microbiology lec5
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Medical MicrobiologyMedical Microbiology
Lecture 6Lecture 6Dr. Saleh M Y OTHDr. Saleh M Y OTH
PhDPhDMedical Molecular Biotechnology and Infectious DiseasesMedical Molecular Biotechnology and Infectious Diseases
11/10/201011/10/2010IMS - MSUIMS - MSU
Systemic bactreiology
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Streptococci and its DiseasesStreptococci and its Diseases
Systemic bactreiology
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Staphylococci- Coagulase-negative staphylococcus; frequently
involved in nosocomial and opportunistic infections
- S. epidermidis – lives on skin and mucous membranes; endocarditis, bacteremia, UTI
- S. saprophyticus – infrequently lives on skin, intestine, vagina; UTI
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Staphylococci are gram positive cocci arranged in grape like clusters.
The genus Staphylococcus includes 3 species of medical importance;
Staph. aureus,
Staph. epidermidis and
Staph. saprophyticus.
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General Characteristics of the Staphylococci
- Common inhabitant of the skin and mucous membranesCommon inhabitant of the skin and mucous membranes
- Spherical cells arranged in irregular clustersSpherical cells arranged in irregular clusters
- Gram-positive Gram-positive
- Lack spores and flagellaLack spores and flagella
- May have capsuleMay have capsule
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Staphylococcus aureus morphology
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S. aureus
- Grows in large, round, opaque colonies
- Optimum temperature of 37oC
- Facultative anaerobe
- Withstands high salt, extremes in pH, and high temperatures
- Produces many virulence factors
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S. aureus
Major human pathogenMajor human pathogen
Habitat - part of normal flora in some humans Habitat - part of normal flora in some humans and animalsand animals
Source of organism - can be infected human Source of organism - can be infected human host, carrier, fomite or environmenthost, carrier, fomite or environment
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Natural history of disease
- Many neonates, children, adults -intermittently colonised by S. aureus
- Usual sites; skin, nasopharynx, perineum
- Breach in mucosal barriers; can enter underlying tissue
- Characteristic abscesses; Disease due to toxin production
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Grouping for Clinical Purposes
1. Coagulase positive Staphylococci- Staphylococcus aureus
2. Coagulase negative Staphylococci- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Staphylococcus saprophyticus
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Diseases- Due to direct effect of organism
- Local lesions of skin
- Deep abscesses
- Systemic infections
- Toxin mediated
- Food poisoning
- toxic shock syndrome
- Scalded skin syndrome
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Factors predisposing to S. aureus infections
Host factors
- Breach in skin- Chemotaxis defects
- Opsonisation defects
- Neutrophil functional defects
- Diabetes mellitus
- Presence of foreign bodies
Pathogen Factors- Catalase (counteracts
host defences)
- Coagulase
- Hyaluronidase
- Lipases (Imp. in disseminating infection)
- B lactasamase(ass. With antibiotic resistance)
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Skin Lesions
- Boils وخراج تقرح
- Styes دمامل
- Furuncles (infection of hair follicle)
- Carbancles (infection of several hair follicles)
- Wound infections (progressive appearance of swelling and pain in a surgical wound after about 2 days from the surgery)
- Impetigo (skin lesion with blisters that break and become covered with crusting exudate)
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Deep abscessses
- Can be single or multiple
- Breast abscess can occur in 1-3% of nursing mothers in puerperiem
- Can produce mild to severe disease
- Other sites - kidney, brain from septic foci in blood
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Systemic Infections
1. With obvious focus متقرحة بؤرة
- Osteomyelitis, septic arthritis
2. No obvious focus- heart (infective endocarditis)
- Brain (brain abscesses)
3. Ass. With predisposing factors - multiple abscesses, septicaemia(IV drug users)
- Staphylococcal pneumonia (Post viral)
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Toxin Mediated Diseases
1. Staphylococcal food poisoning- Due to production of entero toxins
- heat stable entero toxin acts on gut
- produces severe vomiting following a very short incubation period
- Resolves on its own within about 24 hours
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Toxic shock syndrome
- High fever, diarrhoea, shock and erythematous skin rash which desquamate
- Mediated via ‘toxic shock syndrome toxin’
- 10% mortality rate
- Described in two groups of patients- Ass. With young women using tampones
during menstruation
- Described in young children and men
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Scalded skin syndrome
- Disease of young children- Mediated through minor Staphylococcal
infection by ‘epidermolytic toxin’ producing strains
- Mild erythema and blistering of skin followed by shedding of sheets of epidermis
- Children are otherwise healthy and most eventually recover
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Virulence factors of S. aureus
Enzymes:
- Coagulase; coagulates plasma and blood; produced by 97% of human isolates; diagnostic
- Hyaluronidase; digests connective tissue
- Staphylokinase; digests blood clots
- DNase; digests DNA
- Lipases; digest oils; enhances colonization on skin
- Penicillinase; inactivates penicillin21
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Virulence factors of S. aureus
