Title: Shigella flexneri
1Shigella flexneri
Simon Flexner
Discoverer of Shigella dysenteriae (1899)
Compiled by Else Marais, Marlene Kassel, Naseema
Aithma, Angela Potgieter Rob Stewart, Branca
Fernandes, and Janet Loakes
2Gastro-intestinal infections
- Acute inflammatory enteritis
- Campylobacter
- Salmonella
- Shigella
- Certain parasites
3Acute dysentery
- Frequent small bowel movements
- Blood and mucous
- Tenesmus
- Pain on defecation
- Inflammatory invasion of intestinal mucosa
- Bacterial, cytotoxic or parasitic destruction
4Overview of Shigella species
- Small, Gram-negative rods
- Non-motile, non-encapsulated
- Family Enterobacteriaceae Tribe
Escherichieae Genus Shigella - 40 serotypes, 4 groups
- A - Shigella dysenteriae
- B - Shigella flexneri
- C - Shigella boydii
- D - Shigella sonnei
5Overview of Shigella species
- Sensitive to heat, kill in 55 c in 1 hr
- S.sonnei survive in soil room temprature for
9-12 days - Survive on fingers for sometime transmit
through hand contact - If suitable,survive in milk other food(15 days
in sea water)
6Overview
- Shigella species
- 140-200 million people infected annually
- 650,000 deaths per year,
- worldwide(esp. developing countries)
- intracellular pathogens
- Incubation 6 hrs to 9 days(1-7 days)
- AB resistance (multiple)
- 2/3 of all cases and most of deaths in lt 10 y/o
- Developing countries 1-4 y/o but in
- epidemics of S. dysenteriae all age group equal
7Overview
- In 5-15 of diarrhea 30-50 of dysentry
- S.flexeneri the most important in endemic
shigellosis - Africa 15 country with outbreak (30 attack rate
in general population 50 in lt 5 y/o - Developed countries children, daycare centers,
immigrant workers, travelers to developing - 2/3 of cases in lt 10 y/o
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9Iran
- Tehran 52 S.flexeneri, 37 S.sonnei
- Resistance to ampi, co-trimoxazole, tetra, amoxi,
chloramphenicole, cephalotin(more in S.flexeneri) - The most effective AB is ciprofloxacin then
ceftizoxime - Shiraz 60 S.flexeneri, 28 S.sonnei, 12
S.boydii, 34 in preschool age - Resistance to ampi, co-trimoxazole
- Sensitive to nalidixic acid, ceftriaxone,
ceftazidime, ciprofloxacin(100)
10Descriptive epidemiology
- Time trend
- More common in warm seasons
- Equal in both sexes
- In temperate climate warm season
- In tropics rainy season
- Preschool early school age
- 1-4 y/o (adult get disease from children)
- Infants(1- 6 mo) are resistant due to nursing
11Predisposing factors
- HIV ( chronic relapsing and causing bateremia
in spite of AB) - Septicemia in Malnutrition, early infancy
S.dysenteriae type 1 - EL-Nino phenomenon
- a dry not rainy winter rainy spring
increase in dysentery in summer
12Sensitivity resistance
- 10-100 micro-organism ingestion in volunteers
diarrhea in 10-40 - More virulent in children, malnutrition,
debilitated old-mostly sub-clinical in adults - Oral vaccine some success (short- term)
- Attenuated oral vaccine prevent clinical dx
- 2nd attack rate in household contact 40
- Epidemics in crowding, bad public health( day
care center, long term care center)
13Transmission
- Fecal-Oral(direct or indirect) from patient or
carrier - No handwashing after bowel movement( direct
contact) - Contaminated food( not usual but can cause major
epidemics) - Carrierswithout treatment microorganism shedding
for 1-4 wks( but the number is low, so
communicability is lower than pts) - Nosocomial infection from pts to healthworkers
to other pts. - Shigella can survive on lab equipments for some
time - Homosexual oral-anal, penile-oral
14Transmission
- Contaminated water milk
- 4-6 wks survive in water( shorter in sun-exposed
water) - Pasteurization eliminate the mo.
- Insects
- Fly mechanical, biological
- Communicable for 4 wks
15- Humans and primates only reservoirs
- Crowded living conditions
- Poor quality water supplies
- Inadequate sewage disposal
- Increase risk of infection
16Clinical features
- From asymptomatic to severe (Mortality rates
vary from 5-10 ) - Bacilli ingested by epithelial cells of the
intestinal villi - Organisms multiply and spread laterally into
lamina propria - Inflammatory reaction develops with capillary
thrombosis - Necrotic epithelium sloughed leading to
ulceration - Severe cases may become life threatening
17Clinical features natural history
- 7-12 bowel movement/day
- Watery, green or yellow, containing mucous blood
or undigested food - Convulsion, Acute bloody dysentery
- Fever, malaise, headache, abdominal pain
- Usually self limited and recovery after 4-7 days,
sometimes persistent diarrhea - HUS
- Mortality in hospital 20
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19Virulence
- S.dysenteriae forms potent exotoxin
- Fluid transuding action as well as
- Lipo-polysaccharide endotoxin
- Described as a neurotoxin
- Toxin levels of S.dysenteriae, highest
- S.sonnei causes mild illness(short symptomatic
period and very low mortality) - S. flexneri and S.boydii range in severity
- S.flexneri bacteremia, predisposed by ulcers
20Virulence
- Commonly a self-limited disease(mild or mod)
- 4-7 days(several days to weeks)
- S.dysenteriae cause more severe disease(20
mortality in admitted patients) - If untreated stool culture for 30 days or more
21Molecular methods of detection
- Isolation difficult
- Genetic probe to the virulence-plasmid developed
and being tested - PCR not routinely done for detection
22Outbreaks
- From contaminated water or food
- contaminated potato salad
- inadequate toilet facilities
- Origin of infection- food handler
- Secondary transmission may occur
- Flies aid transmission
- Infants resistant to shigellosis
- More in formula fed)
23Patterns of outbreaks
- Cyclic patterns of 20-30 years
- From 1900-1925 S.dysenteriae predominated while
from 1926-1938, S.flexneri was common - Currently S.sonnei predominates in Europe and
USA - S.flexneri is predominant in developing
countries( with boydii dysenteriae)
24Controlprimary prevention
- Chlorinated water, waterborne sewage
- Rigorous hand washing
- Institutional outbreaks Isolation of the
infected - Infected food handlers - 2 negative cultures
- Insecticides
- After P/E of the patient hand washing,
disinfection of exam. Equipments - Vaccination under trial
25primary prevention
- Enteric precaution, disinfection of contaminated
equipment stool( if there is not modern sewage)
- Infected person withhold from children, other pts
and food handling 2 consecutive stool culture in
24 hr interval 48 hr after D/C of AB - AB treatment of carriers( without any sign or
symptoms) not recommended - Common writing equipment(pen,)
- nursing
26Secondary Prevention
- Early treatment shorten acute phase of disease
mo. shedding
27Treatment
- Fluid replacement
- Antimicrobial therapy- reduces duration of
symptoms - Reduces secretion of organisms
- Adults- oral ciprofloxacin or ofloxacin
- Children- cotrimoxazole, ampicillin,nalidixic
acid, ceftriaxone, azithromycin - Agents decreasing intestinal motility should not
be used - Untreated lasts 1 day - 1 month (average 7days)
- Complications - dehydration, seizures,
septicaemia, pneumonia, keratoconjunctivitis and
arthritis
28- Travellers
- Eat well cooked food
- Bottled water
- Peel all fruit and vegetables
- Perhaps use prophylactic flouroquinolones