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Chapter 23, Chapter 24

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Title: Chapter 23, Chapter 24


1
Chapter 23, Chapter 24
  • Microbial Diseases of the Cardiovascular and
    Lymphatic Systems
  • Microbial Diseases of the Respiratory System

2
The Cardiovascular System
  • Blood is a mixture of plasma and cells.
  • White blood cells are involved in the bodys
    defense against infection.

Red blood cells carry oxygen
Figure 23.1
3
The Lymphatic System
  • Fluid that filters out of capillaries into spaces
    between tissue cells is called interstitial
    fluid.

Interstitial fluid enters lymph capillaries and
is called lymph vessels called lymphatics return
lymph to the blood.
Figure 23.2
4
Sepsis and Septic Shock
  • Sepsis is an inflammatory response caused by the
    spread of bacteria or their toxin from a focus of
    infection.
  • Septicemia is sepsis that involves proliferation
    of pathogens in the blood.
  • Septic shock- low blood pressure which cannot be
    controlled

Lymphangitis
Figure 23.3
5
Sepsis
  • Gram-negative sepsis
  • Endotoxins caused blood pressure decrease and
    septic shock .
  • Antibiotics can worsen condition by killing
    bacteria
  • Gram-Positive Sepsis
  • Nosocomial infections, exotoxins
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Streptococcus pyogenes
  • Group B streptococcus
  • Enterococcus faecium and E. faecalis

6
Sepsis
  • Puerperal Sepsis (Childbirth fever)
  • Streptococcus pyogenes
  • Puerperal sepsis begins as an infection of the
    uterus following childbirth or abortion it can
    progress to peritonitis or septicemia.
  • Puerperal sepsis was transmitted by the hands and
    instruments of midwives and physicians.
  • Puerperal sepsis is now uncommon because of
    modern hygienic techniques and antibiotics

7
Bacterial Infections of the Heart
  • The inner layer of the heart is the endocardium.
  • Inflammation of the endocardium
  • Endocarditis
  • Subacute bacterial endocarditis
  • from microbs in the mouth.( Arises from a focus
    of infection, such as a tooth extraction).
  • alpha-hemolytic streptococci
  • staphylococci
  • enterococci
  • Preexisting heart abnormalities
  • are predisposing factors.
  • Signs include fever, anemia, and heart murmur.
  • Acute bacterial endocarditis
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • The bacteria cause rapid destruction of heart
    valves

8
Rheumatic Fever
  • Rheumatic fever is an autoimmune complication of
    streptococcal infections.
  • Rheumatic fever is expressed as arthritis
  • or inflammation of the heart.
  • It can result in permanent heart damage.
  • Rheumatic fever can follow a streptococcal
  • infection, such as streptococcal sore throat.
  • Streptococci might not be present at the
  • time of rheumatic fever.
  • Prompt treatment of streptococcal infections can
    reduce the incidence of rheumatic fever.
  • Penicillin is administered as a preventive
    measure against subsequent streptococcal
    infections.
  • Antibodies against group A beta-hemolytic
    streptococci react with streptococcal antigens
    deposited in joints or heart valves or
    cross-react with the heart muscle.

Figure 23.5
9
Zoonotic disease
  • Tularemia-
  • Francisella tularensis, gram-negative rod
  • Bacteria reproduce in phagocytes
  • Transmitted from rabbits and deer by deer flies
  • Brucellosis (Undulant Fever)
  • Brucella, gram-negative rods that grow in
    phagocytes,
  • B. abortus (elk, bison, cows),
  • B. suis (swine),
  • B. melitensis (goats, sheep, camels)
  • Undulating fever that spikes to 40C each evening
  • Transmitted via milk from infected animals or
    contact with infected animals

10
Anthrax
  • Bacillus anthracis,
  • gram-positive,
  • endospore-forming aerobic rod
  • Found in soil
  • Cattle are routinely vaccinated
  • Treated with ciprofloxacin or doxycycline
  • Cutaneous anthrax
  • Endospores enter through minor cut
  • 20 mortality
  • Gastrointestinal anthrax
  • Ingestion of undercooked food contaminated food
  • 50 mortality
  • Inhalational anthrax
  • Inhalation of endospores
  • 100 mortality