Toxins:- Hemolysins (α, β, γ, δ); lyse red blood cells
- Leukocidin; lyses neutrophils and macrophages
- Enterotoxin; induce gastrointestinal distress
- Exfoliative toxin; separates the epidermis from the dermis
- Toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST); induces fever, vomiting, shock, systemic organ damage
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Epidemiology and Pathogenesis
- Present in most environments frequented by humans
- Readily isolated from fomites
- Carriage rate for healthy adults is 20-60%
- Carriage is mostly in anterior nares, skin, nasopharynx, intestine
- Predisposition to infection include: poor hygiene and nutrition, tissue injury, pre-existing primary infection, diabetes, immunodeficiency
- Increase in community acquired methicillin resistance - MRSA
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Staphylococcal DiseaseRange from localized to systemic
Localized cutaneous infections; invade skin through wounds, follicles, or glands- Folliculitis; superficial inflammation of hair follicle;
usually resolved with no complications but can progress- Furuncle; boil; inflammation of hair follicle or sebaceous
gland progresses into abscess or pustule بثرة
- Carbuncle; larger and deeper lesion created by aggregation and interconnection of a cluster of furuncles
- Impetigo; bubble-like swellings that can break and peel away; most common in newborns
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Bullous impetigo
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Cutaneous lesions of S. aureus
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Systemic infections
- Osteomyelitis; infection is established in
the metaphysis; abscess forms
- Bacteremia; primary origin is bacteria from another infected site or medical devices; endocarditis possible
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Staphylococcal osteomyelitis in a long bone
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Staphylococcal Disease
Toxigenic disease - Food intoxication – ingestion of heat stable
enterotoxins; gastrointestinal distress
- Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome – toxin induces bright red flush, blisters, then desquamation of the epidermis
- Toxic shock syndrome – toxemia leading to shock and organ failure
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Effects of staphylococcal toxins on skin
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Toxic Shock Syndrome Toxin
- Superantigen- Superantigen
- Non-specific - Non-specific binding of toxin to binding of toxin to receptors triggers receptors triggers excessive excessive immune responseimmune response
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TSS Symptoms
- 8-12 h post infection
- Fever
- Susceptibility to Endotoxins
- Hypotension
- Diarrhea
- Multiple Organ System Failure
- Erythroderma (rash)
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TSS Treatment
- Clean any obvious wounds and remove any - Clean any obvious wounds and remove any foreign bodiesforeign bodies
- Prescription of appropriate antibiotics to eliminate - Prescription of appropriate antibiotics to eliminate bacteriabacteria
- Monitor and manage all other symptoms, e.g. - Monitor and manage all other symptoms, e.g. administer IV fluids administer IV fluids
- For severe cases, administer methylprednisone, - For severe cases, administer methylprednisone, a corticosteriod inhibitor of TNF-a synthesisa corticosteriod inhibitor of TNF-a synthesis
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Identification of Staphylococcus in Samples
- Frequently isolated from pus, tissue Frequently isolated from pus, tissue exudates, sputum, urine, and bloodexudates, sputum, urine, and blood
- Cultivation, catalase, biochemical testing, - Cultivation, catalase, biochemical testing, coagulasecoagulase
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Catalase test
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Clinical Concerns and Treatment
- 95% have penicillinase and are resistant to penicillin and ampicillin
- MRSA – methicillin-resistant S. aureus; carry multiple resistance- Some strains have resistance to all major drug groups
except vancomycin
- Abscesses have to be surgically perforated
- Systemic infections require intensive lengthy therapy
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Prevention of Staphylococcal Infections
- Universal precautions by healthcare providers to prevent nosocomial infections
- Hygiene and cleansing
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Antibiotic sensitivity pattern
- Very variable and not predictable- Very important In Patient Management- Mechanisms
1. B lactamase production - plasmid mediated- Has made S. aureus resistant to penicillin group of antibiotics -
90% of S. aureus (Gp A)- β-lactamase stable penicillins (cloxacillin, oxacillin, methicillin)
used
2. Alteration of penicillin binding proteins- (Chromosomal mediated)- Has made S. aureus resistant to β-lactamase stable penicillins- 10-20% S. aureus Gp (B) GH Colombo/THP resistant to all
Penicillins and Cephalasporins)
- Vancomycin is the drug of choice
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DIAGNOSIS
1. In all pus forming lesions - Gram stain and culture of pus
2. In all systemic infections- Blood culture
3. In infections of other tissues- Culture of relevant tissue or exudate
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S. epidermidis
- Skin commensal
- Has predilection for plastic material
- Ass. With infection of IV lines, prosthetic heart valves, shunts
- Causes urinary tract infection in cathetarised patients
- Treatment should be aided with ABST
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S. saprophyticus
- Skin commensal
- Imp. cause of UTI in sexually active young women.
- Usually sensitive to wide range of antibiotics