Title: Human Diseases
1- Human Diseases
- Caused Primarily by Gram-Positive and
Gram-Negative Bacteria  - The Airborne Diseases Part I
2 3Diphtheria
4- Diphtheria - Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- General features
- Club shaped (coryne club in Greek)
pleomorphic V-shaped rods - Gram positive, non-sporing, non-motile
- Refractile granules give rise to heterogeneous
staining - Accumulate in stationary phase phosphate
storage - Metachromatic granules
- Volutin
- Babes-Ernst bodies
- Only humans serve as a reservoir for this
microorganism
5- Acute, contagious disease
- Affects mainly poor people living in crowded
conditions unvaccinated - Acute infection of the respiratory tract ?
usually invading the tonsilar area - Spread via respiratory route and contaminated
milk (unpasteurized)
6- Virulence factors/pathogenicity
- Exotoxin diphtheria toxin (AB exotoxin)
- Tox gene encoded by bacteriophage that integrates
into bacteriums genome ? Prophage b (lysogenic) - Protein synthesis inhibition (involving EF-2 and
translocase) - Can disseminate through bloodstream (toxemia) and
affect nervous system, heart and kidneys - Cord factor
- Glycolipid containing trehalose
7- Symptoms/Presentation
- Dead tissue cells, WBC and RBC and bacterial
cells form a dull gray exudate referred to as a
pseudomembrane - Can block airway in trachea suffocation
- Tracheotomy may be required
- Thick mucopurulant (mucous and pus) nasal
discharge - Fever
- Cough, sore throat
- Malaise (vague feeling of physical discomfort)
- Enlarged and tender cervical lymph nodes
8- Laboratory culture swab the tonsilar area
- Tellurite added to medium (chocolate or blood
agar) - Enriches for C. diphtheriae and restricts growth
of normal flora of the throat - Tellurite is reduced to tellurium metal
precipitate (dark gray to black colonies)
9- Diagnosis
- Detection of toxin
- In vitro virulence test ELEK test
- Streak bacteria out on agar in lines
- Lay a paper strip containing anti-toxin antitoxin
antibodies - Include a positive control in parallel to
patients sample - Incubate and look for line of identity
(precipitate caused by immune complexes) - Inject guinea pig ? morbid symptoms/mortality
10- Susceptibility test
- SCHICK Test (rarely used anymore)
- Diphtheria toxoid inject subcutaneously
- Wait 48 hours and note formation of induration in
the absence of antibodies susceptible ?
immunity not present - If antibodies are present (immune) then toxin is
neutralized ? no induration - DTH response
11- Treatment
- Antitoxin administered to neutralize the toxin
- Immediate administration based on symptoms rather
than waiting for laboratory results - Also administer penicillin or erythromycin
12- Prevention
- Immunization (vaccination)
- Has protected USA from this disease
- Toxoid made from diphtheria toxin
- Part of DPT vaccine
- Diphtheria
- Pertussis
- Tetanus
- Administered at 2, 4, 6, and 15-18 months, and
again at 4-6 years with boosters every 10 years
recommended (especially if traveling to areas
where diphtheria is endemic Asia, Africa,
Central and South America and Russia)
13Legionnaires Disease (Legionellosis)
14- General Features
- Caused by Legionella pneumophila
- Gram negative rods
- This organism also causes Pontiac Fever (no
pneumonia, self-limiting) - 1976 American Legion convention in Philadelphia
in one of the citys largest hotels - 29 fatalities (182 participants)
- 1985 Stafford, England
- Cooling system
- 39 fatalities out of 163 people exposed
15- Not spread person-to-person
- Bacteria normally found in soil and aquatic
ecosystems - Bacteria also found in air-conditioning systems
and shower stalls - Infection causes cytotoxic damage to lung alveoli
16- Virulence factors/pathogenicity
- Mist inhaled from poor water cooling systems and
mist machines in supermarkets - Soil ? dust??
