated and exposure <14 days)
Prognosis: Self-limited; fulminant hepatic failure (<1% but mortality 0-7% if ICU)
Hepatitis B
Diagnosis: HBsAg (surface antigen), Anti-HBc (core antibody), HBe Ag/Anti-HBe (markers of replication), HBV DNA (viral load)
Acute HBV Treatment: Supportive; IFN-alpha or nucleoside analogs (tenofovir, entecavir) only if severe hepatitis or fulminant disease
Chronic HBV Treatment (if HBsAg+ >6 months):
- Tenofovir 300mg PO QD OR Entecavir 0.5mg QD (nucleos(t)ide analogs)
- Interferon alpha 5MU three times weekly or pegIFN alpha 180 µg weekly x 48 weeks (if HBe Ag+ or high viral load)
- Duration: Often lifelong; assess HBsAg loss, anti-HBs seroconversion
Pediatric (HBV treatment): Tenofovir dosing by weight, ETV 0.5 mg QD if weight >30kg
Prophylaxis: HBV vaccine series (0, 1, 6 months); post-exposure prophylaxis (HBIG + HBV vaccine if unvaccinated)
Hepatitis C
Diagnosis: Anti-HCV antibody (EIA), HCV RNA by RT-PCR, HCV genotype (1-6)
Treatment (Direct-Acting Antivirals, DAAs):
- Genotype 1-6: Sofosbuvir/ledipasvir ± ribavirin x 8-12 weeks (for most; longer for cirrhosis)
- Alternative regimens: Sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir, glecaprevir/pibrentasvir
- Cure rates >95% with modern DAAs
- Pediatric: Sofosbuvir-containing regimens dosed by weight; genotype-guided
Monitoring: SVR (sustained virologic response) 12 weeks post-treatment; cirrhosis screening if advanced fibrosis
CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM INFECTIONS
Bacterial Meningitis
Pathogens (adult): N. meningitidis, S. pneumoniae, Gram- rods (Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas), Listeria (>50 or immunocompromised)
Pathogens (pediatric, >3 months): N. meningitidis, S. pneumoniae, Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B, neonates <3 months), H. influenzae (non-Hib vaccine-unvaccinated)
CSF Profile: PMN predominance, elevated protein (>100 mg/dL), low glucose (<50% serum) or <30 mg/dL, positive Gram stain/culture (50-90% sensitivity)
Empiric Therapy (before culture; do not delay):
- Adult, community-acquired: Ceftriaxone 2g IV Q12H + Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H + Ampicillin 2g IV Q4H (Listeria coverage if >50yo, immunocompromised, or alcoholic)
- Adult, hospital-acquired/healthcare-associated: Ceftazidime 2g IV Q8H + Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H (Pseudomonas coverage)
- Pediatric (3 months-18 years): Ceftriaxone or Cefotaxime 2g IV Q4-6H + Vancomycin 15 mg/kg IV Q6H
- Neonatal (<3 months): Ampicillin 50 mg/kg IV Q4-6H + Gentamicin 7.5 mg/kg IV Q8H + (controversial: add cefotaxime 50 mg/kg Q6H)
Adjunctive Dexamethasone: 10mg IV Q6H x 4 days (if given before/with first antibiotic dose); reduces mortality/morbidity in pneumococcal meningitis
Duration:
- N. meningitidis: 7 days
- S. pneumoniae: 10-14 days
- Gram-negative (non-Pseudomonas): 21 days
- Pseudomonas: 14-21 days
- Listeria: 14-21 days
Complications: Subdural empyema, ventriculitis, hydrocephalus, seizures; repeat LP if no CSF sterilization by 24-48h
Viral Meningitis
Pathogens: Enteroviruses (Coxsackievirus, Echovirus), Parechoviruses, Mumps (unvaccinated), HSV-2 (genital), VZV, EBV
Diagnosis: CSF enterovirus PCR (high sensitivity), lymphocytic pleocytosis, normal glucose
Treatment: Supportive (NSAIDs for headache, IV hydration); antivirals only for HSV/VZV meningitis
- HSV/VZV meningitis: Acyclovir 10-15 mg/kg IV Q8H x 10-14 days
- Mumps: Supportive only
BONE AND JOINT INFECTIONS
Acute Osteomyelitis
Pathogens (hematogenous, child): S. aureus, S. pyogenes, Kingella kingae
Pathogens (hematogenous, adult): S. aureus, aerobic Gram-negative rods
Pathogens (post-operative, prosthetic): Coagulase-negative Staph (biofilm), S. aureus (acute infection), Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas, Propionibacterium acnes
Diagnosis: Blood cultures (often positive in acute), MRI (edema, abscess), radiographs (late findings), bone biopsy if culture-negative and diagnosis uncertain
Empiric Therapy:
- Acute hematogenous: Ceftriaxone 2g IV Q12H OR Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H (covers Staph) + Gentamicin 5-7 mg/kg IV QD
- Pediatric: Ceftriaxone 50-100 mg/kg/day Q12H OR Cefotaxime 100-200 mg/kg/day Q4-8H
- Post-operative/prosthetic: Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H + Gentamicin 5-7 mg/kg IV QD
Duration: Minimum 4-6 weeks IV, then consider oral fluoroquinolone or other agent (total 6-8 weeks or longer for prosthetic)
Adjunctive: Surgical debridement if purulent material/necrotic bone, imaging-guided drainage
Septic Arthritis
Pathogens: S. aureus, N. gonorrhoeae (sexually active, migratory polyarthritis), S. pyogenes, Gram-negative rods, Haemophilus spp
