Bacteria Notes Sketchy
Bacteria Notes Sketchy
Bacteria Notes Sketchy
OVERVIEW
Bacteria
Overview
Gram(+)
Gram(-)
Random notes
BACTERIA
Overview
Gram(+)
Lipotechoic acid
Gram(-)
Porin
Outermembrane = Endotoxin/LPS
Periplasmic space (B-lactamase location)
Both
Flagellum = proteins
Pilus/fimbria = glycoprotein
Spore = keratin-like coat; dipicolinic acid; peptidoglycan, DNA (gram+ only)
Cell envelope
Capsule
Glycocalyx = aderes to surfaces
(Indwelling catheters)
Outer membrane (gram- only)
Periplasm (gram- only)
Cell wall
Cytoplasmic membrane
Stains
Gram
Giemsa
India ink
Capsules (Crypto)
FTA-ABS = syphilis
Intracellular
Pigment-producing
In-vivo biofilm
Endotoxins
Main effects
Macrophage activation (TLR4)
Complement activation
Neutorphil chemotaxis, Histamine (hypotension, edema)
Tissue factor activation
DIC
O antigen + core polysaccharide + lipid A (toxic)
ENDOTOXINS
Edema
NO = Hypotension
DIC/Death
Outer membrane
TNF-a = Fever, Hypotension
O antigen
eXtremely heat stable
IL-1, IL-6 = Fever
Neutrophil chemotaxis
Shock
Bacterial genetics
Plasmids
Gene transfer
O2 requirements
Aerobe — requires O2
Anaerobe — killed by O2 (ferments)
Facultative anaerobe — ferment + can use O2
Microaerophile — Low O2 = optimal (but can do without)
Pathogenesis
Inoculum = # of bacteria
Infectious dose = Infection ID50
Lethal dose = Death ID50
GRAM (+)
Overview
Gram(+) cocci
Gram(+) bacilli
Staph
Overview
S aureus
S epidermidis
Novobiocin sensative
Coagulase(-)
Urease(+)
Normal skin flora
commonly contaminates blood cultures
Biofilm — massive polysaccharide
Prosthetic devices
joint implants
artificial heart valve — (endocarditis),
IV catheters
(usually have to replace valve)
Treatment = Vancomycin - “need big guns for biofilm"
S saprophyticus
Coagulase(-)
Urease(+)
Female genital tract, Perineum (normal flora)
UTI (uncomplicated cystitis) in young women — (#2 cause)
“honeymoon cystitis” = sexually active
Strep
Overview
B-hemolytic
Bacitracin — “B-BRAS"
a-hemolytic
Optochin — “OVRPS"
y-hemolytic
6.5% NaCl growth = Enterococcus(+)
S pyogenes (group A)
S agalactiae (group B)
Vagina colonization
Pregnant = prophylactic Penicillin (swab at 35wk)
Pneumonia, Meningitis, Sepsis - (mainly in Babies)
“Bitchy when PMS when pregnant"
Properties
CAMP factor
enlarges S aureus homolysis area
(+)Hippurate test
(hydrolyzes sodium hippurate)
Capsule — polysaccharide
No capsule
S mutans, S mitis
Oropharynx (normal) — Dental caries
S sanguinis — "sangrias = red like blood"
Subacute bacterial endocarditis — heart valve damage (if have pre-existing)
(Dextrin adheres to fibrin platelet aggregates — why only if pre-existing)
“not afraid Of-the-chin aka Op-to-chin (live in mouth)"
S bovis — (S gallolyticus)
Gut colonization
S gallolyticus (biotype 1)
Bacteremia, Subacute endocarditis
“Bovis in the blood = Cancer in the Colon"
Bacilli
Clostridia = spore forming, obligate anaerobe
C tetani
Tetanospasmin (exotoxin)
Motor axons — Retrograde travel
protease, cleaves SNARE for NT’s, prevents exocytosis of NT
blocks GABA, glycine (inhibitory) from
Renshaw cells in spinal cord
Inhibit overactivity of cells
“wrench-saw” = usually inactivate overactive cells
Symptoms
Spastic paralysis
Trismus (lockjaw)
Risus sardonicus (facial spasm = raised eyebrows, open grin “evil smile”)
Opisthotonus — (exaggerated arching of back)
DTaP vaccine
tetanus-part is toxoid
(toxin conjugated to protein)
Treatment: Metronidazole
C botulinum
Obligate anaerobe
flourish inside anaerobic environment — canned food/honey
Botulinum toxin
protease, cleaves SNARE, prevents exocytosis
blocks ACh release (motor neurons)
“from bad canned of food, juice, honey"
PNS only
cannot cross BBB
Injestion of spores
Floppy Baby syndrome
(babbies lack enough flora to outcompete spores)
Injestion of preformed toxin = adult disease
Descending flaccid paralysis
Diplopia
Ptosis
Multiple people experiencing same symptoms