11
Gangrene
  • Ischemia
  • Loss of blood supply to tissue
  • Necrosis
  • Death of tissue
  • Gangrene
  • Death of soft tissue
  • Gas gangrene
  • Clostridium perfringens,
  • gram-positive,
  • anaerobic rod,
  • endospore-forming
  • grows in necrotic tissue
  • Treatment includes surgical removal of necrotic
    tissue and/or hyperbaric chamber

12
Animal bites and scratches
  • Pasteurella multocida
  • Clostridium
  • Bacteroides
  • Fusobacterium
  • Cat-scratch disease
  • Bartonella hensellae

13
Plague
  • Plague - Yersinia pestis,
  • gram-negative rod
  • grow in blood and lymph
  • Transmitted by rat flea
  • Septicemia plague-Septic shock
  • Pneumonic plague-Bacteria in the lungs

14
Lyme Disease
  • Borrelia burgdorferi
  • Reservoir
  • Deer
  • Vector
  • Ticks

15
Lyme Disease
Figure 23.13a
16
Lyme Disease
  • First symptom
  • bull's eye rash
  • Second phase
  • Irregular heartbeat
  • Encephalitis
  • Third phase
  • Arthritis

Figure 23.14
17
Rickettsias
  • The human body louse Pediculus humanus corporis
    transmits Rickettsia prowazekii in its feces,
    which are deposited while the louse is feeding
  • Epidemic typhus is prevalent in crowded and
    unsanitary living conditions that allow the
    proliferation of lice.
  • The signs of typhus are rash, prolonged high
    fever, and stupor - Tetracyclines and
    chloramphenicol are used in treatment.
  • Endemic murine typhus is a less severe disease
    caused by Rickettsia typhi and transmitted from
    rodents to humans by the rat flea.
  • Spotted Fevers (Rocky Mountain spotted fever)
     -Rickettsia rickettsii is a parasite of ticks
    (Dermacentor spp.) in the southeastern United
    States, Appalachia, and the Rocky Mountain
    states.
  • The rickettsia may be transmitted to humans, in
    whom it causes tickborne typhus fever.
  • Chloramphenicol and tetracyclines effectively
    treat Rocky Mountain spotted fever, or tickborne
    typhus.
  • Serological tests are used for laboratory
    diagnosis.

18
Viral Diseases of the Cardiovascular and
Lymphatic Systems 
  • Burkitt lymphoma is a cancer of the lymphatic
    system (in particular, B lymphocytes).
  • It is named after Denis Burkitt, a surgeon who
    first described the disease in 1956 while working
    in equatorial Africa.
  • Epstein-Barr virus (Human herpesvirus 4)
  • The endemic variant occurs in equatorial Africa.
    It is the most common malignancy of children in
    this area.
  • Children affected with the disease often also
    had chronic malaria
  • Disease characteristically involves the jaw or
    other facial bone, distal ileum, cecum, ovaries,
    kidney or the breast.
  • The sporadic type of Burkitt lymphoma (also known
    as "non-African") is another form found outside
    of Africa.
  • It is believed that impaired immunity provides an
    opening for development of the Epstein-Barr
    virus.
  • It accounts for 30-50 of childhood lymphoma. Jaw
    is less commonly involved, comparing with the
    endemic variant. Ileo-cecal region is the common
    site of involvement.
  • Immunodeficiency-associated Burkitt lymphoma is
    usually associated with HIV infection or occurs
    in the setting of post-transplant patients who
    are taking immunosuppressive drugs.

19
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20
Infectious Mononucleosis
  • Mononucleosis is caused by Epstein-Barr virus.
  • The virus multiplies in the parotid glands and is
    present in saliva.
  • It causes the proliferation of atypical
    lymphocytes.
  • The disease is transmitted by the ingestion of
    saliva from infected individuals.
  • Childhood infections are asymptomatic
  • Diagnosis is made by an indirect
    fluorescent-antibody technique.
  • EB virus may cause other diseases, including
    cancers and multiple sclerosis.

