Bacteria
Bacteria
Bacteria
Staphylococcus aureus
(virulent)
Gm+ cocci
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
*Skin infections:
impetigo, cellulitis,
erysipelas, abcess,
furuncle, carbuncle
*Bacteremia/sepsis:
hematogenous spread
*Acute endocarditis:
DESTRUCTIVE (compare
to S.viridans and
S.faecalis)
*Pneumonia damaging
process, cavitations,
empyema, effusions
*Osteomyelitis/septic
arthritis- hematogenous
and traumatic spread
*Food poisoning 1-8 hr
onset, vomiting, preformed
toxin
*Tox shock syndromefever, vomiting, diarrhea,
diffuse erythematous rash
Gm + cocci in
grapes/clusters
Ubiquitous in
environment; normal
flora of skin/nose
Enterotoxin- vomiting,
diarrhea, heat resistant,
(actually released in gut)
TSST-1 tampon use,
wounds, superantigen
Exfoliatin- scalded skin
Gm + cocci in grapes,
Catalase differentiates
from Strep.
Beta lactamase
production is
common! Use
methicillin,
nafcillin,
dicloxacillin
none
Catalase +
coagulase +
TISSUE SPREAD:
Alpha toxin(lechthinase)skin necrosis;hemolysis
Hyaluronidase- degrades
proteoglycans
Fibrinolysin- lysis fibrin
clots
IMMUNE EVASION:
Protein A- binds IgG-Fc,
blocks opsonization and
complement fixation
Coagulase- activates
prothrombin
Hemolysin- destroys
RBCs, PMNs, M0s,
platelets
Leukocidin- destroys
WBCs
S.aureus: Beta
hemolysis, coagulase,
Yellow (Au) pigment
(coagulase causes
coagulation!)
MRSAvancomycin
Coagulase neg:
S. epidermidis:
novobiocin sensitive
sensitive skin
S. saprophyticus:
Novobiocin resistant
S. epidermitis: associated w/ IV catheters, damaged/prosthetic heart valves: INSIDIOUS onset, Nosocomial, LESS virulent.
Blood culture Contaminant
S. saprophyticus: Community acquired UTI in young women
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Gm+ cocci
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Gm + cocci in
chains or pairs
Human throat/skin,
Transmission by
respiratory droplets
Hyaluronidase- degrades
proteoglycans
(TISSUE SPREAD)
Erythrogenic toxinscarlet fever, lysogenized
S.pyogenes
Streptolysin 0- results in
beta hemolysis, target of
ASO antibodies
Penicillin to
prevent
rheumatic
fever.
Beta-hemolytic are
classified by
Lancefield groups
(A,B,D) according
to Ccarbohydrates
Beta hemolysis
and Bacitracin
sensitivity point to
GABHS, esp with
inc. ASO titer.
Prevention
Penicillin
DOES NOT
treat post strep
disease or
enterococcus.
M protein- antibody
target, but inhibits
complement/phagocytosis
Streptokinase- converts
plasminogen to plasmin,
dissolves fibrin clots
IgA protease
HES an MSI
Beta-hemolytic
S. faecalis (enterococcus)
Subacute endocarditis, UTI
Oh crap! Ive got Heart
problems!
Not hemolytic
GI tract
Not hemolytic
GI tract
S. bovis (group D)
UTI
S. pneumoniae
(pneumococcus)
Alpha-hemolytic
Nasopharynx
85 different capsular
polysaccarides
Quellung rxn
Alpha-hemolytic
Oropharynx
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Neisseria
Gm- cocci
N. meningitidis (meningococcus)
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
*Meningococcemia- fever,
arthralgias, myalgias,
petechial rash, inc. in
people w/ complement
deficiencies
*meningitis- fever,
headache, stiff neck,
photophobia, inc.PMNs in
CSF
* WaterhouseFriedrichsen- fever,
purpura, DIC, adrenal
insufficiency due to
bilateral adrenal
hemorrhage, shock, death
(like a bad
meningococcemia)
Gm cocci kidney
beans.
Airborne droplets,
colonized nasopharynx,
establishes carrier states
in some
Polysaccharide capsule,
endotoxin (LPS),
IgA protease
Ferments maltose
Penicillin or
Ceftriaxone
(G3)
Chemoprophylaxis
with Rifampin
(excreted into
saliva)
Thayer-Martin,
chocolate agar
Capsular polysaccharides
are antigenic serve as
markers for classification.
