Title: Chapter 25 Micro
1Chapter 25 Micro
- Diseases of the Digestive System
2Miscellaneous
- Most of these are transmitted by fecal-oral cycle
- Over 76 million cases of food poisoning in US
each year - Over 5,000 deaths from food poisoning each year
3Normal flora in digestive tract
- Few in stomach and small intestine
- Large populations in mouth and large intestine
- 40 of fecal mass is bacterial!
- Bacteria are anaerobic and facultative anaerobes
in intestine and help with enzymatic breakdown of
foods and vitamin production (vitamin K) - Defenses from pathogens include stomach acid,
Paneth cells in small intestine (phagocytize and
produce defensins and lysozyme)
4Bacterial diseases of the mouth
- Caries-tooth decay (eating less sucrose really
helps prevent it) - Oral bacteria convert sucrose and other
carbohydrates into lactic acid which attacks
tooth enamel - 700 species of bacteria can occur in the oral
cavity! - Streptococcus mutans is an important cavity
causing bacterium - Accumulations of a biofilm called plaque may
harbor over 400 species but is mainly
Streptococcus and Actinomyces. - Over time this hardens and becomes tarter or
dental calculus (see figure 25.4) - Saliva contains lysozyme which helps protect
exposed teeth
5Periodontal disease
- Inflammation and degeneration of structures that
support the teeth - Gingivitis-infection is limited to gums (bleeding
gums is a sign) - Periodontitis-gums are inflamed and bleed easily,
may get pus pockets called periodontal pockets) - Infection continues and moves toward root tips
- Teeth are loose and may fall out
- Porphyromonas (poor-fi-row-moan-is) is the
bacteria found in this infection - Trench mouth is a serious mouth infection with
foul breath and pain when chewing
6Bacterial Diseases of the Lower Digestive System
- May have 2 types infections or intoxications
- Infection is when pathogen enters and multiplies,
penetrates intestinal mucosa, and move to organs - Intoxication-ingestion of a toxin (Staphylococcus
toxin causes symptoms in a few hours, usually no
fever) - Both types cause diarrhea (with blood and mucous
is called dysentery) - Gastroenteritis is when there is inflammation of
stomach and intestinal mucosa - Diarrhea is major factor in infant deaths in 3rd
world countries
7Staphylococcal food poisoning
- Leading cause of gastroenteritis
- Toxin is enterotoxin produced by S. aureus
- Resistant to heat up to 60 degrees C for 30
minutes, drying, radiation, and high osmotic
pressure - Staphylococcus is normal in the nose, gets on
fingers, enters food and can reproduce in food
(temperature abuse-leaving food out in room temp) - http//apt.allenpress.com/perlserv/?requestget-ab
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8More on S. aureus
- Produces several toxins that damage tissue and/or
increase virulence - Production of toxin of serological type A is
responsible for most cases is correlated with the
production of an enzyme that coagulates blood
plasma (hence they are described as coagulase
positive bacteria)-used for identification only - 1 million bacteria per gram of food can cause
enough toxin to make you sick (re-heating kills
the bacteria but not the toxin)
9More on Staph
- Custards, cream pies, and ham are high risk
- Hamburger is not usually a problem because of
competition from other bacteria - May occur on poultry if it is handled and allowed
to stand at room temp - Contamination by human handlers is always a
problem so refrigerate! - Toxin can survive 30 minutes of boiling and is a
superantigen - symptoms start in 1-6 hours
- vomiting, abdominal cramps, diarrhea
- Recovery within 24 hours
10Shigellosis (Bacillary Dysentery)
- Longer incubation period than Staph (12 hours up
to 2 weeks) - Severe diarrhea caused by Shigella (20 BMs in a
day), cramps and fever also, kills macrophages if
enter blood - Spread from person to person reside in GI of
humans and monkeys only - 4 species S. sonnei, S. dysenteriae, S.