21
Cytomegalic Inclusion Disease
  • Cytomegalovirus (Human herpesvirus 5)
  • Infected cells swell (cyto-, mega-)
  • Latent in white blood cells
  • Cause formation of distinctive inclusion bodies
  • May be asymptomatic or mild
  • Transmitted across the placenta, may cause mental
    retardation
  • Transmitted
  • sexually,
  • by blood, or by transplanted tissue

22
Viral hemorrhagic fevers
  • Viral hemorrhagic fevers are caused by viruses
    from four distinct families.
  • Range in severity from relatively mild to
    life-threatening.
  • Begin with fever and muscle aches.
  • Some viral hemorrhagic fevers progress to far
    more serious problems, including severe internal
    and external bleeding (hemorrhage), widespread
    tissue death (necrosis), and shock.
  • No current treatment can cure viral hemorrhagic
    fevers, and immunizations exist for only two of
    the many VHFs

23
Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
24
Protozoan Diseases of the Cardiovascular and
Lymphatic Systems
  • ChagasDisease - Trypanosoma cruzi
  • Reservoir-Rodents, opossums, armadillos
  • Vector- Reduviid bug
  • Leishmaniasis -Leishmania spp.
  • Vector- SandfliesThe protozoa reproduce in the
    liver, spleen, and kidneys.
  • Antimony compounds are used for treatment.
  • Babesiosis - Babesia microti
  • transmitted to humans by ticks.

Figure 23.22, 12.33d
25
Toxoplasmosis
  • Toxoplasmosis is caused by Toxoplasma gondii.
  • T. gondii undergoes sexual reproduction in the
    intestinal tract of domestic cats, and oocysts
    are eliminated in cat feces.
  • In the host cell, sporozoites reproduce to form
    either tissue-invading tachyzoites or
    bradyzoites.
  • Humans contract the infection by ingesting
    tachyzoites or tissue cysts in undercooked meat
    from an infected animal or contact with cat
    feces.
  • Congenital infections can occur. Signs and
    symptoms include severe brain damage or vision
    problems.
  • Toxoplasmosis can be identified by serological
    tests, but interpretation of the results is
    uncertain.

26
Malaria
  • The signs and symptoms of malaria are chills,
    fever, vomiting, and headache, which occur at
    intervals of 2 to 3 days.
  • Malaria is transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes.
    The causative agent is any one of four species of
    Plasmodium.
  • Sporozoites reproduce in the liver and release
    merozoites into the bloodstream, where they
    infect red blood cells and produce more
    merozoites.
  • New drugs are being developed as the protozoa
    develop resistance to drugs such as chloroquine.

27
Learning objectives
  • Identify the role of the cardiovascular and
    lymphatic systems in spreading and eliminating
    infections.
  • List the signs and symptoms of septicemia, and
    explain the importance of infections that develop
    into septicemia.
  • Differentiate gram-negative sepsis, gram-positive
    sepsis, and puerperal sepsis.
  • Describe the epidemiologies of bacterial
    endocarditis and rheumatic fever.
  • Discuss the epidemiology of tularemia.
    Brucellosis and antrax.
  • Discuss the epidemiology of gas gangrene.
  • List three pathogens that are transmitted by
    animal bites and scratches.
  • Compare and contrast the causative agents,
    vectors, reservoirs, symptoms, treatments, and
    preventive measures for plague, Lyme disease, and
    Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.
  • Identify the vector, etiology, and symptoms of
    five diseases transmitted by ticks.
  • Describe the epidemiologies of epidemic typhus,
    endemic murine typhus, and spotted fevers.
  • Describe the epidemiologies of CMV inclusion
    disease, Burkitts lymphoma, and infectious
    mononucleosis.
  • Compare and contrast the causative agents, modes
    of transmission, reservoirs, and symptoms for
    Ebola hemorrhagic fever and Hantavirus pulmonary
    syndrome.
  • Compare and contrast the causative agents, modes
    of transmission and reservoirs, for
    toxoplasmosis, malaria, leishmaniasis, and
    babesiosis.

28
Structure and Function of the Respiratory System
  • The upper respiratory system consists of
  • Nose
  • Pharynx
  • Sinus
  • middle ear and auditory tubes.
  • Coarse hairs in the nose filter large particles
    from air entering the respiratory tract.
  • The ciliated mucous membranes of the nose and
    throat trap airborne particles and remove them
    from the body.
  • Lymphoid tissue, tonsils, and adenoids provide
    immunity to certain infections.

29
Structure and Function of the Respiratory System
  • The lower respiratory system consists of
  • Larynx
  • Trachea
  • bronchial tubes
  • alveoli.
  • The ciliary escalator of the lower respiratory
    system helps prevent microorganisms from reaching
    the lungs.
  • Microbes in the lungs can be phagocytized by
    alveolar macrophages.
  • Respiratory mucus contains IgA antibodies.