Diagnosis: Joint aspiration (>50,000 WBC, positive culture gold standard), blood cultures, Gram stain
Empiric Therapy:
- Gonococcal (sexually active, migratory): Ceftriaxone 1g IV Q12H or Cefotaxime 1-2g IV Q8H
- Non-gonococcal (community): Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H OR Ceftriaxone 1-2g IV Q12H
- Pediatric: Ceftriaxone or Cefotaxime 50-100 mg/kg/day Q12H or Q8H
Duration: 2-3 weeks IV (longer for prosthetic joints, 4-6 weeks)
Adjunctive: Joint drainage/arthroscopy; daily aspiration until sterile fluid; aggressive PT
CARDIOVASCULAR INFECTIONS
Infective Endocarditis (IE)
Pathogens (subacute, native valve): Viridans streptococci (oral flora), Streptococcus gallolyticus (colon cancer), HACEK organisms (fastidious Gram-negative)
Pathogens (acute, native valve): S. aureus, Streptococcus agalactiae, Enterococcus, Pseudomonas (IVDU)
Pathogens (prosthetic valve, early <1 year): S. epidermidis, S. aureus, Enterococcus, Gram-negative, fungi
Diagnosis: Duke criteria (clinical, echocardiography, serology), blood cultures (2-3 sets before antibiotics), TEE (more sensitive than TTE)
Empiric Therapy (before culture/sensitivities):
- Native valve, community-acquired: Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H + Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV Q8H + Ceftriaxone 2g IV Q12H
- IVDU (likely S. aureus): Nafcillin 2g IV Q4H + Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV Q8H (preferred over vancomycin if non-MRSA)
- Prosthetic valve: Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H + Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV Q8H + Rifampin 600mg IV/PO Q8H
Targeted Therapy (streptococcal IE, penicillin-susceptible):
- Penicillin G 2-4MU IV Q4H + Gentamicin 3 mg/kg IV Q8H x 2 weeks (streptococci only) OR
- Penicillin G 2-4MU IV Q4H x 4 weeks (monotherapy for streptococci)
Duration: 4-6 weeks (native valve), 6+ weeks (prosthetic valve)
Complications: Septic emboli, valvular regurgitation, heart block, complications requiring surgical valve replacement
SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS (STIs)
Chlamydia trachomatis (Genital)
Presentation: Urethritis (males), cervicitis (females), often asymptomatic
Treatment:
- Azithromycin 1g PO single dose OR Doxycycline 100mg PO BID x 7 days OR Levofloxacin 500mg PO QD x 3 days
- Pediatric (uncomplicated): Azithromycin 10 mg/kg PO single dose
- Pregnancy: Azithromycin 1g PO single dose (doxycycline contraindicated)
Complications: PID, epididymitis, urethral strictures, ophthalmia neonatorum (newborn)
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Presentation: Purulent urethritis (males), cervicitis, pharyngitis, proctitis, disseminated infection
Treatment (RESISTANT to fluoroquinolones):
- Ceftriaxone 500mg IM single dose (uncomplicated urogenital) OR Ceftriaxone 1g IM single dose
- Add azithromycin 1g PO single dose if Chlamydia not excluded
- Pediatric: Ceftriaxone 125mg IM single dose (if <45kg) or 250mg IM (if ≥45kg)
Complications: PID, tubo-ovarian abscess, bartholinitis, perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh-Curtis)
Syphilis
Diagnosis: RPR/VDRL (nontreponemal, quantitative), FTA-ABS or TP-PA (treponemal, confirmatory), dark-field microscopy (primary/secondary)
Treatment by Stage:
- Primary/secondary/early latent (<1 year): Penicillin G benzathine 2.4MU IM single dose (gold standard)
- Late latent (>1 year) or unknown duration: Penicillin G benzathine 2.4MU IM weekly x 3 weeks
- Neurosyphilis: Penicillin G 18-24MU/day IV QID x 10-14 days
- Pediatric: Penicillin G benzathine 50,000 units/kg IM (max 2.4MU)
- Penicillin-allergic (non-pregnant): Doxycycline 100mg PO BID x 28 days (early syphilis)
Jarisch-Herxheimer Reaction: Fever, rash, transient worsening of symptoms 6-24h after first antibiotic (especially secondary syphilis); pretreat with acetaminophen/NSAIDs
EYE AND EAR INFECTIONS
Acute Bacterial Conjunctivitis
Pathogens: S. aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes, H. influenzae, Moraxella, Neisseria gonorrhoeae (neonates)
Treatment:
- Non-gonococcal: Topical antibiotic drops (tobramycin, ciprofloxacin, moxifloxacin) 4-6x/day x 5-7 days
- Gonococcal conjunctivitis (neonatal ophthalmia): Ceftriaxone 50mg/kg IV single dose + topical erythromycin ointment
- Systemic involvement: IV antibiotics as for generalized infection
Acute Otitis Media (AOM)
Pathogens: S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae (nontypeable), M. catarrhalis, Group A Streptococcus
Treatment:
- Amoxicillin 25-45 mg/kg/day BID-TID (pediatric) OR 500-875mg TID (adult) x 5-7 days
- If penicillin-allergic or treatment failure: Amoxicillin-clavulanate 22.5/3.125 mg/kg BID OR Cefuroxime axetil 30 mg/kg/day BID