(opposite of Guianne Barre)
(adults normal flora kill spores)
(preformed in anaerobic “canned” environment)
(preformed toxin — absorbed in gut — blood stream — PNS)
Local injections = botox
Exotoxin A (enterotoxin)
Binds brush border (gut)
Watery diarrhea
accumulation of neutrophils
inflammation, loss of water
cell death
Exotoxin B (cytotoxin)
Cytoskeletal disruption (Actin depolymerization)
Pseudomembranous colitis - membrane covers colon
2º to antibiotic use - (normally in gut, but restricted by normal flora)
especially Clindamycin or Ampicillin
(Ampicillin actually more common, it was just first discovered with
Clindamycin)
“Clean-damycin, if don’t clean your hands properly, you spread"
Spores = transport around hospital
Treatment
Metronidazole, Vancomycin (oral)
(Metronidazole can ironically cause pseudomembranous colitis, but
Vancomycin causes antibiotic resistant species)
(recurrent = Fidaxomicin, fecal microbiota transplant) “Fix-dat"
Lab = stool toxin analysis
(most people have C diff, just not a toxin producing strain)
Obligate anaerobe
Spore forming
Soil = Reservoir
Double zone hemolysis + Anaorobic environment = C perfriengens
Gas-gangreen
a-toxin
Lecthinase (Phospholipase)
degrades tissue cell membranes
Symptoms
Myonecrosis (“gas gangrene")
Crepidis
(due to gas from bacterial carbohydrate metabolism)
Hemolysis
“double zone” on blood agar
(due to a-toxin degrading cell membrane)
Deep penetrating wounds, Major Trauma
Motorcycle accidents
Military combat
(large amount flesh exposed to dirt/dust)
Food poisoning
Spores — survive in undercooked food
Enterotoxin (heat-labile) = food poisoning
Slow onset diarrhea
Injest large amount of spores
Spores germinate, create toxin while in body
(unlike others that create toxin before ingested)
(slow-onset due to time it takes to germinate in gut)
Treatment
Self-limited (usually)
Treatment = Penicillin G (IV)
Bacillus cereus
Spore forming
“Reheated rice syndrome”
(also Tacos or Pasta)
Cereulide - (preformed enterotoxin)
Nausea, Vomiting (1-5hr)
Enterotoxin
Diarrhea (8-18hr)
Diptheria toxin
Subunit A
EF-2 (protein synthesis) inhibition via ADP-ribosylation
(EF-2 = translocation of ribosome)
Subunit B = binding
encoded by B-prophage
Lymphadenopathy (“bull’s neck”), Arrhythmias, Myocarditis, Pseudomembranous
pharyngitis (grayish-white)
“LAMP"
Nerve demyelination (oropharynx)
Lab tests
Metachromatic (blue and red) Granules
+ Elek test = toxic or non-toxic form
Tellurite agar, Loeffler’s medium = diagnosis - “Love on the Tele"
Treatment = Anti-toxin + Penicillin
DTaP vaccine = toxoid vaccine
"ABCDEFG = ADP-ribosylation, B-prophage, Corynebacterium Diptheriae, EF-2,
Granules"
Listeria monocytogenes
Soil
Immunocompromised
Pulmonary infections (immunocompromised), Brain abcesses (rare)
mimics TB, but (-)PPD
Cutaneous infections after trauma
Treatment = Sulfonamides (TMP-SMX)
GRAM(-)
Overview
Gram(-) cocci
Gram(-) zoonotics
Mycobacteria
Spirochetes
Gram-indeterminate
gram(-) bacilli
COCCI
Neisseria
N meningitidis
Capsule = polysaccharide
inhibits phagocytosis
Maltose(+)
Sickle cell/Apslenic = more suseptible
LOS — (Lipo-Oligo-Saccharides)
Neisserias LPS
Very high production = Blebbing off
Meningitis (acute) — Nausea, Headache, Fever, Chills, Photophobia
Meningococcemia (disseminated) = multi-organ disease (Severe!)
1. Inflammatory response (massive)
LOS proteins = blebbing (when outgrow themselves)
Capillary leakage — Hypovolemic shock
2. Petechial rash = thrombocytopenia
Little red dots on skin
Small vessel thrombrosis
NEVER a good sign, disease likely progressing to DIC
3. DIC - (Disseminated-Intravascular-Coagulation)
Bleeding + Clotting — “in all the wrong locations"
4. Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome
Hemorrhagic adrenal glands
DIC + Hypovolemic shock (vasoconstriction)
(bilateral - due to DIC) = cortasol(-) — fucks up electrolytes! = MEDICAL
EMERGENCY!