- Whirlpool filters, shower heads, nebulizers and
hot water systems
17- Endotoxin in cell wall
- Hemolysin generated
- Cytotoxin produced
- Bacteria divide within alveolar macrophages
- Inhibition of fusion of phagosome with lysosome
- Mediated by mip gene product (macrophage
infectivity potentiator) - Important in establishing pneumonia
18- Symptoms
- Chest pain, dry (non-productive) cough
- Fever
- Headache
- Neuralgia
- Atypical pneumonia (bronchopneumonia)
- Abdominal cramping and gastrointestinal symptoms
may also occur
19- Laboratory culture
- Mueller-Hinton agar
- 1 Hemoglobin 1 Isovitalex (vitamins)
- 5 CO2
- Cell culture
- Grown in animals
- Guinea pigs
- Chick embryos
- Can survive in free-living amoebae (another
potential source)
20- Increased susceptibility
- Smokers
- Alcoholism
- Endotracheal intubation
- Chronic pulmonary diseases
- Patients on immunosuppressive therapy
- Transplant patients
- Autoimmune patients
- Anesthesia
21- Diagnosis and treatment
- Isolation and serological identification needed
- Direct immunofluorescence (organisms cultured or
obtained from sputum) - Indirect immunofluorescence (patients serum
antibodies to organism) - Agglutination tests
- ELISA
- RIA on urine
- Erythromycin and/or rifampin
22MeningitisNeisseria meningitidis, Streptococcus
pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Salmonella
choleraesuis (invades from GI tracts), Listeria
monocytogenes
23- Meningitis - caused by a variety of organisms and
conditions - Bacterial (septic) meningitis is diagnosed by the
presence of bacteria in the cerebrospinal fluid - Bacterial meningitis is treated with various
antibiotics, depending on the specific bacterium
involved - Aseptic (nonbacterial) meningitis syndrome is
more difficult to treat but the mortality is
generally low
24Neisseria meningitidis(epidemic meningitis)
25- General features
- Gram negative dipolococci (meningococci)
- Non-motile
- Oxidase positive
- Can oxidize dimethyl (and tetramethyl)
para-phenylene diamine hydrochloride) - Must be grown gt30oC
- Require special media ? sensitive to trace metals
and fatty acids - Chocolate agar (blood agar treated at 80oC for
10) - Decreases inhibitory effects of trace metals and
fatty acids - Incubated with 10 CO2
- Causes 2000-3000 cases of meningitis annually in
USA
26- Classification
- Serotypes based on common antigens
- Polysaccharide capsule
- Outermembrane proteins
- A-D, X-Z, L, W135 and 29E
- A,B an C are primarily responsible for meningitis
outbreaks
27- Virulence characteristics
- Obligate parasite of humans
- Often found in nasopharynx of asymptomatic
carriers - Spread via respiratory route
- Pili enable attachment to host cells
- Capsule resists phagocytosis
- Release large amount of endotoxin
- IgA1 protease produced
28- Three stages
- First stage nasopharyngeal infection
- Minor inflammation or asymptomatic
- Lasts days to months
- Protective antibodies made
- Second state memingococcemia
- Microbes enter bloodstream
- Can be acute and rapid (death in 6-8 hours!)
- May take longer to ensue with fever, malaise and
rash
29- Sometimes lesion in joints, lungs, skin, internal
organs and adrenal glands develop - Endotoxin induced (TNF-alpha produced)
- Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) may
develop (Hageman factor) - Clots disrupt circulation
- Amputation may be necessary
30- Third stage meninges infected following
invasion of the blood brain barrier (BBB) - Headache, stiff neck, vomiting, delerium
- TNF-alpha found in CSF
- Concentration correlates with degree of BBB
disruption and severity of the disease - Most severe form of meningococcemia is the life
threatening Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome - High fever, shock, widespread purpura,
disseminated intravascular coagulation and
adrenal insufficiency, seeding of multiple organs
including the meninges
31Bleeding into the skin (petechiae and purpura),
and the tissue in these areas may die (become
necrotic or gangrenous).