- Fluoroquinolone drops (ofloxacin) for otitis with tympanostomy tubes
Complications: Mastoiditis (coalescent; requires imaging, drainage), meningitis
4. SEPSIS MANAGEMENT
Definition and Criteria
Sepsis: Life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by host response to infection; qSOFA score ≥2 predicts poor outcome
- Altered mental status (GCS <15, or delirium)
- SBP ≤100 mmHg
- Respiratory rate ≥22 breaths/min
Septic Shock: Sepsis + hypotension requiring vasopressors to maintain MAP ≥65 mmHg, lactate >2 mmol/L
Surviving Sepsis Campaign Bundles (1-Hour)
- Measure lactate level (yes/no)
- Blood cultures before antibiotics
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics within 1 hour (3 hours if non-septic shock)
- IV crystalloid fluid bolus (30 mL/kg) for hypotension or lactate ≥4
- Vasopressor support if persistent hypotension during/after fluid resuscitation (target MAP ≥65)
Vasopressor Selection and Dosing
Norepinephrine (1st-line): 0.01-0.05 µg/kg/min, titrate to MAP ≥65 (alpha + beta effects)
Dopamine (if HR <60, cardiogenic shock risk): 5-20 µg/kg/min (at higher doses: alpha>beta, less tachycardia than epi)
Epinephrine (refractory shock, 2nd-line): 0.05-0.2 µg/kg/min (powerful alpha + beta, but arrhythmia risk)
Vasopressin: 0.04 units/min (fixed dose, often added to norepinephrine in refractory shock)
Phenylephrine: 0.5-1.4 µg/kg/min (pure alpha, no beta effects, reduces CO)
Antibiotic Empiric Therapy
Community-Acquired Sepsis:
- Ceftriaxone 1-2g IV Q12H + Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H (dual Gram+/Gram- coverage)
- Alternative: Piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5g IV Q6H (monotherapy covers Gram+/Gram-/anaerobes)
- Add metronidazole 500mg IV Q8H if anaerobic source (intra-abdominal, aspiration)
Hospital-Acquired/Healthcare-Associated:
- Cefepime 2g IV Q8H OR Piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5g IV Q6H (Pseudomonas coverage)
- Vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV Q8-12H if MRSA risk or unstable
Source Control: Imaging (CXR, abdominal imaging), identify source (UTI, pneumonia, intra-abdominal, wound), drainage if loculated
Adjunctive Therapies
Hydrocortisone: 50mg IV Q6H x 7 days if refractory septic shock requiring escalating vasopressor support
Activated Protein C: No longer recommended (removed from market due to lack of benefit)
Monitoring: Lactate clearance (>10% at 6 hours indicates response), repeat lactate if elevated, urine output target 0.5 mL/kg/hr, CVP monitoring if central line placed
5. INFECTION CONTROL
Standard Precautions (all patients, all body fluids)
- Hand hygiene: Alcohol-based hand rub or soap/water (visible soiling requires soap/water)
- PPE: Gloves, gown, mask, eye protection based on anticipated exposure
- Respiratory hygiene: Mask for respiratory symptoms, cough etiquette
- Safe injection practices: New needle/syringe per injection, single-use medication vials
- Reusable equipment: Clean and disinfect between patients (stethoscope, blood pressure cuff)
- Environmental: Clean/disinfect high-touch surfaces daily
Transmission-Based Precautions (for specific pathogens)
Airborne (mask in room):
- Tuberculosis, measles, varicella-zoster, SARS-CoV-2 (certain variants), Mycobacterium avium complex
- Private room, negative pressure if available, N95 respirator, limit patient transport
Droplet (surgical mask):
- Influenza, pertussis, meningococcal disease, streptococcal pharyngitis, mumps, rubella, scarlet fever, parainfluenza, adenovirus, enterovirus
- Private room if available, surgical mask for healthcare workers within 6 feet
Contact (gloves + gown):
- VRE, MRSA, C. difficile, norovirus, enteroviruses, respiratory syncytial virus, scabies, herpes zoster (disseminated)
- Dedicated equipment, gloves/gown for room entry
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Proper Use:
- Donning sequence: Gown → Mask/respirator → Eye protection → Gloves
- Doffing sequence (in designated area): Gloves → Gown → Eye protection → Mask/respirator → Hand hygiene
- Hand hygiene after each patient/after removing gloves
- Fit-test required for N95 respirators (annual)
Sterilization Methods
Autoclaving (steam sterilization, 121°C, 15-30 min at 15 psi): Surgical instruments, decontaminated sharps containers
High-Level Disinfection (chemical, 3-10 hours or automated): Endoscopes, semicritical items (touch mucous membranes, non-sterile body areas)
- Glutaraldehyde 2.5% (sporicidal, but slow)
- Peracetic acid (sporicidal, faster)
Low-Level Disinfection (chlorine, quaternary ammonium, phenolics, 10 min): Surfaces, equipment not in direct patient contact
- Chlorine: 0.5-5% solution (1:10 dilution of household bleach = 0.5%), effective against enveloped viruses, vegetative bacteria
