Title: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma
1Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma
2Family Mycoplasmataceae
- Genus Mycoplasma
- Species M. pneumoniae
- Species M. hominis
- Species M. genitalium
- Genus Ureaplasma
- Species U. urealyticum
3Diseases Caused by Mycoplasma
N.B. Other organisms infect humans but their
disease association is not known.
4Morphology and Physiology
- Smallest free-living bacteria (0.2 - 0.8 m)
- Small genome size
- Require complex media for growth
- Facultative anaerobes
- Except M. pneumoniae - strict aerobe
- Lack a cell wall
- Grow slowly by binary fission
- Fried egg colonies
- M. pneumoniae colonies have a granular appearance
5Fried Egg Colonies of Mycoplasmas
6Morphology and Physiology
- Smallest free-living bacteria
- Small genome size
- Require complex media for growth
- Facultative anaerobes
- Except M.. pneumoniae - strict aerobe
- Lack a cell wall
- Grow slowly by binary fission
- Fried egg colonies
- Ureaplasma - T strains
- Require sterols for growth
7Differentiation of Species
- M. pneumoniae - glucose
- M. hominis - arginine
- U. urealyticum - urea
- M. genitalium - difficult to culture
8Pathogenesis - Mycoplasma
- Adherence
- P1 pili (M. pneumoniae)
- Movement of cilia ceases
- Clearance mechanism stops resulting in cough
- Toxic metabolic products
- Peroxide and superoxide
- Inhibition of catalase
- Immunopathogenesis
- Activate macrophages
- Stimulate cytokine production
- Suprerantigen (M. pneumoniae)
9Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- Tracheobronchitis
- Atypical pneumonia (walking pneumonia)
10Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae
- Occurs worldwide
- No seasonal variation
- Proportionally higher in summer and fall
- Epidemics occur every 4-8 year
11Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae
- Spread by aerosol route (Confined populations)
- Disease of the young (5-20 years), although all
ages are at risk
12Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae
- Estimated pneumonia in USA per year 2
million - Estimated respiratory disease in USA per year
20 million - Non-reportable disease
13Clinical Syndrome - M. pneumoniae
- Tracheobronchitis
- 70-80 of infections
- Pneumonia
- Approximately 10 of infections
- Mild disease but long duration
- Primary atypical pneumonia
- Walking pneumonia
14Clinical Syndrome - M. pneumoniae
- Incubation - 2-3 weeks
- Fever, headache and malaise
- Persistent non-productive cough
- Respiratory symptoms
- Radiological signs precede symptoms
- Organisms persist
- Slow resolution
- Rarely fatal
15Immunity - M. pneumoniae
- Complement activation
- Alternative pathway
- Phagocytic cells
- Antibodies
- IgA important
- Delayed type hypersensitivity
- More severe disease (immunopathogenesis)
16Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae
- Microscopy
- Difficult to stain
- Can help eliminate other organisms
- Culture (definitive diagnosis)
- Sputum (usually scant) or throat washings
- Special transport medium needed
- Must suspect M. pneumoniae
- May take 2-3 weeks
17Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae
- Serology
- Complement fixation
- May take 4-6 weeks
- Fourfold rise in titer
- Cold agglutinins
- 1/3 - 2/3 of patients
- I antigen
- Appear first
- Non-specific
- Presumptive diagnosis
- ELISA
- Not commercially available
18Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae
- Molecular diagnosis
- PCR-based tests are being developed and these are
expected to be the diagnostic test of choice in
the future.
19Treatment and PreventionM. pneumoniae
- Treatment
- Tetracycline or erythromycin
- Newer fluoroquinolones
- Cant use cell wall synthesis inhibitors
- Prevention
- Avoid close contact
- No vaccine
20M. hominis, M. genitalium andU. urealyticum
- Clinical syndromes
- M. hominis - pyleonephritis, pelvic inflammatory
disease and postpartum fever - M. genitalium - nongonococcal urethritis
- U. urealyticum - nongonococcal urethritis
- Epidemiology
- Colonization at birth - usually cleared
- Colonization with M. hominis - 15
- Colonization with U. urealyticum - 45 -75
- Colonization with M. genitalium - ??
21M. hominis, M. genitalium and U. urealyticum
- Laboratory diagnosis
- Culture (except M. genitalium)
- Treatment and prevention
- Treatment
- Tetracycline or erythromycin
- Prevention
- Abstinence or barrier protection
- No vaccine