Hypovolemic (from inflammatory response), leads to Peripheral
Vasoconstriction, Adrenal insufficiency = worse shock!
Septic shock
Respiratory, Oral transmission
Nasopharynx colonized — Hematogenous spread
Military recruits, College dorm rooms
Treatment = Ceftriaxone, Penicillin G
Prophylactic = Rifampin, Ciprofloxacin, Ceftriaxone (for close contact)
(mortality ~15%)
Vaccine = conjugated/capsular saccarides
Type A, C, D (not B) — Covers 4/5 common serotypes
College/Military/adolescents 10-12y/o
CSF = WBC(++), Glucose(--), Protein(+)
N gonorrheae = Gonorrhea
Bacilli — enteric
Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Serratia
Lactose(+)
MacConkey = pink(+)
Nosocomial = (Hospital aquired)
Multi-drug resistant
Treatment = Carbapenam
Pneumonia, UTI's
“Enteric bacilli, MacConkey agar = E coli or these"
Klebsiella
Enterobacter
Motile
Serratia
Salmonella
Facultative intracellular (M cells), Immotile, Acid stable (need less than salmonella to
cause infection)
Hektoen agar = green (vs salmonella = black)
Invade M cells (in pyrus patches) — present antigens
M cells phagocytise, but Shigella escapes degredation
Actin filaments (hijacks hosts - uses as tail)
Type III secretion = inflamatory cytokines
Cell-to-cell spread
Shiga-toxin
60S ribosomal inhibition (protein synthesis inhibition)
Endothelial damage
Diarrhea (bloody, inflammatory)
Shigella dysenteriae
Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) — (young children)
Anemia, Thrombocytopenia, Renal failure (acute, glomerular damage)
(kid who has bloody diarrhea, and just as about to get better has renal
failure)
E coli
MacConkey = pink(+)
Lactose(+), Catalase(+)
EMB agar = green
Virulence factors
Fimbriae (pilli) = UTI (#1), Cystitis, Pyelonephritis
Kapsule = Pneumonia, Neonatal meningitis (only if K-antigen)
LPS endotoxin = Sepsis (#1 gram(-))
EHEC = STEC - (Shiga toxin-producing E coli)
Sorbitol(-) = distingueshes from other E coli
Diarrhea (bloody)
Dysentery (infection of intestines, severe diarrhea w/ blood and mucus)
(Toxin alone causes Necrosis, Inflammation)
Shiga-like toxin
60S ribosome inhibition — protein-synthesis(-)
Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS)
Anemia, Thrombocytopenia, Renal failure (acute)
Endothelium swelling, Blood vessel narrowing
Microthrombi on damaged endothelium
(mechanical hemolysis, platelet consumption, decreased renal
blood flow)
O157:H7 = most common serotype in US
Transmission = undercooked meat
ETEC
Travelers’ diarrhea (watery) = EnTeroToxins
Heat-labile = cAMP(+)
similar to cholera toxin
Heat-stable = +cGMP
similar to yersinia toxin
“Stable on the Ground, Labile in the Air"
(no inflammation or invasion)
Transmission = water
EPEC
Diarrhea (Pediatrics)
Intestinal adhesion, Villi flattens, Inflammation
(no toxic = almost always ; Shiga-like = very rarely)
EIEC
Intestinal mucosa (Invasive)
Necrosis, Inflammation (similar to Shigella)
Dysentery
(no toxin)
Yersinia
Yersinia enterocolitica
Diarrhea (bloody)
Disseminated = Fever, Leukosystosis, Abcesses (intestine)
Pseudo-appendicitis
(RL-abdominal pain: Mesenteric adenitis/Terminal ileitis)
Autoimmune reactive arthritis (Righter syndrome) — Adults
Conjunctivitis, Urethritis, Arthitis
“can’t See, can’t Pee, can’t Climb a tree"
Transmission = Puppy feces, Milk / Pork (contaminated)
Toddlers most effected
Cold resistant
Bacteroides fragilis
Comma-shaped
Campylobacter jejuni
Vibrio cholerae
Comma-shaped, Oxidase(+)
Acid-labile — Alkaline media growth
(lower acidity of stomach - increased chance of infection — eg. PPI's)
Diarrhea - "profuse rice-water"
Fimbrae attachment
Enterotoxin (A-B)
Gs activation — cAMP(+)
(ADP-ribosylation of Gs-a subunit)
Transmission = Fecal-Oral
Developing countries (endemic)