N. gonnorhoeae (gonnococcus)
Males- symptomatic
dysuria, penile discharge
b/c of urethritis. Leads to
epididymitis, prostatitis,
urethral strictures
Female- asymptomatic,
vaginal discharge,
dyspareunia, due to
cervicitis, Infertility, PID,
ectopic, tubo-ovarian
abcess, perihepatitis (FitzHugh-Curtis syndrome),
opthalmia neonatorum
Polysaccharide
vaccine in military
recruits.
LATEX agglutination
test b/c capsular
polysaccharides
NO CAPSULE
Sexual transmission
Gm cocci kidney
beans.
Thayer-Martin,
chocolate agar
Presumptive diagnosis
by Gm stain of
petechiae or CSF
Pili/fimbriae
(ANTIGENIC variation)
Men: Gm diplococci
in PMNs
LPS
OMPs
IgA protease
NO CAPSULE!
No serologic testing, no
capsule!
Ceftriaxone
(G3) b/c
penicillinase
producing
N.gonnorhoeae
PPNG common
Erythromycin
eye drops in
newborns (also
protects vs.
Chlamydia)
No Vaccine.
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Clostridium
Gm+ Rods
C. tetani
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Spores, ubiquitous in
soil, enter wounds and
germinate in anaerobic
environment of necrotic
tissue
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Penicillin,
ventilatory
support, muscle
relaxants
Tetanus
toxoid
(formaldehyde
treated tox)
Tetanus immune
globulin,
preformed Ig
C. botulinum
Botulism flaccid paralysis,
descending weakness, diplopia,
flaccid paralysis, resp failure.
Wound botulism- spores to
wounds, germinate, release toxin
Infant botulism- ingestion of
spores in honey- floppy baby
Spores, in soil,
inadequate sterilization
of canned foods.
Alkaline veggies,
smoked fish.
Antitoxin,
ventilatory support
Watch swollen
cans!
NO
PENICILLIN!!
Will burst cells
and release toxin
C. perfingens
Gas gangrene (myonecrosis):
war wounds, septic abortions
Food poisoning- ingestion of
cooking resistant spores in
foods. Watery diarrhea,
cramps, little vomiting
Results in
crepitus- gas
production and
Hemolysis
Morphology,
exudate smears,
culture, sugar
fermentation,
organic acid
production
Debridement, O2
gas, Penicillin
Normal flora in 3% of
people
Suppression of normal
flora allows overgrowth,
usually by clindamycin,
ampicillin,
cephalosporins
Exotox A (severe
diarrhea
Exotox B (damage to
colonic mucosa)
ID C-diff tox in
stool
Metronidazolepoorly absorbed
orally, inc. colonic
dose
C. difficile
Antibiotic associated
pseudomembranous colitis- esp
in hospitalized pts.
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Vancomycin
Bacillus
Gm+ Rods
B. anthracis
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Large w/ square
ends, nonmotile
Common in animals.
Humans infected by
spores on animal
products (skins/hides)
Antiphagocytic capsule
made of d-glutamate
[only one w/ Amino
acids!] (not a
polysaccharide)
Morphology and
blood agar growth.
Penicillin
Sterilization of
animal
products, and
vaccination of
animals.
Transmission through
skin, GI tract, respiratory
tract
Vaccine
(protective
antigen) for
humans at risk
Tripartite anthrax
toxin: protective
antigen, lethal factor,
edema factor. Protective
factor inhibits
phagocytosis.
B. cereus
Vomiting with 4 hr incubation
period (like S.aureus)- heat
stable toxin--
Distinguished
from B. anthracis
by motility and
lack of capsule.
Corynebacterium diptheriae
Treat symptoms
Preformed heat-labile
enterotoxin (like E.coli,
Cholera tox) - diarrhea
Avoid
reheated rice
Gm+ Rods
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Diptheria throat
inflammation, gray
fibrinous exudate
(pseudomembrane), airway
obstruction, myocarditis,
recurrent laryngeal nerve
palsy
Club shaped, in
palisades, Chinese
characters
Airborne droplets,
colonization of throat and
production of Diptheria
tox.
Tellurite plate,
Loefllers
Antitoxin,
Penicillin to
reduce
transmission
Diptheria toxoid
vaccine. (disease in
US is iatrogenic
due to innoculation
by inadequately
killed toxin.
Polyphosphate
granules stain
metachromatically
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Toxin assessed by
animal inoculation or
gel diffusion precipitin
test.
Listeria monocytogenes
Gm+ Rods
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Gm + rods, in
clumps, Chinese
characters, NONsporeforming,
Tumbling
distinguishes it
from
corynebacterium
Newborns,
immunocompromised are
high risk groups.
Ampicillin
No vaccine
Transmitted to humans
from animal feces,
veggies, unpasteurized
milk/cheese.
