Title: Bioterrorism Agents
1Bioterrorism Agents PlagueLesson 4
2Objectives
- List appropriate specimens
- List tests available for diagnosis
- List laboratory criteria for diagnosis
- Describe safety procedures
3Overview
- Critical for first cases
- Collect immediately and before antibiotics
- Store appropriately
- Presumptive diagnoses
4SpecimensRespiratory
- Pharyngeal swabs
- Tracheal washes or aspirates
- Sputum specimens
- Trans-thoracic lung aspirates
- Pleural fluid collection
- Testing Staining, culture, DNA amplification
5SpecimensTissues
- Lung tissue
- Lymph node tissue
- Spleen
- Liver
- Testing Culture, Gram stain
6SpecimensTissues (Autopsy)
- Lung
- Liver
- Spleen
- Lymph nodes
- Skin lesions
- Kidney
- Testing PCR (Specimens kept fresh frozen,
unpreserved)
7SpecimensBlood
- Baseline before antibiotics
- Convalescent
- Minimum 14 days apart
- 3 to 4 weeks after symptom onset
- Two or more sequentially collected samples
preferred
8Specimen HandlingRespiratory, Blood
- Respiratory/Sputum
- Sterile screw-capped containers
- Room temperature (store 2?C-8?C if 2-24 hrs)
- Blood
- Direct to lab at room temperature
- Hold at ambient until incubator
- Do not refrigerate
9Specimen HandlingTissue
- Sterile container
- 1 to 2 drops normal saline
- Transport at room temperature
- Chill if delay
- Contact public health for detailed instructions
10SpecimensTissue Handling
- Split into non-glass containers
- 4?C for live recovery
- -20?C or -70?C for rapid molecular testing
- Formalin-fixed
- Tests Histopathology, HC, PCR
- NOT frozen
- Packaged separately from unpreserved
11Laboratory TestingPneumonic Plague
- Collect before initiating therapy
- Sputum, blood, lymph node aspirate
- Gram Stain and culture
- Gram-negative coccobacillus
- Bipolar (safety pin) staining
- Acute and convalescent bloods for public health
12Laboratory TestingPneumonic Plague
Leukocyte Count Elevated
Differential Neutrophil predominance, including immature forms
Platelets May be normal or low
WBCs 15,000-25,000/µl, left shift
AST, ALT, bilirubin Elevated
13Laboratory TestingPneumonic Plague
- Coagulation abnormalities
- Fibrin split products
- DIC possible
- Increased fibrin degradation products
- Hypofibrinogenemia
- Prolongation of PT and PTT
14Laboratory Case ClassificationSuspect
- Definition
- Clinical sx and exposure compatible AND
- Small, Gram-negative and/or bipolar-staining,
plump rods in singles, short chains, catalase ()
oxidase and urease (-) - Lab Tests Gram stain, differential stain,
culture, catalase, oxidase urease
15Laboratory Case ClassificationProbable
- Definition
- Clinical sx and exposure compatible AND
- Specimen/Isolate positive by one of DFA, PCR,
IHC - OR single PHA/HI titer of ?110 or positive ELISA
- Lab Tests DFA, DNA, IHC,
- Serology
16Laboratory Case ClassificationConfirmed
- Definition
- Positive DFA or DNA detection and bacteriophage
lysis of recovered isolate - OR Paired sera 4-fold rise or fall by PHA/HI or
ELISA - Tests Bacteriophage lysis, Serology, IHC
17Review Questions - Plague
18Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 1
- Suspect pneumonic plague
- Sending for labs before antibiotics
- Which of the following is best for organism
identification?
19Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 1
- Which of the following is best for organism
identification? - Obtain initial blood specimen
- Obtain more than one blood specimen
- Get plasma or whole blood specimen on filter
paper - A smear or isolate from affected tissues
20Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 1
- Which of the following is best for organism
identification? - D. A smear or isolate from affected tissues
21Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 2
- Suspect pneumococcal plague patient
- Sputum sample
- What tests would your laboratory perform?
22Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 2
- What tests would your laboratory perform?
- PCR
- Gram stain and culture
- IHC
23Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 2
- What tests would your laboratory perform?
- B. Gram stain and culture
24Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 3
- Lab unable to rule out Y. pestis
- Specimens sent to public health
- Patient now suspect case
- At what point would public health rule them a
confirmed case?
25Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 3
- At what point would public health rule them a
confirmed case? - Positive by DFA Staining
- Positive by PCR
- Isolate lysed at 22?C-25?C and 37?C
- Single PHA/HI titer lt110
26Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 3
- At what point would public health rule them a
confirmed case? - C. Isolate lysed at 22?C-25?C and 37?C
27Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 4
- About to submit blood specimens
- Possible Y. pestis
- What should you do first?
28Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 4
- What should you do first?
- Treat it as you would others
- Do not refrigerate
- Contact public health epidemiology
- Contact public health laboratory
29Plague Review QuestionLesson 4, Question 4
- What should you do first?
- D. Contact public health laboratory