flexneri, and S. boydii - Most common one in U.S. is S. sonnei (mild)
- Worst is S. dysenteriae (Shiga toxin, very bad,
but uncommon)
11Salmonellosis (Salmonella gastroenteritis)
- Normal resident in intestine of human and many
animals - Separated in typhoidal and nontyphoidal
salmonellae (milder) - More than 2000 serotypes known, 50 found in US
- Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium would be
S. typhimurium conventionally - Multiply in the intestinal mucosa, multiply,
replicate in macrophages if enter blood via M
cells, incubation time is 12 to 36 hours - Moderate fever, nausea, abdominal pain and
cramps, diarrhea - Recovery depends on how many bacteria, usually a
few days may shed in feces for up to 6 months in
some patients
12Cautions for Salmonella
- Meat products like chicken are susceptible to
contamination - Hens are susceptible and the eggs get
contaminated (cook your eggs) - Pet reptiles (turtles, iguanas, snakes) carry
this and baby ducks! - May occur on tomatoes and raw alfalfa sprouts!
- Good sanitation, hand washing, and refrigeration,
wash cutting boards after cutting raw chicken!
13Typhoid fever
- S. typhi (most virulent serotype) causes this
- Spreads only in human feces (Typhoid Mary)
- S. typhi multiplies inside phagocytes then enters
liver and spleen where they are cells lyse and
release the bacteria into the blood stream - Incubation is 2-3 weeks
- High fever (104), headache, diarrhea in second
and third week, fever declines when diarrhea
appears, ulceration and perforation of intestine
can occur in severe cases (fatal without
treatment) - Many become chronic carriers and shed bacteria in
feces (harbor pathogen in gallbladder) - Treat with cephalosporins or quinolones ,
immunity after recovery
14Cholera
- Very serious gastrointestinal disease caused by
Vibrio cholerae - Produce exotoxin called cholera toxin that cuases
host cells to secrete water and electrolytes
(especially potassium) - Rice water stools (12-20 liters of fluid lost in
a day) - Fluid loss results in dehydration, shock,
collapse, death - 50 mortality if untreated
- Associated with brackish water
- Sensitive to stomach acid so people taking
antacids are more susceptible - Must drink over 100 million bacteria to get sick
15E. coli Gastroenteritis
- Escherichia coli bind to intestinal cells using
fimbriae - Produce toxins that cause GI disturbance
(Pepto-Bismol is good treatment) - Travelers diarrhea (montazumas revenge)
- Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) is not invasive
but produces an enterotoxin that causes watery
diarrhea that resembles a mild case of cholera - Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) invades the
intestinal wall resulting in fever, inflammation,
and shigella-like dysentery.
16Shiga Toxin-Producing E. coli
- Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) has become a
problem involving undercooked hamburger meat - Serotype is O157H7
- 90 of ground beef is contaminated at low levels
- Raw alfalfa sprouts and tomatoes have been
responsible for many, many cases and petting zoo - In 6 of population this Shiga toxin causes
inflammation of colon with profuse bleeding
(Hemorrhagic colitis) - Toxin is released into intestine, not blood
- May cause hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) leading
to kidneys failure
17Campylobacter Gastroenteritis
- Campylobacter is a spirally curved gram negative
bacterium - Leading cause of foodborne illness in U.S.
- Adapt well to intestinal environment of animal
host, especially poultry - Almost all retail chicken is contaminated
- Infective dose is 1,000 bacteria
- Symptoms are fever, cramping abdominal pain,
diarrhea or dysentery - Recover in 1 week
- Linked to Guillian-Barre syndrome (temporary
paralysis)
18Helicobacter peptic ulcer disease
- Caused by H. pylori (30-50 of population in
developed countries like U.S. have been infected) - 15 of those people develop ulcers
- People with type O blood are more susceptible
(also true of cholera) - Gastric cancer may develop in 3 of those
(carcinogenic bacteria) - Test with urea breath test, swallow radioactively
labeled urea, in 30 minutes CO2 labeled with
radioactivity can be detected.