Isolation Protocols
Respiratory Isolation (TB):
- Negative pressure room (≥6 air changes/hour outward)
- N95 respirator required for entry
- Duration: Until 3 consecutive negative sputum smears (1-2 weeks typically)
Contact Isolation (C. difficile, VRE, MRSA, norovirus):
- Single room if available
- Dedicated equipment (bedpan, commode, stethoscope, BP cuff)
- Hand hygiene with soap/water (alcohol ineffective against C. difficile spores)
- Gown + gloves for all patient contact
Outbreak Management
Identification: Cluster of cases exceeding baseline (epidemic curve, temporal clustering, common source)
Cohort Isolation: Group affected patients together, dedicated staff, prevent mixing with susceptible population
Environmental Investigation:
- Inspect water sources (Legionella), food sources (Salmonella), environmental surfaces
- Cultures of environment and specimens
Communication: Inform infection control team, hospital epidemiology, public health (reportable diseases), staff education
Duration: Until outbreak controlled (e.g., C. difficile outbreak: stop antibiotics if possible, strict hand washing, environmental cleaning)
6. PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS
Respiratory Pandemics
Identification: Novel respiratory virus with human-to-human transmission, pandemic potential based on R0 (basic reproduction number), severity, novelty
Initial Containment:
- Case identification (syndromic surveillance)
- Isolation (home/hospital depending on severity)
- Contact tracing and quarantine (14 days post-exposure exposure)
- Personal protective equipment (PPE) conservation, rationing guidelines
Clinical Triage:
- Mild-moderate (outpatient symptomatic care): RSV/influenza-like illness, monitor for deterioration
- Severe (hospitalization): Respiratory distress, hypoxia, pneumonia, risk factors (age, comorbidities)
- Critical (ICU): ARDS, shock, multi-organ failure
Therapeutics:
- Antivirals if available (remdesivir, oseltamivir for influenza, paxlovid for COVID-19)
- Monoclonal antibodies (neutralizing antibodies, early in disease course)
- Convalescent plasma (limited evidence)
- Glucocorticoids (dexamethasone) if severe hypoxia/ARDS
Vaccine Development/Rollout:
- mRNA vaccines (if platform available, rapid development timeline)
- Traditional inactivated vaccines (slower development)
- Priority groups: Healthcare workers, elderly, immunocompromised, essential workers
- Cold chain management, vaccine hesitancy mitigation
Cholera Pandemic Preparedness
Agent: Vibrio cholerae O1/O139; epidemic potential in regions with poor sanitation, water infrastructure
Clinical: Profuse watery “rice-water” diarrhea (10+ liters/day), severe dehydration, hypovolemic shock
Treatment:
- Aggressive fluid replacement: IV Lactated Ringer or Normal Saline (match stool losses + maintenance)
- Antibiotics: Doxycycline 300mg single dose OR Ciprofloxacin 1g single dose (reduce stool output 50%)
- Zinc supplementation (children): 10-20 mg daily x 14 days (reduces subsequent infections)
- Oral rehydration solution (1L = 75 mEq Na, 65 mEq Cl, 20 mEq K, 20 mmol glucose/L)
Prevention:
- Water chlorination/treatment, sanitation infrastructure
- Oral cholera vaccine (Vaxchora): 1-3 dose regimens depending on formulation; 65-90% efficacy x 3 years
Dengue Preparedness
Agent: Dengue virus (DEN-1-4) transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes; endemic in tropical/subtropical regions
Clinical: Fever, rash, myalgias, thrombocytopenia; risk of progression to dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), dengue shock syndrome (DSS)
Management:
- Supportive care: IV fluids (2-3 L/day if warning signs), platelet transfusion if <20,000 or spontaneous bleeding
- Monitor: Daily platelet count, vital signs, fluid status
- No antivirals available; NSAIDs contraindicated (bleeding risk)
Prevention:
- Vector control: Mosquito breeding site elimination, insecticide-treated bednets, environmental management
- Dengvaxia vaccine (tetravalent, live-attenuated): For seropositive individuals (prior dengue); 3 doses at 0, 6, 12 months
Ebola Preparedness
Agent: Filovirus (Zaire, Sudan, Bundibugyo); human-to-human transmission via blood/body fluids
Clinical: Fever, myalgias, rash (maculopapular), hemorrhage, coagulopathy, shock, mortality 50-90%
Management:
- Strict isolation: Negative pressure room, level 4 PPE (powered air-purifying respirator)
- Supportive care: IV fluids, blood products for coagulopathy
- Supportive monitoring: Renal function, electrolytes, coagulopathy markers
- Experimental antivirals: Monoclonal antibodies (REGN-EB3, mAbs114) reduce mortality if early
Prevention:
- Occupational exposure avoidance (healthcare worker training, PPE availability)