Treatment = Oral rehydration
Pseudomonas aerginosa
Proteus mirabilis
Bacilli — respiratory
HaEMOPhilus influenzae
Bordetella pertussis
Phases
Pertussis toxin
inhibits Gi — cAMP(+)
[Insulin(+) — Sugar(-) — PMN response(-) — Phagocytosis(-)]
Lymphocytosis = stimulates release from lymph nodes
prevents extravation out of blood vessels
Adenylate cyclase toxin
(+)cAMP, (same as EF from anthracis)
Edema
Tracheal toxin
Ciliary inhibition (trachea)
(part of peptidoglycan wall)
Resperatory droplet transmission
Filimentous Hemagglutinin (Pili) = attachment
Treatment = Macrolides
DTaP vaccine = acellular Pertussusis antigens
Ca alginate swab — Potato agar or Regan-Lowe agar
Legionella pneumophila
Bacilli — Zoonotics
Brucella
Mycobacterium
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Mycobacterium leprae
Spirochetes
Leptospira interrogans
Gram(-) spirochetes
Crook at end — resembles “shepherd’s staff”
Reservoir = rats, dogs
Excreted in Urine — (Water with Animal urine)
Surfers in tropics (Hawaii)
Water sports associated — (not the R. Kelly type)
Septicemic phase
Early
Flu-like
Myalgias (calves)
Conjuctival suffusion
Erythema w/o exudate
(or the surfer might just be high)
Photophobia
Severe = Weil diseaes (biphasic
Hemorrhagic diathesis
Renal failure (interstitial nephritis)
Azotemia
Liver failure
Jaundice
Meningitis
Antibody appearance — ends phase
(organism clears, symptoms resolve)
Immune phase
Leptospira in urine
Treatment = Penicllin G
(Prophylaxis = Doxycycline)
Treatment = Penecillin G
Jarisch Herxheimer rxn possible
brisk treponema lysis — release LPS
Fever, Chills
1º — 6wks after exposure
Painless chancre (genital)
local small vessel invasion
ischemic necrosis
takes out nerves, hence painless
Chancre resolves in 3-6wks
2º = Systemic — 6wks after chancre heals
Maculopapular rash (palms, soles)
Condylomata lata (smooth, moist, painless, wart-like white lesions on genitals)
(Meningitis, Hepatitis, Arthritis)
3º — “causes a NAGing infection” — Years later
Neurosyphilis (tabes dorsalis, “general paresis”), Aortitis (vasa
vasorum), Gummas (chronic granulomas) — granulomas of soft tissue/bone
Argyll Robertson pupil - “prostitutes pupil”
(constricts with accomodation, non-reactive to light)
(Broad-based ataxia, Romberg(+), Charcot joint, Stroke w/o hypertension)
Congenital
Congenital syphilis
Saddle nose, Saber shins, Teeth (Hutchingson’s, Mulberry
molars), Rhagades, Snuffles
Deafness (CN VIII)
“saddle teeth, knoched nose, saber shins”
Stillbirth, Other anomalies
Transplacental transmission
Prevention = treat mother early in pregnancy
VDRL — (Vernereal Disease Research Lab)
Quantitative, Sensitive (non-specific)
False positives
Viral infection (mono, hepetitis), Drugs (IV), Rheumatic factor, Lupus,
Leprosy
detect antibodies react w/ beef Cardiolipin
FTA-ABS = Specific/sensitive
(detects anti-treponema antibodies)
Indeterminate
Chlamydia - “Chlamys = cloak (intracellular)"
Obligate intracellular
Muramic acid lacking (peptidoglycan) in cell wall
B-lactam antibiotics NOT effective
Inclusion bodies - cytoplasmic
Giemsa
NAAT test
(nucleic acid amplification test = PCR)
C. trachomatis
Reactive arthritis
Auto-immune disorder
(Reiter's syndrome = Uveitis(eye),Urethritis,Arthritis)
Sacroiliac, Knee, Other
HLA-B27 associated
“can’t See, can’t Pee, can’t climb a tree"
Serotypes
A,B,C — “Africa, Blindness, Chronic infection"
Blindness — (#1 worldiwide)
“A,B,C with your eyes"
Chronic infection — (chronic conjunctivitis)
(inflammation — corneal vascularization/scarring)
Africa
Transmission = Hand-Eye, Fomites
D-K — STI
Watery discharge
Urethritis
(can be asymptomatic)
PID
Fallopian tube damage — EKtopic pregnancy
Complications
