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MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences

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Title: MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences


1
MICR 201 Microbiology for Health Related Sciences
  • Lecture 15 Microbial diseases of the
    cardiovascular and lymphatic system
  • Edith Porter, M.D.

2
Lecture outline
  • Cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
  • Bacterial diseases
  • Sepsis and septic shock, infections of the heart,
    rheumatic fever, systemic diseases caused by
    bites and scratches, vector transmitted diseases
  • Viral diseases
  • Hemorrhagic fevers
  • Protozoan diseases
  • Malaria, Chagas disease
  • Helminthic diseases
  • Schistosomiasis

3
The Cardiovascular and lymphatic system (1)
  • Blood (plasma and formed elements)Transports
    nutrients to and wastes from cells
  • Plasma leaves blood system to become interstitial
    fluid
  • Lymph capillariesTransport interstitial fluid to
    blood
  • Lymph nodesContain macrophages, dendritic cells,
    B cells and T cells

4
The Cardiovascular and lymphatic system (2)
5
Sepsis and septic shock
  • Septicemia
  • Presence of bacteria in blood with severe
    symptoms
  • Sepsis
  • Bacteria present (and proliferating) in blood and
    dissemination into various with organ dysfunction
  • Induces a systemic inflammatory response syndrome
  • Severe sepsis
  • Sepsis decreased blood pressure
  • Septic shock
  • Sepsis low blood pressure cannot be controlled

6
Lymphangitis may accompany sepsis
  • Lymphangitis
  • Inflamed lymph vessels accompanying septicemia
    and septic shock

7
Sepsis
  • Gram-negative sepsis
  • Endotoxins (LPS) induces cytokine release by
    macrophages and subsequently causes blood
    pressure to decrease
  • Antibiotics can worsen condition by killing
    bacteria and liberating endotoxin
  • Gram-positive sepsis
  • Less often
  • Less severe
  • Lipoteichoic acids in the gram positive cell wall
    can also induce cytokine release and symptoms of
    sepsis but to a lesser degree
  • Mostly observed during nosocomial infections
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Enterococcus faecium and E. faecalis
  • Puerperal spesis

8
Bacterial infections of the heart
  • Endocarditis
  • Inflammation of the endocardium
  • Subacute bacterial endocarditis
  • Alpha-hemolytic streptococci from mouth
  • Acute bacterial endocarditis
  • Staphylococcus aureus from mouth
  • Pericarditis
  • Streptococci

9
Bacterial infections of the heart endocarditis
10
Consequences of endocarditis
11
Rheumatic Fever
  • Inflammation of heart valves and joints
  • Autoimmune complication of Streptococcus pyogenes
    infections

12
Brucellosis (undulant fever)
  • Brucella, gram-negative rods that grow in
    phagocytes
  • Granulomas form
  • If bacteria are not controlled they can reenter
    the bloodstream andcause recurrent
  • 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

13
Selected diseases transmitted by scratches and
bites
  • Bartonella henselae cat-scratch disease
  • Pasteurella multocida animal bites

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net/cat_scratch_disease_8.jpg
14
Animal bites and scratches Pasteurella multocida
  • Normal microbiota of the upper respiratory tract
    of a number of animals
  • A frequent cause of opportunistic infections in
    domestic livestock
  • Usually acquired by humans from the bite or
    scratch of a dog or cat
  • Infection develops at the site of the wound and
    can spread via the lymphatics or via blood stream
    to a number of other organs
  • Virulent strains are encapsulated, but no other
    virulence factors are known
  • The organism is unusually sensitive to penicillin

15
Rickettsia infections
  • Epidemic typhus
  • Rickettsia prowazekii
  • Reservoir
  • Rodents
  • Vector
  • Lice (Pediculus humanus corporis)
  • Transmitted when louse feces is rubbed into bite
    wound
  • Rocky Mountain spotted fever
  • Rickettsia rickettsii
  • Measles-like rash except that the rash appears on
    palms and soles too
  • Vector
  • Ticks

16
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
  • Rickettsia are obligate intracellular parasites
  • Infect and grown in endothelial cells of the
    vascular system