- Ring vaccination: rVSV-ZEBOV vaccine for contacts of confirmed cases
- Community health worker education, burial practices
Quarantine and Isolation Policies
Quarantine: Separation of exposed (asymptomatic) individuals for incubation period
- COVID-19: 5-10 days from exposure (based on transmission risk assessment)
- Measles: 21 days post-exposure (highly contagious)
- Ebola: 21 days post-exposure (incubation period)
Isolation: Separation of infected (symptomatic/confirmed) individuals for duration of contagiousness
- Respiratory viruses: Until fever-free without antipyretics x 24 hours + respiratory symptoms improving
- TB: Until 3 consecutive negative sputum smears
- C. difficile: Until diarrhea resolved
Surge Capacity Planning
Hospital Capacity:
- ICU bed surge (600-1200 ventilators per million population in pandemic)
- Staff surge (cross-train staff, mutual aid agreements with other facilities, active duty medical personnel)
- Supply chain (PPE stockpile, medications, ventilators, ECMO circuits)
Staffing Models:
- Contingency staffing (reduce hours, extend shifts)
- Crisis standards of care (rationing resources, triage protocols)
- Mental health support (burnout prevention, critical incident stress management)
Communication:
- Daily briefings (hospital leadership, staff, community)
- Transparent messaging (mortality rates, resource limitations, vaccine efficacy)
- Risk communication (behavioral recommendations, trust building)
7. TROPICAL AND ENDEMIC DISEASES
MALARIA
Epidemiology and Transmission
- Plasmodium parasites: P. falciparum (most severe, Africa), P. vivax (relapse, Asia), P. ovale (relapse), P. malariae (chronic), P. knowlesi (zoonotic, SE Asia)
- Anopheles mosquito transmission (dusk-dawn peak)
- Incubation: 7-30 days (P. falciparum), 8-25 days (P. vivax/ovale), 18-40 days (P. malariae)
Diagnosis
- Thick/thin blood film (gold standard, 0.5 µL blood, requires expertise)
- Rapid diagnostic test (RDT): Detects HRP-2 (P. falciparum), pLDH (pan-Plasmodium), G6PD (P. vivax/ovale)
- PCR: Most sensitive, species identification
Clinical Presentation
- Uncomplicated: Fever (cyclical, every 48h P. vivax/ovale, every 72h P. malariae), chills, myalgias, headache, hepatomegaly
- Severe: Cerebral malaria (seizures, altered mental status), severe anemia (Hb <7 g/dL), acute kidney injury, metabolic acidosis, pulmonary edema, hyperparasitemia (>5%)
Treatment by Species
P. falciparum (chloroquine-resistant):
- Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) preferred:
- Artemether-lumefantrine (Coartem): 80/480mg BID x 3 days
- Artesunate-amodiaquine, dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DHA-PPQ)
- Severe (parenteral): Artesunate 2.4 mg/kg IV at 0, 12, 24 hours, then daily (better than quinine)
- Pediatric: Artemether-lumefantrine 1.5-19kg: 1 tablet BID x 3 days (based on weight bands)
- Duration to parasite clearance: 3-7 days
P. vivax/P. ovale (with relapse):
- Acute phase: ACT (artemether-lumefantrine) OR Chloroquine 600mg, then 300mg at +6h, +24h, +48h (if sensitive regions)
- Relapse prevention: Primaquine 0.5 mg/kg daily x 14 days (must test G6PD first; hemolysis risk in G6PD deficiency)
- Pediatric: Primaquine 0.5 mg/kg daily x 14 days (test G6PD <6 months first)
P. malariae:
- Chloroquine 600mg, then 300mg +6h, +24h, +48h
- Relapse prevention: Primaquine 0.5 mg/kg daily x 14 days
Severe Malaria Management
- IV artesunate 2.4 mg/kg at 0, 12, 24 hours, then daily x 5-7 days
- Switch to oral ACT when tolerated
- Supportive: Blood transfusion if Hb <7 g/dL, seizure prophylaxis (diazepam), RBC exchange (if hyperparasitemia >10%)
Chemoprophylaxis
- Doxycycline 100mg daily x 2 days before, during, 4 weeks after (chloroquine-resistant areas)
- Mefloquine 250mg weekly x 1 week before, during, 4 weeks after (side effects: neuropsychiatric)
- Atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone): 1 tablet daily x 1 day before, during, 7 days after
- Chloroquine 300mg (base) weekly (chloroquine-sensitive areas only)
DENGUE FEVER
Epidemiology
- Aedes aegypti mosquito (daytime, urban)
- 4 serotypes (DEN-1-4), endemic SE Asia, Latin America
- Secondary dengue (prior different serotype) → severe dengue risk (DHF/DSS)
Clinical Phases
- Febrile phase (3-7 days): High fever, myalgia, headache, rash (maculopapular, trunk)
- Critical phase (days 3-7): Fever defervescence, rapid IV fluid loss → shock if untreated, thrombocytopenia (<100,000)
- Recovery phase: Gradual improvement, convalescent rash
Management
- Mild-moderate: Outpatient if reliable follow-up; oral rehydration, acetaminophen (avoid NSAIDs)
- Severe/DHF: IV fluids (Lactated Ringer, NS) 500-1000 mL/hr, target urine output 0.5 mL/kg/hr
- Platelet transfusion: If count <20,000 OR <50,000 with bleeding/planned procedure