30
Microbial Diseases of the Upper Respiratory System
  • Upper respiratory normal microbiota may include
    pathogens
  • Laryngitis
  • S. pneumoniae,
  • S. pyogenes,
  • viruses
  • Tonsillitis
  • S. pneumoniae,
  • S. pyogenes,
  • viruses
  • Sinusitis
  • Bacteria
  • Epiglottitis
  • H. influenzae

31
Streptococcal pharyngitis
  • Strep throat
  • Streptococcus pyogenes
  • Resistant to phagocytosis
  • Streptokinases lyse clots
  • Streptolysins are cytotoxic
  • Pharyngitis - Scarlet Fever
  • Erythrogenic toxin produced
  • by lysogenized S. pyogenes
  • Diagnosis by indirect agglutination

Figure 24.3
32
Diphtheria
  • Corynebacterium diphtheriae.
  • exotoxin-producing
  • Diphtheria
  • A membrane, containing fibrin and dead human
  • and bacterial cells, forms in the throat and can
  • block the passage of air.
  • The exotoxin inhibits protein synthesis,
  • and heart, kidney, or nerve damage may result.
  • Laboratory diagnosis is based on isolation of the
    bacteria and the appearance of growth on
    differential media.
  • Antitoxin must be administered to neutralize the
    toxin, and antibiotics can stop growth of the
    bacteria.
  • Routine immunization in the United States
    includes diphtheria toxoid in the DTaP vaccine.
  • Slow-healing skin ulcerations are characteristic
    of cutaneous diphtheria.
  • There is minimal dissemination of the exotoxin in
    the bloodstream.

33
Common cold
  • Rhinoviruses (50)
  • Coronaviruses (15-20)
  • Rhinoviruses attached to ICAN-1 on nasal mucous

34
Infection of he middle ear
  • Otitis Media
  • S. pneumoniae (35)
  • H. influenzae (20-30)
  • M. catarrhalis (10-15)
  • S. pyogenes (8-10)
  • S. aureus (1-2)
  • Treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics
  • Incidence of S. pneumoniae reduced by vaccine

35
Microbial Diseases of the Lower Respiratory System
  • Bacteria, viruses, fungi cause
  • Bronchitis
  • Bronchiolitis
  • Pneumonia

36
Pertussis (Whooping Cough)
  • Bordetella pertussis
  • Gram-negative coccobacillus
  • Capsule
  • Tracheal cytotoxin of cell wall damaged ciliated
    cells
  • Pertussis toxin
  • Prevented by DTaP vaccine (acellular Pertussis
    cell fragments)
  • Stages
  • Catarrhal stage, like common cold
  • Paroxysmal stage Violent coughing siege
  • Convalescence stage

Figure 24.8
37
Tuberculosis
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Acid-fast rod.
  • Transmitted from human to human
  • M. bovis
  • Not transmitted from human to human
  • M. avium
  • Intracellular complex
  • infects people with late stage HIV infection
  • Treatment of Tuberculosis Prolonged treatment
    with multiple antibiotics
  • Vaccines BCG, live, avirulent M. bovis. Not
    widely used in U.S.

Figure 24.9
38
Tuberculosis
39
Tuberculosis
Diagnosis Tuberculin skin test screening
current or previous infection Followed by X-ray
or CT, acid-fast staining of sputum, culturing
bacteria
Figure 24.11
40
Pneumonias
  • Pneumonia
  • an illness of the lungs and in which the alveoli
    (microscopic air-filled sacs of the lung
    responsible for absorbing oxygen) become inflamed
    and flooded with fluid.
  • Pneumonia can result from a variety of causes
    bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites
  • Typical pneumonia is caused by S. pneumoniae.
  • Atypical pneumonias are caused by other
    microorganisms.
  • Typical symptoms
  • cough,
  • chest pain,
  • fiver,
  • breathing difficulty,
  • rust-colored sputum.
  • Diagnostic tools include x-rays and examination
    of the sputum.
  • Treatment depends on the cause of pneumonia
    bacterial pneumonia is treated with antibiotics.

41
Pneumomoccal Pneumonia
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Gram-positive encapsulated diplococci
  • Diagnosis by culturing bacteria
  • Penicillin is drug of choice

Figure 24.13
42
Pneumonia
  • Haemophilus influenzae
  • Gram-negative coccobacillus
  • Alcoholism, poor nutrition, cancer, or diabetes
    are predisposing factors
  • Second-generation cephalosporins
  • Mycoplasma pneumoniae
  • It is an endemic disease.
  • Diagnosis is by PCR or serological tests.
  • Legionella pneumophila
  • Aerobic gram-negative rod.
  • The bacterium can grow in water
  • such as air-conditioning cooling towers,
  • and then be disseminated in the air.
  • This pneumonia does not appear to be transmitted
    from person to person.
  • Bacterial culture, FA tests, and DNA probes are
    used for laboratory diagnosis.