32- Diagnosis of Meningococcal infections
- Microscopy smears
- Culturing CSF, blood, skin lesion, nasopharyngeal
secretions - Chocolate agar
- Blood agar
- Thayer-Martin medium
- Nystatin, Polymyxin, Vancomycin Antibioitics
inhibit contaminants while favoring pathogenic
Neisseria - 5-10 CO2 (candle jar or CO2 incubator)
33- Serology
- Group-specific antisera agglutination of
bacteria - Sugar fermentation tests (Glucose, Maltose)
- Counterimmunoelectrophoresis
- At the pH used the anti-capsule antibodies have a
positive charge and moves toward the anode while
the capsular polysaccharides have a negative
charge and moves toward the cathode - Electrophoresed for 30-60 minutes
- A precipitate line forms if positive
34- Quellung reaction
- Antibodies to capsular components swelling of
capsule occurs - Latex bead agglutination (group-specific
polysaccharide adsorbed to beads incubated with
patients serum)
35- Treatment
- Penicillin or erythromycin
- Prevention
- Quadravalent vaccine A, C, Y W135
polysaccharide antigens - Used in epidemics and for military personnel
- Prophylactic rifampin used for those exposed
36Haemophilus influenzae - Meningitis
37- General features and growth requirements
- Small, Gram negative rod/coccobacillus
(pleomorphic) - Non-motile, aerobic
- Associated with bacterial meningitis in children
and epiglottis infection (can block airway) - Leading cause of invasive bacterial disease in
children
38- Six capsular types
- Type b significant in human infections
- Primary virulence factor - antiphagocytic
- Composed of PRP
- Polymer of ribose phosphate or ribulose phosphate
- Polysaccharide capsule
- Non-encapsulated forms in majority of
asymptomatic carriers - Can cause secondary bacterial pneumoni after
viral infections (influenzae0
39- Require chocolate agar supplemented with X and V
factors - X factor heat stable hematin (reguired for
cytochromes and catalase) - V factor heat labile, can be substituted with
NAD
40- Virulence factors/pathogenicity
- Respiratory route of infection/transmission
- Menintigitis in children
- 1000-3000 cases annually in USA
- Mortality rate of 3-7
- Enters blood via nasopharynx, then meninges
- CSF resembles meningococcal infection
- PMNLs and elevated sugar concentration
41- Other diseases caused by HIB
- Epiglottitis in children
- Airway obstruction owing to inflmmation, edema
- Can lead to suffocation if not treated
- Otitis media with effusion (OME)
- Within first 3 years of life, 60-70 of children
are affected (40 more than once) - Usually the unencapsulated form is responsible
- Can also cause septic arthritis in children lt2
years old (joint inflammation) - Elderly infections pneumonia, meningitis,
epiglottitis and female genital tract
42- Diagnosis, treatment and prevention
- Centrifuge the CSF
- Gram stain pleomorphic Gram negative rods
- Quellung reaction with type b antiserum
- Fluorescent antibodies
- Countercurrent electrophoresis of CSF versus
antiserum - ELISA
43- Latex bead agglutination (beads coated with
antibodies to type b capsule) - Culture CSF and blood ? chocolate agar, 350C
CO2 or TSA X,V or XV discs - Both X and V required for growth
44- Treatment of meningitis must be immediate!
- Relatively high mortality rate (3-7)
- High level of complications (in 30 of survivors)
- Convulsions
- Hydrocephalus
- Mental retardation
- Blindness
- Ampicillin or if ampicillin resistant then
chloramphenicol or cephalosporins - Rifampin used as prophylactic for those exposed
45- Prevention
- Vaccine for type b capsular antigens
- Early vaccines were inefective in children lt2
years - Improved vaccine
- Conjugate vaccine
- Polysaccharide of type b conjugated to large
proteins which serve as carriers - Tetanus toxoid carrier
- Diphtheria toxoid carrier
- Administered at 2 months of age, 3 doses, 2
months apart, then a booster at 12-15 months - Tetramune DPT HbOC
- Case Study
46Listeria monocytoenes - Listeriosis
47- General features
- Small, Gram positive, motile, pleomorphic rod
(club shaped) - Facultative anaerobes
- Beta hemolytic on blood agar plates (narrow band)
- 11 serotypes
- Most prevalent forms include types 1a, 1b and 4b
48- Pathogenicity
- Transmitted by
- Animals
- Contaminated water
- Soil
- Fecal-oral route
- Poultry (major reservoir)
- Unpasteurized milk
- Coleslaw (raw vegetables not cleaned,