- No antivirals; supportive care only
ENTERIC FEVER (TYPHOID/PARATYPHOID)
Agent
- Salmonella typhi (typhoid), S. paratyphi A/B (paratyphoid)
- Fecal-oral transmission, chronic carriers (bile ducts), endemic Asia/Africa
Clinical
- Week 1: Rose spots (faint pink macules on trunk), fever stepladder, relative bradycardia
- Week 2-3: Enteric fever (cough, delirium, diarrhea/constipation, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly)
- Complications: Intestinal perforation, myocarditis, meningitis, encephalitis
Diagnosis
- Blood culture (week 1, most sensitive), stool culture (week 2+), urine culture
- Widal test (O and H antibodies, less specific, endemic areas have baseline titers)
- PCR increasingly available
Treatment
Uncomplicated:
- Ceftriaxone 1-2g IV/IM Q12H x 7-14 days OR Fluoroquinolone (levofloxacin 500mg daily x 7 days, if susceptible)
- Pediatric: Ceftriaxone 50-100 mg/kg/day Q12H
Severe/Complications:
- Ceftriaxone 1-2g IV Q12H + Gentamicin 3-5 mg/kg IV Q8H
- Switch to oral agent when clinically improved
Resistance: Multi-drug resistant (MDR, chloramphenicol/ampicillin/TMP-SMX resistant) common in Asia; fluoroquinolone resistance emerging
Prevention
- Typhoid vaccine (inactivated or oral Ty21a) recommended for travelers to endemic areas
- Hygiene, safe water access, sewage sanitation
RABIES
Epidemiology
- Lyssavirus transmitted via saliva (bite, scratch, mucosal contact)
- Mortality ~100% once symptomatic; pre-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) highly effective
Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP)
Wound Management:
- Immediately wash with soap/water x 15 minutes
- Apply iodine solution or 70% alcohol
- Do NOT stitch if possible (allows drainage); if required, suture after PEP
Immunoglobulin (RIG):
- Human rabies immunoglobulin (HRIG) 20 IU/kg: Infiltrate around wound, remainder IM
- Administer within 7 days of bite
Vaccine Schedule (inactivated rabies vaccine, ICRV or PCECV):
- IM route: 1.0 mL at days 0, 3, 7, 14, 28 (5 doses)
- Intradermal route: 0.1 mL at 5-8 sites on days 0, 3, 7; 1.0 mL IM on day 28 (cost-saving)
Pediatric: Same immunoglobulin weight-based dosing; vaccine doses unchanged
Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP)
- Indicated: Animal handlers, cave explorers (bat exposure), healthcare workers with frequent exposure
- Schedule: 1.0 mL IM on days 0, 7, 21-28
- Booster: Every 2-5 years if continued exposure risk
TETANUS
Epidemiology
- Clostridium tetani: soil-spore, anaerobic germination in wounds → tetanospasmin toxin (GABA inhibition → unopposed motor neuron firing)
- Risk: Puncture wounds, burns, surgical wounds, umbilical cord (developing countries)
Clinical
- Incubation: 3-21 days
- Generalized: Trismus (“lockjaw”), rigidity (opisthotonus, “risus sardonicus”), respiratory failure
- Localized: Muscle rigidity near wound; may progress to generalized
- Neonatal: Fever, poor feeding, irritability, generalized rigidity
Management
- Supportive: ICU care, mechanical ventilation (high mortality without), benzodiazepines for spasms (lorazepam, diazepam)
- Wound debridement, culture
- Antibiotics: Metronidazole 500mg IV Q6-8H x 7-10 days (or penicillin G 2-4MU IV Q4-6H)
- Tetanus immunoglobulin (TIG) 500 IU IM (for severe tetanus, early)
- Prognosis: Mortality 5-10% with supportive care (20-50% untreated)
Prevention
- Vaccination: Primary series (3 doses) + boosters every 10 years
- Wound prophylaxis (see Immunization section)
CHOLERA
Agent and Epidemiology
- Vibrio cholerae O1 (Classical, El Tor biotypes) and O139
- Fecal-oral transmission, water-borne, epidemic potential
- Incubation: 1-3 days
Clinical
- Rice-water diarrhea (10-20 L/day), severe dehydration, hypovolemic shock, hypoglycemia, electrolyte abnormalities
- Mortality: 1% with treatment, 50% untreated
Management
- Fluid replacement (paramount): IV Lactated Ringer (rapidly), match stool losses
- Initial: 75 mL/kg over 4 hours (dehydrated)
- Maintenance + ongoing losses: Monitor urine output, vitals
- Oral rehydration solution (WHO formula): 75 mEq Na, 65 mEq Cl, 20 mEq K, 20 mmol glucose/L
- Antibiotics: Doxycycline 300mg single dose (or TID x 3 days) OR Ciprofloxacin 1g single dose
- Reduces diarrhea volume 50%, shedding duration, hospitalization
- Pediatric: Doxycycline contraindicated; Ciprofloxacin 20-30 mg/kg/day BID x 3 days
- Supportive: Zinc (children 10-20 mg daily x 14 days), monitoring
LEPTOSPIROSIS
Agent and Epidemiology
- Leptospira interrogans: Soil/water contamination from infected animal urine (rodents, livestock)
- Occupational (farmers, abattoir workers, military)
- Biphasic illness
Clinical
- Leptospiremic phase (first week): Fever, myalgia, headache, conjunctival suffusion