Liver capsule infect — Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome
L1-3 — LGV
LymphoGranuloma Venereum
Painless genital ulcers (small, shallow, heal rapidly)
Buboes — Inguinal lymph nodes (ulcerate, swollen, painful)
Also an STD
Congenital (D-K)
Pneumonia
Staccato cough
Conjunctivitis
7+ days
(vs. Gonorrhea, which is <5 days — “gonoREA REActs quicker in
baby eyes”)
C. pneumoniae
Aerosol transmission
Atypical (walking) pneumonia
Elderly
C. psittaci
Avian reservoir
Bird poop = Transmission
Pneumonia
Pet shop workers, Veternarians
Treatment = Azithromycin (Macrolides), Doxycycline
+ Ceftriaxone for N. gonorrhea
(Macrolides/Tetracyclines used because Chlamydia is intracellular — need an
antibiotic that can enter cells)
Replication — 2 forms
Elementary body (small, dense) — exist outside cells
Enfectious, Enters cell via Endocytosis
Transforms to Reticular body
Reticulate body (active form) — use host ATP
Replicates in cell by fission
Reorganizes into elementary bodies
Obligate intracellular
Spore forming
Q-fever (no rash)
Headache, Fever, Pneumonia
Hepetitis, Endocarditis (sometimes)
closely related to Rickettsia genus, however:
“Q fever is Queer — no rash, no vector, causitive organism can survive
outside in endospore form”
Farm animals = reservoir
Aerosol transmission (to humans)
Farmers, Veterinarians
Contaminated spore-like-structures in animal feces
(unlike other rickettsia sp., it does not require an arthropod vector
because it can survive as a spore)
Treatment = Supportive or Tetracycline
Culture(-) endocarditis (rarely)
CDC manditory report
Gardnerella vaginalis
Rickettsia
RANDOM NOTES
Bloody diarrhea
Watery diarrhea
Rash causing
Polyoma (BK)
Adeno
Anaerobes
Clostridium
Actinomyces
Bacteroides
Fusobacterium
Aerobes
HUS
Shigella
EHEC
Pseudo-appendicitis
Yersinia enterocolitica
Food poisoning
Food related
TORCHeS (some)
HSV-2
VZV
CMV
80-90% asymptomatic
Hydrops fetalis; Blueberry muffin rash; Hepatomegaly/Jaundice
Sensorineural hearing loss; Ventriculomegaly / Periventricular calcifications (brain);
Seizures
Rubella
Histology:
Rabies = Negri bodies
EBV = Downey/Atypical lymphocytes (atypical CD8 cells)
CMV = Owl eyes
HSV = Cowdry
HPV = Kiliocytes (atypical cells on PAP)
Pox = Inclusion bodies (Guarnieri)
Accessory organs
Spontaneous peritonitis
Adults — E coli
Children — Streptoccous pneumoniae
Symptoms
Ascites
Treatment = Cefotaxime
Ascending cholangitis
E coli
Duct obstruction — bacterial infection
Life threatening
Fever
Jaundice
RUQ pain
Multiple liver abscesses = #1 cause
Treatment = Piperacillin-tazobactam + drainage
Liver abscess
Causes
E coli
Entamoeba histoytica
#1 cause liver abscess Worldwide — (NOT in US)
Bacteroides fragilis
Enterococcus faecalis
R lobe = most common
Epidemiology
1/25 hospitalized patients has an HAI
722,000 HAIs in US acute care hospitals (2011)
75,000 pts w/ HAIs died during hospitaliztion
Causes
Surgical site infections ~50%
Genital ulcers
HSV
Painful lesions
Treponema pallidum
Non-painful ulcer
Haemophilus ducreyi — Chancroid
Gram(-) rod — “School of fish” pattern
Erythematous papule — Pustule — Painful ulcer
“You do cry with ducreyi!"
Chlamydia trachomatis L1-2
Klebsiella granulomatis — granuloma inguinale
Africa tropics
Painless
Beefy red bump + Granulation tissue — bleeds easily
Ixodes tick
Mycobacterium marinum
Mycobacterium scrofulaceum
Moraxella catarrhalis
Gram(-) diplococcus
Bordetella pertussis
Food poisoning
Granulomas / Gummas
AIDS diarrhea
Cryptosporidium — CD4<50
Acid fast + Larger, extracellular
MAI — CD4<50
Acid fast + Intracellular
Microsporidia, Isospora
Adenovirus, Astrovirus
Campylobacter, Listeria, Salmonella, Shigella
HSV-1, HSV-2
Temporal lobes — preferentially involved
CMV
C difficile
Osteomyelitis mechanisms