contaminated with manure)
49- Even pastueurized milk can be a potential source
intracellular microbes in leukocytes in milk are
resistant to heat - Meningitis occurs in gt75 of infections (most
common feature/manifestation in adults) - Also causes endocarditis, urethritis,
conjunctivitis and abortions (miscarriage) - Most susceptible
- Immunocompromised and immunosuppressed
- Newborns
- Neonatal listeriosis
50- Neonatal listeriosis
- Early and late onset
- Early onset Transplacental or transvaginal
acquisition - Acutely ill at birth or shortly thereafter
- Pneumonia common
- Believed to be a result of decreased
cell-mediated IRs in pregnancy - Growth of bacteria within placental cells
- Late onset
- 1-4 weeks after birth
- Meningitis usually
- Probably acquired after birth as a result of
person-to-person contact
51- Listerolysin O (LLO)
- Hemolytic cytolysin responsible for intracellular
growth in macrophages and epithelial cells - Permits escape of phagocytosed L. monocytoges
from phagosome ? into the cytosol
52- Treatment
- Penicillin
- Ampicillin
- Or tetracycline (preferred)
53Atypical Mycobacteria
54- Mycobacterium avium - M. intracellulaire
pneumonia - Organisms are normal soil and water inhabitants
especially in Southern USA - Both the respiratory and the gastrointestinal
tracts have been proposed as portals of entry - The gastrointestinal tract is thought to be the
most common site of colonization and dissemination
55- Pulmonary infection is similar to tuberculosis
but usually milder - Most often seen in elderly patients with
preexisting pulmonary disease - Occurs in 15 to 40 of AIDS patients is becoming
a severe problem - Symptoms include fever, malaise, weight loss, and
diarrhea - Treatment is usually multiple drug therapy
56Bordetella pertussis Whooping Cough
57- Pertussis (whooping cough) - Bordetella pertussis
- Highly contagious disease that primarily affects
children - Transmission is by droplet inhalation
- Toxins are responsible for most of the symptoms
58- General features
- Small, Gram negative cocco-bacillus
- Non-motile
- Non-spore forming
- Often encapsulated
- Source
- Respiratory discharge (microdroplets)
- Direct or indirect
59- Virulence characteristics (non-invasive)
- The disease progresses in stages
- Catarrhal stage
- Inflamed mucous membranes
- Resembles a cold (sneezing, coughing)
- Follows infection of ciliated epithelium of RT
- Lasts 7-10 days
60- Spasmodic/Paroxysmal stage
- After 1-2 weeks
- Prolonged coughing sieges with inspiratory whoop
- Exhaustive
- Vomiting
- Conovulsions
- Lasts 2 weeks
- Convalescent stage
- Lasts a further 2 weeks or sometimes longer
- Some fatalities
61- Virulence factors
- Pertussis toxin (AB exotoxin)
- Increased cAMP
- Activated protein kinases in cell
- Anaphylaxis sensitivity (histemine-sensitizing
effect) - Increased insulin hypoglycemia
- Increased lymphocytes n blood
- Aids in adherence to host cells
- Extracytoplasmic adenylate cyclase (bacterial
enzyme) - Increased cAMP
- Inhibition of neutrophils, macrophages and NK
cells
62- Filamentous Hemagglutinin
- Binding to epithelium
- Pertactin
- Binding to epithelium
- Tracheal cytotoxin
- Causes mucous and inflammatory debris to build up
in the lungs - PTG degradation product
- Induces IL-1 peroduction
- Ciliated epithelial cells are killed
63- Spontaneous mutations in lab cultures of
virulence factors ? can lead to phase changes
(phase 1,2,3,4) - Phase 1 most virulent
- Phase 4 avirulent
- Reversible process
- Colony morphology may change
- Loss of virulence factors
64- Treatment and prevention
- Culture
- Push swab in back of nose to posterior nares and
ask patient to cough - Swab (not cotton) coated with penicillin
- Cultured on Bordet-Gengou medium
- Potato blood glycerol agar (high blood, 20-30)
- 3-4 days
65- Detection
- Agglutination tests
- Fluorescent antibodies
- Antibiotics
- Erythromycin or tetracyclines or chloramphenicol
- Not always helpful, but important in limiting
secondary infections (bronchitis and pneumonia
caused by other organisms)
66- Vaccination
- Effective but there are complications
- 5-20 deaths 50 cases of brain damage in USA per
year over last 10 years - Post vaccine encephalopathy
- DPT vaccine
- 2,4,6 and 12-15 mos
- Killed Bordetella pertussis
- Results of vaccination
- 1934 265,000 cases ? 7500 deaths
- 1998 6000 cases ? 3-5 deaths