19Clostridium perfringens gastroenteritis
- One of the more common forms (symptoms appear
8-12 hours after ingestion) - Associated with meats and meat stews contaminated
with animal intestinal content during slaughter - Cook meat causes spores to form, reheating
doesnt hurt spores - Grows in intestine and produces exotoxin that
causes abdominal pain and diarrhea - Usually mild
20Clostridium difficile associated diarrhea
- Produces exotoxin that cause inflammation
accompanied by increase in fluid secretion and
permeability of intestinal mucosa - Occurs in hospitals and nursing homes
- Linked to extended use antibiotics
- Caregivers can get it from patients (take
universal precautions) - Kids can get it in daycares
- May range from mild diarrhea to life threatening
colitis (inflammation and ulceration of colon
wall)
21Bacillus cereus gastroenteritis
- Common in soil and vegetation
- Heating food doesnt necessary kill spores, which
germinate as food cools (toxins produced) - Rice dishes served in Asian restaurants are a
likely source - Diarrheal symptoms appear 8-16 hours after
ingestion sometimes (diarrheal form) - Other episodes may involve nausea and vomiting
(2-5 hours after ingestion) called emetic form) - Usually lasts 24 hours
22Viral Diseases
- Mumps-target is the parotid glands (an accessory
digestive organ) - Painful swelling of one or both glands 16-18 days
after exposure (MMR-measles, mumps, rubella) - Transmitted in saliva, portal of entry is
respiratory - Contagious during first 48 hours before symptoms
appear
23Mumps continued
- Symptoms include swelling of the parotid glands,
difficulty swallowing, fever - In post pubescent males swelling of the testicles
(orchitis) can occur 4-7 days after onset of
symptoms - May burst occasionally, may cause sterility
occasionally - Usually complete immunity after recovery
24Hepatitis
- Inflammation of liver
- 5 different viruses cause hepatitis
- Hepatitis A food/feces (fecal/oral)
contamination - Single stranded RNA virus without an envelope
- Amount of virus shed in feces is greatest before
symptoms occur - Virus can survive on cutting boards, etc for days
- Resistant to chlorine disinfectants that are used
in water
25Hepatitis A (HAV) continued
- 50 of infections are subclinical, especially in
children - Symptoms loss of appetite, malaise, nausea,
diarrhea, abdominal discomfort, fever, chills - Symptoms last 2-21 days
- Jaundice may occur, dark urine may occur
- Not chronic
- Incubation is 4 weeks average
26Hepatitis B (HBV)
- This is a double stranded DNA enveloped virus
- STD (sexually transmitted), blood products,
needle pricks) - 10,000 health care workers a year may become
infected (immunization now available) - Transmission by semen stored in sperm banks has
been documented, mother to infant during birth,
(administer HBIG to infant quickly) - May lead to liver disease (caused by immune
response)
27HBV continued
- Acute HBV-incubation 12 weeks average
- Symptoms may be mild with loss of appetite, low
fever, joint pain - If patient gets fulminant HBV they have fever,
nausea, and jaundice - 90 recover completely
- Fulminating HBV has high mortality
- Chronic HBV-if symptoms persist for 6 months
- More likely in infants and young children
- 10 of patients become chronic carriers and have
higher rate of liver disease (cancer)
28Hepatitis C (HCV)
- Transfusion hepatitis
- Delay of 70-80 days before serological tests can
detect this in blood, so cant be detected in
blood donor during that time - Now can detect it within 25 days of infection
(see box p. 769) - Single stranded RNA with envelope
29HCV continued
- Silent epidemic
- Has killed more people than AIDS in the U.S.
- May not get symptoms for 20 years
- 85 progress to chronic hepatitis
- 100,000 new cases each year with 5,000 deaths
- 25 develop liver cirrhosis or liver cancer
- Limit exposure, dont share razors, toothbrushes,
nail clippers - 80 of Intravenous Drug users are infected
(IDUs)
30Gastroenteritis
- Rotavirus is most common cause of viral
gastroenteritis - 90 of children in U.S. have been infected by age
3, some cases the parents get it too - This doesnt usually happen because the parents
usually had it as kids - Incubation of 2 or 3 days
- Low fever, diarrhea, vomiting for a week
- May require rehydration and hospitalization
rarely
31Other
- If you get time after finals, read the rest of
the chapter. It is full of interesting facts
about parasites! - It wont be on the test!