Title: Chapter 18
1- Chapter 18
- The Gram-Negative Cocci
2Chapter 18- Neisseria Species and Moraxella
catarrhalis
- General characteristics
- Aerobic, gram-negative diplococci
- Nonmotile, capnophilic
- Oxidase positive (one of the most important
features) - Catalase positive
- Primary pathogens
- N. gonorrhoeae (ALWAYS pathogenic)
- N. meningitidis (May be carried as commensal in
URT)
3Chapter 18- Neisseria Species and Moraxella
catarrhalis
- Habitat
- Upper respiratory tract
- Genitourinary tract
- Alimentary(Digestive) tract
4Chapter 18- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Virulence factors
- Fimbrae (common pili)- enhance the ability of
bacterial cells to adhere to host cells and to
each other - Lipopolysaccharide resembles that of other
gram-negative organisms prevents phagocytosis - Capsule
- Cell membrane proteins
- IgA protease- cleaves IgA on mucosal surfaces
5Chapter 18- Neisseria gonorrhoeae Clinical
Infections
- Pyogenic (pus-producing) infection of columnar
and transitional epithelial cells anywhere they
are found (urethral, endocervix, anal canal,
pharynx, and conjunctiva) - Disease in the male
- Incubation period 2 to 7 days
- Transmitted only by intimate sexual contact
- 95 show symptoms of acute infection
- Symptoms include dysuria, urethral discharge
- Complications include epididymitis and urethral
stricture, and prostatitis - Specimen is purulent discharge after urinating
6Chapter 18- Neisseria gonorrhoeae Clinical
Infections
- Disease in the female
- 20 to 80 are asymptomatic
- Symptoms (if symptomatic) include burning or
frequency of urination, vaginal discharge - Fever and abdominal pain
- Complications include pelvic inflammatory disease
(PID), sterility and ectopic pregnancy
7Chapter 18- Neisseria gonorrhoeae Infections in
Other Sites
- Disseminated gonococcal disease ( 1 of
infections) - Acute form has the following symptoms fever,
chills, malaise, intermittent bacteremia, and
skin lesions - If untreated will progress to septic joint form
of the disease (inflamed joints, swollen, hot,
full of pus and fluid) - Gonococcal arthritis occurs as a result of
disseminated gonococcal bacteremia
8Chapter 18- Neisseria gonorrhoeaeInfections in
Other Sites
- Disease in children
- In infancy, an eye infection (ophthalmia
neonatorum) may occur during vaginal delivery - May cause blindness if not treated
- Infection is preventable with the application of
antibiotic eye drops at birth - Extragenital infections
- Pharyngitis
- Anorectal infections
9Chapter 18- Laboratory DiagnosisNeisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Clinical specimens
- Genital sites
- Female endocervix
- Male urethra
- Anal
- Oral/pharyngeal
- Eye
- Blood/joint fluids
- If specimen is from site other than genital, lab
must be notified, as N. gonorrhoeae is not
ordinarily looked for as a pathogen in other body
sites (i.e. throat)
10Chapter 18
- Specimen collection
- Dacron/ Rayon swabs preferred
- Swabs transported in Amies medium with charcoal
- Inoculate media within 6 hours of collection,
avoid drying
11Chapter 18- Laboratory DiagnosisNeisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Transport media
- Transgrow or JEMBEC
- JEMBEC James E Martin Biological Environmental
Chamber
JEMBEC
12Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Identification
- Morphology
- Gram-negative, kidney-beanshaped diplococci
A direct gram-stained smear of male urethral
discharge showing intracellular gram-negative
diplococci
13Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Intracellular g dc in symptomatic males
correlates 95 with positive culture for N.
gonorrhoeae - Intracellular g- dc in females results in
positive N. gonorrhoeae culture only 50-70, due
to other g- dc vaginal flora - Urethral g.s. with gt 5 PMN/oif but NO bacteria
may indicate other genital infection, such as
Chlamydia or Ureaplasma
14Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Identification
- Inoculated culture media must be incubated at 350
C in 3 to 5 CO2 or candle jar - Colony morphology on modified Thayer-Martin (MTM)
agar - Small, gray
- Translucent, raised
- Fresh growth must be used for testing, because N.