- Immune phase (second week): IgM appears, aseptic meningitis, weil’s disease (severe: jaundice, renal failure, hemorrhage)
Diagnosis
- PCR blood/urine (first week)
- Culture (blood week 1, urine weeks 2-30, slower)
- IgM/IgG serology (week 2+)
Treatment
- Leptospiremic phase: Doxycycline 100mg BID x 7 days (if early) OR Penicillin G 2-4MU IV Q6H
- Weil’s disease (severe): Penicillin G 2-4MU IV Q4-6H x 7-10 days OR Ceftriaxone 1-2g IV Q12H
- Pediatric (<8 years, avoid doxycycline): Penicillin G 50,000 units/kg Q6H
8. IMMUNIZATION PROTOCOLS
VACCINE TYPES
Live Attenuated
- Mechanism: Weakened pathogen replicates in host, induces robust cellular and humoral immunity
- Examples: MMR, varicella, rotavirus, yellow fever, Ty21a (typhoid), BCG
- Precautions: Avoid in pregnancy, immunocompromised (CD4 <200); spacing (4-week minimum between live vaccines)
Inactivated/Killed
- Mechanism: Dead pathogen or component antigens; humoral response
- Examples: Polio (IPV), hepatitis A, hepatitis B, rabies, typhoid (IM), influenza (inactivated), pertussis
- No spacing requirement between different inactivated vaccines
Toxoid
- Mechanism: Inactivated bacterial toxin; antibody-mediated neutralization
- Examples: Diphtheria, tetanus toxoids
- Part of DPT/Tdap combination vaccines
Subunit/Recombinant
- Mechanism: Purified antigen (no pathogen replication risk)
- Examples: Hepatitis B (recombinant), influenza (split), pertussis acellular
- Generally well-tolerated, less immunogenic than live
Conjugate
- Mechanism: Polysaccharide antigen conjugated to carrier protein (enhances T-cell response in infants)
- Examples: PCV13 (pneumococcal), Hib, meningococcal conjugate
- Addresses poor response of infants to naked polysaccharides
mRNA Vaccines (emerging, platform)
- Mechanism: mRNA encodes viral protein (spike protein); host cells produce antigen
- Examples: COVID-19 (Pfizer/Moderna), RSV vaccine development
- Rapid development timeline, excellent immunogenicity
COLD CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Temperature Requirements
- Freezer storage (-20°C or colder): mRNA vaccines (Pfizer -80°C, Moderna -20°C), some live vaccines
- Refrigerator storage (2-8°C): Most inactivated vaccines, toxoids
- Room temperature: MMR, varicella, oral polio (OPV) for limited periods
Chain Maintenance
- Dedicated vaccine refrigerator (not food/medication mixture)
- Daily temperature monitoring (min/max thermometer or electronic probe)
- Generator backup or alternative power
- Transport in insulated boxes with ice packs
- Documentation of temperature excursions (may require reporting to manufacturer)
Vaccine Wastage Minimization
- Multi-dose vial use: Once opened, discard after specified interval (varies: 1-28 days)
- Refrigerator storage post-reconstitution critical (oral polio vaccine reconstituted only at point-of-use)
- Training on proper handling, reconstitution, aseptic technique
ADULT IMMUNIZATION SCHEDULE
| Vaccine | Age 19-26 | Age 27-49 | Age 50-64 | Age ≥65 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tdap/Td | 1 dose Tdap (if not prior), then Td Q10y | Td Q10y if no prior Tdap | Td Q10y if no prior Tdap | 1-time Tdap | Pertussis protection |
| Influenza (IIV/LAIV) | Annual | Annual | Annual | Annual | Age ≥65: High-dose or adjuvanted preferred |
| MMR | 2 doses (if no evidence immunity) | 2 doses (if no evidence immunity) | — | — | Contraindicated if immune |
| Varicella | 2 doses (if no evidence immunity) | 2 doses (if no evidence immunity) | — | — | Zoster vaccine (≥50yo) preferred instead of 2nd varicella |
| Zoster (Shingrix) | — | — | 2 doses | 2 doses | Recombinant, non-live, preferred over ZOSTAVAX |
| HPV (Gardasil 9) | 3 doses (ages 19-26 if no prior) | 3 doses (if not vaccinated; up to age 45 per individual decision) | — | — | Males 19-26 routinely; older if risk |
| Pneumococcal (PCV20 or PPSV23) | PCV20 x1 OR PPSV23, then PCV20 | PCV20 x1 OR PPSV23 then PCV20 | PCV20 x1 OR PPSV23 then PCV20 | PCV20 x1 (if not prior pneumo) | ≥65: PCV20 preferred |
| Meningococcal (MCV4/MenB) | MCV4 (if not prior), then Q5y if risk; MenB 2 doses | MCV4 or MenB if not prior | — | — | Asplenia, terminal complement deficiency |
| Hepatitis A | 2 doses (if not immune) | 2 doses (if not immune) | 2 doses (if risk) | 2 doses (if risk) | Risk: MSM, PWID, occupational |
| Hepatitis B | 3 doses (if not immune) | 3 doses (if not immune) | 3 doses (if risk) | — | Risk: PWID, MSM, occupational |
| Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) | 1 dose (if not prior) | 1 dose (if not prior) | — | — | Asplenia, other risk factors |
| Japanese encephalitis | Travel to endemic areas | Travel to endemic areas | Travel to endemic areas | Travel to endemic areas | 2 doses Vero-derived |