17
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever cases 1997 - 2002
18
Plague
  • Causative agent Yersinia pestis, gram-negative
    rod
  • Reservoir
  • Rats, ground squirrels, prairie dogs
  • Vector
  • Fleas
  • Bubonic plague
  • Bacterial growth in blood and lymph
  • Septicemia plague
  • Septic shock
  • Pneumonic plague
  • Bacteria in the lungs
  • Necrotizing hemorrhagic pneumonia
  • Human to human transmission
  • Black Death in the middle ages

19
Boubonic plague and US plague cases between 1970
- 2004
20
Lyme Disease
  • Causative agent Borrelia burgdorferi
  • Reservoir Deer
  • Vector Ticks

21
Clinical stages of Lyme disease
  • Acute Bull's-eye rash, fever, muscular and joint
    pain, meningeal irritation
  • Chronic Disabling arthritis, myocarditis,
    meiningoencephalitis

22
Lyme disease in the U.S., 2005
23
Viral hemorrhagic fever
  • Yellow fever
  • Liver cells are primary target
  • Dengue fever
  • 4 serotypes
  • Infection with a second serotype can lead to
    severe manifestation
  • Ebola virus
  • High mortality rate of 60 80 within a few
    days

24
Malaria
  • Caused by Plasmodium species
  • P. vivax
  • P. ovale
  • P. malariae
  • P. falciparum
  • Vector Anopheles mosquito
  • Definitive host Anopheles mosquito

25
Malaria
26
Malaria in the United States
27
Malaria
28
Chagas Disease (1)
  • American trypanosomiasis
  • Causative agent Trypanosoma cruzi
  • Reservoir Rodents, opossums, armadillos
  • Transmitted via feces of kissing bug
  • Infects organs, chronic infection, organ megaly

29
Chagas Disease (2)
  • Endemic in Mexico, Central America, and South
    America
  • 8 to 11 million people are infected
  • Local lesion (chagoma, palpebral edema) at the
    site of inoculation
  • Acute phase (2 -3 months)
  • Usually asymptomatic
  • If symptomatic
  • Fever, anorexia
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Mild hepatosplenomegaly
  • Myocarditis
  • Asymptomatic chronic stage (years- decades)
  • Symptomatic chronic stage
  • Cardiomyopathy (the most serious manifestation)
  • Megaesophagus
  • Megacolon
  • Weight loss
  • Can be fatal

30
Schistosomiasis
  • Infection of venous system by the trematode
    Schistosoma
  • Complex life cycle
  • Pathology mainly due to eggs that protrude into
    body cavities

31
Life cycle of Schistosoma
32
Schistosomiasis
  • Tissue damage (granulomas) in response to eggs
    lodging in tissues

33
Types of Schistosomiasis
34
Important to Remember
  • Cardiovascular and lymphatic systems are in
    continuous comminucation
  • Bacterial diseases Sepsis and septic shock,
    infections of the heart endocarditis rheumatic
    fever- an autoimmune disease after streptococcal
    infection undulating fever caused by
    brucellosis systemic diseases caused by bites
    and scratches cat scratch disease and
    Pasteurella infection vector transmitted
    diseases plague, Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain
    spotted fever, typhus
  • Viral diseases
  • Hemorrhagic fevers Yellow fever, Dengue fever,
    Ebola hemorrhagic fever (60 80 mortality)
  • Protozoan diseases Malaria caused by Plasmodium
    and infects erythrocytes Chagas disease caused
    by Trypanosoma cruzi leading to organ infection
    and organ megaly
  • Helminthic diseases Schistosomiasis adult
    couple lives in venous system, , pathology due to
    eggs that penetrate into urinary bladder or
    intestine.

35
Check your understanding
1) Which of the following statements about severe
sepsis is false? A) Symptoms include fever and
decreased blood pressure. B) Lymphangitis may
occur. C) Symptoms are due to bacterial
endotoxin. D) It usually is caused by
gram-positive bacteria. E) It may be aggravated
by antibiotics. 2) Which of the following is NOT
caused by a bacterium? A) Epidemic typhus B)
Tickborne typhus C) Malaria D) Plague E)
Relapsing fever 3) Human-to-human transmission of
plague is usually by A) Rat flea. B) Dog flea. C)
The respiratory route. D) Wounds. E) Unsanitary
conditions.
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