gonorrhoeae produces autolytic enzymes
15Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Thayer-Martin agar is chocolate agar with
vancomycin, colistin, and nystatin - MTM contains the above trimethoprin
- These antibiotics will inhibit the growth of MOST
bacteria, but N. gonorrhoeae is catalase and
oxidase - Specimen MUST be plated on warmed media ASAP
(need for transport media if not close to a lab)
16Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
Candle extinction jar with inoculated MTM agar
plates Only white candles must be used colored
ones may inhibit growth
17Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Identification
- Oxidase test ()
-
Carbohydrate utilization test acid produced
only in the glucose tube indicates that the
isolate is N. gonorrheoae
18Chapter 18-Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
- Immunologic methods
- Use colonies from primary plate
- Organisms do not need to be viable
- Fluorescent antibody technique
- Coagglutination
- Non-culture methods
- Use direct patient specimen
- ELISA, nucleic acid probe, and PCR testing
- Expensive usually used in high-risk populations
with large volume of testing - Unable to perform on all sources
19Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
gonorrhoeae
- If N. gonorrheoae is cultured from children or in
suspected sexual abuse cases, at least two
different forms of organism identification should
be performed to withstand legal scrutiny - PPNG Penicillinase Producing Neisseria
gonorrhoeae - First seen in 1976
- Plasmid-mediated
- Beta-lactamase testing should always be done on
N. gonorrheoae - Treatment Penicillin
- Tetracycline if beta-lactamase positive strain.
Can also use cephalosporins and flouroquinolones
20Chapter 18- Neisseria meningitidis
- General characteristics
- Exclusively human parasite
- Exist as harmless member of normal upper
respiratory flora - Similar to Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Antigenic structures
- Capsular polysaccharide nine serotypes
A, B, C, D, X, Y, Z, W135, 29E. - Contribute to invasive properties by inhibiting
phagocytosis - Same virulence factors as N. gonorrhoeae
- Vaccine available, but poorly antigenic in
children lt 2 years old
21Chapter 18- Neisseria meningitidisClinical
Infections
- Bacterial meningitis
- Transmission is by respiratory droplets and
requires both close contact (ex dormitories,
military barracks, in institutions) and lack of
specific antibody (susceptibility) - Symptoms include fever, headache, stiff neck,
nausea, vomiting, and purulent meningitis with
increased WBCs - Serotypes B and C most common in US
- Other infections include meningococcemia,
pneumonia, purulent arthritis, endophthalmitis - May be seen in genital tract with oral-genital
contact
22Chapter 18- Neisseria meningitidisClinical
Infections
- Bacteremia
- (meningococcemia)
- Appearance of skin petechiae due to hemorrhage
Hemorrhage in the adrenal glands in
Waterhouse-Fridericksen syndrome
23Chapter 18- Laboratory DiagnosisNeisseria
meningitidis
- Identification
- Examine direct smear from CSF for intra extra
cellular g- dc - Examine smear for halo
- Other body sites include nasopharyngeal swabs,
sputum, and urogenital specimens
Gram-stained smear of CSF showing the extra
cellular and intracellular gram-negative
diplococci
24Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
meningitidis
- Identification
- Examine cultures on blood agar chocolate agar
in CO2 - Oxidase-test positive
- Conventional CTA carbohydrates for biochemical
identification (glucose and maltose) or
immunologic methods are available for serogrouping
Neisseria meningitidis growing on sheep blood
agar (right) and chocolate agar (left)
25Chapter 18- Laboratory Diagnosis Neisseria
meningitidis
- Other tests
- DNase negative
- Nitrate reduction negative
- Latex agglutination from CSF
- Counterimmunologic electrophoresis
- Other molecular diagnostics
26Chapter 18- Neisseria meningitidisTreatment
- Penicillin
- Other options rifampin or sulfonamide
27Chapter 18- Neisseria lactamicaHabitat
- Normal flora of nasopharynx
28Chapter 18- Neisseria lactamicaLaboratory
Diagnosis
- Identification
- Colony morphology on chocolate is grayish white
- Carbohydrate utilization
- Dextrose, maltose, lactose positive
- Sucrose negative
- DNase negative
29Chapter 18- Moraxella catarrhalis (Branhamella)
- Normal commensal of the respiratory tract (humans
only) - Has become an important opportunistic pathogen
30Chapter 18- Moraxella catarrhalis
(Branhamella)Clinical Infections
- Clinical infections
- Pneumonia
- Sinusitis
- Otitis media (3rd most common cause)
31Chapter 18- Moraxella catarrhalis (Branhamella)
- Predisposing factors
- Advanced age
- Immunodeficiency
- Neutropenia
- Other debilitating diseases
32Chapter 18- Moraxella catarrhalis
- Colonies appear smooth with a grayish- white
color - When colonies pushed with loop, they scoot
across media
Moraxella catarrhalis growing on chocolate agar
after 48 hours of incubation
33Chapter 18- Moraxella catarrhalis
Direct smear from an otitis media sample showing
intracellular gram-negative diplococci M.
catarrhalis was identified from cultures. M.
catarrhalis may resist decolorization.
34Chapter 18- Moraxella catarrhalis
(Branhamella)Laboratory Diagnosis
- Oxidase positive
- Catalase positive
- Catarrhalis Disc positive
- All CTA sugars negative
- Produce beta- lactamase
- DNase positive
35Chapter 18- Moraxella catarrhalisTreatment
36Chapter 18- Identification of Selected
Neisseria Species Moraxella