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ENTERIC
E. coli
Gm- Rods
(Enterobacteriaciae)
Diseases
Character
Hab/Trans
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevent
As other
Normal flora,
but need
virulence
factors to cause
disease.
Pathogenisis by pilus
and enterotox,
capsule, and
endotoxin.
G3 Cephalosporin
No vaccine
S. typhi- by Cipro
or ceftriaxone
Hand
washing,
cooking,
water
chlorination
Salmonella
enterobacteria
ciae family
Serotype ID by O,H,K
antigens
(Enerobacteriaciae)
As other
enterobacteria
ciae family
Normal flora of
animals.
Contamination
food, poultry /
eggs
K anitgen/Vi antigen
Flagella antigenic
variation
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ENTERIC
Shigella
Gm- Rods
(INTESTIAL disease)
(Enterobacteriaciae)
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Enterocolitis (dysentary) by
S.dysentariae, S.sonnei, S.
flexneri, S. boydii
Nonmotile
NO H2S gas,
nonmotile. Non
lactose fermenting
on EMB,
MacConkeys agar
Fluid replacement,
avoid
antiperistaltic
drugs which
prolong excretion
of organism.
Small innoculum
<100 bugs
Prevention
PMNs in smear w/
fever suggest
invasive bug.
Vibrio
(Not Enterobacteriaciae)
Comma shaped,
single flagella.
Large innoculum
needed.
V.parahemolyticus is a marine
bug in contaminated raw
seafood. Japan
Campylobacter
Diagnosis clinically
in endemic areas:
Asia, Africa, Latin
America.
Oral rehydration
No effective
vaccine.
Antibiotics
No Vaccine
Bismuth sulfate,
tetracycline,
metronidazole
No vaccine.
(Not Enterobacteriaciae)
Helicobacter pylori
Mucinase aided
colonization of small
intestine, bipartite
enterotox: binds GM1
gangliosides on
enterocyte, ADPribosylation of G
protein. (like ETEC)
Comma or Sshaped,
Microaerophilic,
urease negative
Probably
enterotoxin
(Not Enterobacteriaciae)
Urease + (protects
from stomach
acid)
Fecal-oral.
Attaches to gastric
mucosa, mediated by
NH3 production, host
inflammatory response
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ENTERIC
Gm- Rods
(EXTRAINTESTIAL disease)
Klebsiella-Enterobacter-Serratia
(Enterobacteriaciae)
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
All ferment
Lactose
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Ferment lactose on
EMB, MacConkeys
agar
No vaccine
Swarming appearance
on blood agar. Use
antigens from
Rickettsiae cross react
with Proteus.
No vaccine
K.pneumoniae,
E.cloacae,
S.marcescens
difficult to
distinguish
clinically
Proteus-Providencia-Morganella (Enterobacteriaciae)
Community and nosocomial UTI,
b/c high motility
(important species:
Proteus mirabilis, Proteus vularis
Providencia rettgretii
M. morganii )
Pseudomonas
Non lactose
fermenting,
urease +
(alkalinizes urine)
Only enterobac
that makes
phenylalanine
deaminase
P.mirabilis is indole
neg unlike others of
this group.
(Not Enterobacteriaciae)
P aeruginosa: opportunistic,
nosocomial: Pneumonia,
osteomyelitis, burn infections,
sepsis, UTI, endocarditis, malignant
otitis externa, corneal infections.
P. cepacia colonizes CF patients
Bacteroides fragilis
Peritoneal abscesses. Growth
favored by growth w/ facultative
anaerobes to exhause local oxygen
Strict aerobe,
Not glucose
fermenting, Not
reduce nitrates,
oxidase +
Exotox like
C.diptheriae
(ADPreibosylation)
Produces pyocyanin,
pyoverdin
Highly resistant.
Combo pipercillin,
ticarcillin and
aminoglycoside.
Ceftazidime
(Not Enterobacteriaciae)
Anaerobic, non
sporeforming,
non LPS,
polysaccharide
capsule. No
exotox, No LPS
Predominant flora of
colon. NOT communicable.
Exits colon via break in
mucosa (Chronic disease,
PID, trauma)
Polysaccharide
capsule
provides
virulence factor
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Treat as mixed
infection.
Clindamycin, or
metronidazole
No Vaccine
RESPIRATORY
H. Influenzae
Diseases
Gm- Rods
Coccobacillus w/
polysaccharide
Capsule
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
ONLY encapsulated
forms like type B cause
invasive disease.
Nonencapsulated cause
URI, pneumonia in pts
with preexisting lung
disease (COPD).
IgA protease,
Chocolate agar,
w/ heme and
NAD.
Rifampin
prevents
meningitis and
transmission
from close
contacts b/c
secreted into
saliva better than
Ampicillin
HIB vaccine of
capsular
polysaccharide
conjugated to
carrier protein.