43
Obligate intracellular pathogens
  • Chlamydophila pneumoniae
  • has a complex life cycle and must infect another
    cell in order to reproduce.
  • It is transmitted from person to person.
  • Tetracycline is used for treatment.
  • Coxiella burnetii causes Q fever.
  • The disease is usually transmitted to humans
    through unpasteurized milk or inhalation of
    aerosols in dairy barns.
  • Laboratory diagnosis is made with the culture of
    bacteria in embryonated eggs or cell culture.

44
Melioidosis
  • Burkholderia pseudomallei
  • Gram-negative, rod-shaped
  • bipolar,
  • aerobic,
  • motile
  • A human and animal pathogen
  • Transmitted by inhalation, ingestion, or through
    puncture wounds.
  • Symptoms include pneumonia, sepsis, and
    encephalitis

45
Viral Pneumonia
  • Viral pneumonia as a complication of influenza,
    measles, chickenpox
  • Viral etiology suspected if no cause determined
  • Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV)
  • Common in infants 4500 deaths annually
  • Causes cell fusion (syncytium) in cell culture
  • Symptoms coughing
  • Diagnosis by serologic test for viruses and
    antibodies
  • Treatment Ribavirin

46
Influenza
  • Influenza virus
  • Hemagglutinin (H) spikes
  • used for attachment to host cells
  • Neuraminidase (N) spikes
  • used to release virus from cell
  • Antigenic shift
  • Changes in H and N spikes
  • Probably due to genetic recombination between
    different strains infecting the same cell
  • Antigenic drift
  • Mutations in genes encoding H or N spikes
  • May involve only 1 amino acid
  • Allows virus to avoid mucosal IgA antibodies
  • Influenza serotypes
  • A causes most epidemics, H3N2, H1N1, H2N2
  • B moderate, local outbreaks
  • C mild disease
  • Chills, fever, headache, muscle aches (no
    intestinal symptoms)
  • 1 mortality due to secondary bacterial
    infections
  • Treatment Amantadine

47
Fungal Diseases of the Lower Respiratory System
  • Fungal spores are easily inhaled
  • They may germinate in the lower respiratory
    tract.
  • The incidence of fungal diseases has been
    increasing in recent years.
  • The mycoses in the sections below can be treated
    with amphotericin B.

48
Fungal Diseases of the Lower Respiratory System
  • Histoplasmosis
  • Histoplasma capsulatum
  • subclinical respiratory infection that only
    occasionally progresses to a severe, generalized
    disease.
  • Coccidioidomycosis
  •  Coccidioides immitis -
  • Most cases are subclinical,
  • tuberculosis can result.
  • Pneumocystis Pneumonia 
  • Pneumocystis jiroveci is found in healthy human
    lungs,
  • causes disease in immunosuppressed patients.
  • Opportunistic fungi can cause respiratory disease
    in immunosuppressed hosts, especially when large
    numbers of spores are inhaled - Aspergillus,
    Rhizopus, and Mucor.

49
Learning objectives
  • Describe how microorganisms are prevented from
    entering the respiratory system.
  • Characterize the normal microbiota of the upper
    and lower respiratory systems.
  • Differentiate among pharyngitis, laryngitis,
    tonsillitis, sinusitis, and epiglottitis.
  • List the causative agent, symptoms, prevention,
    preferred treatment, and laboratory
    identification tests for streptococcal
    pharyngitis, scarlet fever, diphtheria, cutaneous
    diphtheria, and otitis media.
  • List the causative agents and treatments for the
    common cold.
  • List the causative agent, symptoms, prevention,
    preferred treatment, and laboratory
    identification tests for pertussis and
    tuberculosis.
  • Compare and contrast the seven bacterial
    pneumonias discussed in this chapter.
  • List the etiology, method of transmission, and
    symptoms of melioidosis.
  • List the causative agent, symptoms, prevention,
    and preferred treatment for viral pneumonia, RSV,
    and influenza.
  • List the causative agent, mode of transmission,
    preferred treatment, and laboratory
    identification tests for four fungal diseases of
    the respiratory system.
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