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Listeriosis

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... & most disinfecting agents. Microbiology L. monocytogenous is the commonest of the 7 species of the genus Listeria in causing disease. On a semisolid media, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Listeriosis


1
Listeriosis
  • PREP, May 2004
  • Nelson, 17th ED

2
Historical perspective
  • L. monocytogenous, why?
  • Previously a rare cause of infection but today is
    isolated more frequently, why?
  • Refrigerators.
  • Highly processed food.
  • Extended shelf life of foodstuffs.
  • However it usually doesnt cause disease.

3
Microbiology
  • Facultatively anaerobic G , non spore forming
    motile bacillus/ coccobacillus/ diplococci,or
    diphtheroids like.
  • It can tolerate low temperatures (4), high pH,
    high salt conc. So can replicate in soil, water,
    sewage, contaminated refrigerated foods.
  • Destroyed by pasteurization most disinfecting
    agents.

4
Microbiology
  • L. monocytogenous is the commonest of the 7
    species of the genus Listeria in causing disease.
  • On a semisolid media, demonstration of a tumbling
    motility, umbrella-type formation, hemolysis,
    typical cAMP test are sufficient to establish a
    presumptive diagnosis of L mono.

5
Epidemiology
  • Important cause of zoonoses.
  • F- O transmission in animals.
  • Usually food- borne.
  • Animal to human by direct contact.
  • Vertical or horizontal transmission.
  • Cross- infection in a neonatal unit through
    contact with a contaminated mineral oil used to
    bathe infants.

6
Epidemiology
  • IP 3 weeks-30 days.
  • 5 of healthy adults have Listeria species in
    their stool (usuallylt1 mo).
  • Infectious dose 104- 106 / gram of ingested
    product lower in special situations.
  • 0.7/100,000 general 10/100,000 infants
    1.4/100,000 elderly.
  • Males more.

7
Pathogenesis
  • It causes granulomatous reactions micro
    abscesses.
  • Translocations in animals.
  • It can cross the intestinal mucosal barrier
    once in the blood stream, the bacteria may
    disseminate hematogenously to any site but mostly
    to the CNS or placenta, liver, spleen.

8
Pathogenesis
  • It has the ability to escape from antibodies,
    complement, neutrophils.
  • Intercurrent GI infection with another pathogen,
    as shigella sp., may enhance invasion in
    individuals infected with L monocytogenous. it
    may enhance the transfer of intraluminal m.o
    across the intact intestinal mucosa.

9
Immunity
  • T cell mediated.
  • It is prevented through routine prophylaxis for
    Pneumocystis carinii in HIV patients.
  • Complement, opsonizing antibodies ?

10
Clinical Aspects
  • The enteric phase is usually asymptomatic, then
    the bacteria crosses the intestinal barrier to be
    transmitted inside the macrophages to any organ
    but mostly to the spleen liver.
  • Disease its severity depends on several factors.

11
Intrapartum Disease
  • Listeriosis in pregnancy documented mostly in
    the 3rd trimester.
  • Early abortion.
  • Second third trimester flu like
  • illness or GI, rarely meningitis
    with/without
  • fetal involvement stillbirth,
  • premature labour (mortality rate 50-
  • 90). It may resolve after delivery even
  • without treatment.

12
Neonatal DiseaseEarly Onset
  • 1.5 days (lt5 days), mostly through the placenta
    (can be ascending).
  • Strong association with maternal disease.
  • Septic like picture predominates, but can be ARD,
    Pneumonia, Meningitis, Myocarditis.
  • Granulomatosis infantisepticum which are widely
    disseminated granulomas present in severe
    listerial disease (skin, liver, placenta).

13
Late Onset
  • Symptoms are several days to weeks after birth,
    usually at 14.3 days (5-30) of age.
  • Transmission is vertical or nosocomial.
  • Mostly as meningitis, in a term infant.
  • Less common.
  • Mothers are culture negative.

14
Nonperinatal Disease
  • Most common M.O as a cause of meningitis in
    patients with lymphoma, organ transplant
    recipients, in those receiving corticosteroids,
    in the elderly.
  • Risk factors include DM., Liver disease, chronic
    renal disease, collagen vascular disease, iron
    overload, diminished gastric acidity. However
    54 of children have no apparent
    immunocompromising condition.

15
Nonperinatal Disease
  • After the neonatal period 30-55 present with
    meningitis. 30 will have neurologic sequelae
    (MR, hydrocephalus, e.t.c.)
  • Rhombencephalitis in healthy adults diagnosed by
    MRI.
  • Bacteremia in immunocompromised.
  • Infection in other body organs.

16
Diagnosis
  • It should be included in the differential
    diagnosis of infection in pregnancy, neonatal
    sepsis, meningitis.
  • CBC.
  • Gram stain.
  • Culture / 36 hr incubation/ blood, CSF, cervix,
    vagina, placenta.
  • Alert the lab not to discard as a
    contaminating diphtheroids.

17
Diagnosis
  • CSF. Glucose, Blood Culture, Gram Stain, Protein.
  • Rapid detection by MA/ NAH.
  • PCR not available commercially.
  • Anti-listeriolysin O, a hemolysin mediates lysis
    of vacuoles is responsible for the zone of
    hemolysis when grown on blood containing solid
    media.
  • Serological test not available.
  • Detect contact with animals.

18
Management
  • No available controlled trials about the exact
    drug or duration of treatment but a minimum of 2
    weeks is needed.
  • Many factors make treatment difficult.
  • Antibiotics.

19
Prevention
  • Food-borne listeriosis keeping uncooked meat
    separate from vegetables. Washing hands, knifes,
    cutting boards after exposure to uncooked food.
    Regular cleaning disinfection of the insides of
    refrigerators. At risk patients should avoid soft
    cheeses, reheat ( until steaming hot) leftover
    ready to eat foods, avoid cold cuts if unable to
    reheat thoroughly.

20
Prevention
  • Zero tolerance policy.
  • Prophylaxis.
  • Vaccine.
  • It is a reportable disease.

21
THANK YOU
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