Erythromycin
(also good for
Mycoplasma)
Disinfect water
sources
Erythromycin
reduces
complications,
doesnt change
clinical course.
Resp tract
already
damaged.
Killed B.pertussis
vaccine 2,4,6
months, Boosters
at age 1, school.
Acellular vax for
booster only.
Quellung rxn
Hmmmm
Chocolaaate!
H.Simpson
Legionella pneumophilia
Atypical pneumonia with high
fever, nonproductive cough(
differentiate from Mycoplasma,
influenza, psittacosis, Q fever)
Bordetella pertussis
Whooping cough- acute
tracheobronchitis with URI
symptoms, paroxysmal
hacking cough 1-4 wks,
copious mucus
Poor gm stain
High concentration
Error! No table of
figures entries
found.of cysteine
and iron. Urine
antigen test.
Suspect when inc.
PMNs with no
organisms!
(Bordet-genou agar)
Small gm- rods
Polysaccharide capsule
and pili are essential for
virulence. Does NOT
invade. Pertussis tox
(ADP-ribosylation), and
tracheal cytotoxin.
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ZOONTIC
Gm- Rods
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Animal reserviors:
B melitensisi (goats/sheep)
B. abortus (cattle)
B. suis (pigs)
Non pasteurized milk
products(travelers),
through skin (meat
packers, vets, farmers)
Organisms localize in
RES. Persist in
macrophages, induce
granulomas
Serology,
biochemistry
Antibiotics
Animal
vaccination,
pasteurization.
Francisella tularensis
Tularemia- influenza like
syndrome w/ ulceroglandular
lesions (hole in skin, black base,
swollen LN, draining pus)
Yersinia pestis
No Human
vaccine.
Ubiquitous in US in wide
variety of animals.
Tick/mite vectors.
Humans as accidental dead
end hosts by bites or
animal skin handling.
Serology
Streptomycin
Live
attenuated
vaccine (like
BCG)
Immunoflorescence
Antibiotics
Quarantine.
Bacteria spread to
regional LN, enlarged
tender buboes.
No Vaccine.
Pasteurella multocida
Cellulitis rapid onset at bite
site. Osteomyelitis as
complication. Sutures
predispose to infection
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Presumptive Dx by
rapid onset cellulitis
at animal bite.
Penicillin
Ampicillin
prophylax.
11
MYCOBACTERIA
M. tuberculosis
Diseases
Character
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Obligate
aerobe,
intracellular,
infect M0,
persist for
years.
Mycolic
acid walls
Prolonged,
multiple Tx.
(INH, rifampin,
pyrazinamide,
ehtambutol)
Protracted tx
b/c: intracellular
life cycle,
granuloma
blocks
penetration of
drug,
metabolically
inactive
mycobac persist
in lesion
Prevention
Chemoproph
ylax w/ INH
(watch
hepatotox in
people >35
y.o.)
Live
attenuated
M.bovis
(BCG)
induces some
protective
immunity.
M. avium- intracellulare
Clincal TB indistinguishable
from M tuberculosis in AIDS.
Atypical
mycobacterium
Azithromycin
Clarithromycin
Macrolide
prophylax
when CD4
count < 50
Rifampin
Dapsone
Up to 2 years!
Prophylax
exposed
persons with
Dapsone.
M. leprae
Leprosy- preferential growth in < 37C,
skin, superficial nerves.
Tuberculoid- good cellular immune
response, few AFB, granulomas,
positive lepromin skin test. Anethetized
skin lesions and thickened superficial
nerves.
Lepromatous- poor cellular immune
response, lots of organisms, foamy
histiocytes, negative lepromin skin test
(poor response.) Skin lesions, lion
facies. Skin anesthesia, bone resorption,
skin thickening, disfiguring.
Never has
been
grown in
lab.
Intracellular replication
(skin histiocytes,
endothelial cells,
Schwann cells)
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ACTINOMYCETES
A. israelii
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Penicillin
No vaccine
Bactrim
(trimethorprim +
sulfamethoxazole)
No vaccine
Nocardia asteroides
Nocardiosis- pneumonia
that progresses to abscess
formation, sinus tract
drainage, dissemination to
brain/kidney
(immunosuppressed)
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Diseases
Characteristics
Habitat/Transmission
Pathogenesis
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Walking pneumonia
(dry nonproductive cough,
horrible CST, generally
feel well) Most common
pneumonia in young
adults (college students).
Respiratory droplets.
Attaches but does NOT
invade respiratory
epithelium, like
B.pertussis.
Erythromycin
Tetracycline
No vaccine
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13