| Rabies | PrEP: 3 doses (days 0, 7, 21-28) | PrEP: 3 doses | PrEP: 3 doses | PrEP: 3 doses | Risk occupation/exposure |
| Yellow fever | Single dose (valid 30 years) | Single dose (valid 30 years) | Single dose | Single dose (if travel/risk) | Live-attenuated, booster not routinely recommended |
| Typhoid (parenteral) | Single dose (booster Q3y if risk) | Single dose (booster Q3y if risk) | Single dose (booster Q3y if risk) | Single dose | Travel to endemic areas |
PEDIATRIC IMMUNIZATION SCHEDULE (Highlights)
| Age | Vaccines |
|---|---|
| Birth | HepB dose 1 |
| 1-2 months | HepB dose 2, RV dose 1, DTaP dose 1, Hib dose 1, PCV13 dose 1, IPV dose 1 |
| 2 months | Same as 1-2 months (if not given at birth) |
| 4 months | RV dose 2, DTaP dose 2, Hib dose 2, PCV13 dose 2, IPV dose 2 |
| 6 months | HepB dose 3, RV dose 3, DTaP dose 3, Hib dose 3, PCV13 dose 3, IPV dose 3, Influenza dose 1 (and dose 2 one month later) |
| 12-15 months | Hib dose 4, PCV13 dose 4, IPV dose 4 (if not completed), MMR dose 1, Varicella dose 1, Hepatitis A dose 1, Influenza dose 1 (if not prior) |
| 4-6 years | DTaP dose 5, IPV dose 4, MMR dose 2 (if not prior), Varicella dose 2 (if not prior), Influenza annual |
| 11-12 years | Tdap dose 1 (if not prior), HPV dose 1 (series), Meningococcal (MCV4) dose 1, Influenza annual, Hepatitis B series (if not prior) |
| 16-18 years | MCV4 dose 2, Meningococcal B (if not prior), Influenza annual |
POST-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS (PEP) PROTOCOLS
Rabies PEP
- Administration: ASAP (effective up to 14 days post-exposure, ideally within 7 days)
- RIG: 20 IU/kg body weight (infiltrate wound, remainder IM)
- ICRV/PCECV: 5 doses (IM: days 0, 3, 7, 14, 28; intradermal: days 0, 3, 7 with booster day 28)
- Booster: Single 1.0 mL IM dose if prior PrEP and exposed (vaccine day 0, RIG omitted)
Tetanus PEP
- Toxoid-containing vaccine: Td (tetanus-diphtheria) or Tdap (pertussis-containing); if tetanus vaccination >10 years ago
- TIG: 500 IU IM if wound is high-risk (contaminated, >6 hours old, crush/puncture) AND not fully vaccinated
Hepatitis B PEP (exposure: needle stick, mucous membrane contact)
- HBIG (Hepatitis B Immunoglobulin): 0.06 mL/kg IM within 24 hours (ideally)
- HBV vaccine: Dose 1 at 0 hours (can be given simultaneously as HBIG, different anatomical site)
- Complete vaccine series if prior series incomplete; check anti-HBs if prior vaccination
HIV Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP)
- Duration: 28 days (preferably start within 2 hours of exposure)
- Regimen: Tenofovir/emtricitabine + raltegravir OR dolutegravir (recommended)
- Tenofovir/emtricitabine (Truvada): 1 tablet daily
- Raltegravir: 400mg BID (if available, preferred integrase inhibitor)
- Dolutegravir: 50mg daily
- Pediatric dosing: Weight-based modifications
Meningococcal PEP (close contacts: household, daycare, direct respiratory)
- Ciprofloxacin 500mg single dose (preferred, cost-effective) OR
- Rifampin 600mg BID x 2 days OR
- Ceftriaxone 250mg IM single dose
- Administer within 24 hours of index case identification
APPENDIX: QUICK REFERENCE DOSING TABLE
| Drug | Adult IV | Adult PO | Pediatric IV | Pediatric PO | Renal Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ceftriaxone | 1-2g Q12H | N/A | 50-100 mg/kg Q12H | N/A | No adjustment |
| Vancomycin | 15-20 mg/kg Q8-12H | N/A | 10-15 mg/kg Q6-8H | N/A | Severe adjustment required |
| Levofloxacin | 750mg QD | 750mg QD | 10-20 mg/kg QD | 10-20 mg/kg QD | Adjust if CrCl <50 |
| Metronidazole | 500mg Q6-8H | 500mg QID | 7.5 mg/kg Q6-8H | 7.5 mg/kg QID | Minor adjustment |
| Azithromycin | 500mg QD | 500mg day 1, 250 QD | 10 mg/kg day 1, 5 mg/kg QD | Same | No adjustment |
| Doxycycline | 100mg BID | 100mg BID | >8yo: 2.2 mg/kg BID | >8yo: 2.2 mg/kg BID | No adjustment |
| TMP-SMX | 5 mg/kg (TMP) Q6-12H | 1-2 DS BID | 6-12 mg/kg (TMP) BID | 6-12 mg/kg (TMP) BID | Adjust if CrCl <30 |
| Oseltamivir | N/A | 75mg BID x 5d | N/A | By weight: 15 mg/kg BID | Adjust if CrCl <30 |
| Acyclovir | 10-15 mg/kg Q8H | 400-800mg 4-5x/day | 10-20 mg/kg Q8H | <12yo: 15-20 mg/kg 4x/day | Significant adjustment needed |
| Gentamicin | 5-7 mg/kg QD | N/A | 2.5 mg/kg Q8H or 7.5 mg/kg QD | N/A | Major adjustment required; TDM essential |
Training Note: This document provides evidence-based, current clinical guidance for small hospital/clinic practice. Dosing reflects adult standard care and pediatric dosing for common infections. Always verify local resistance patterns, formulary availability, and individual patient factors (renal/hepatic function, drug allergies, contraindications) before prescribing. Regular updating recommended as resistance patterns evolve and new agents become available.