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Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2nd ed.

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Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2nd ed. Chapter 19: Infectious Diseases Affecting the Nervous System Poliomyelitis Acute enteroviral infection of the spinal cord ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2nd ed.


1
Microbiology A Systems Approach, 2nd ed.
  • Chapter 19 Infectious Diseases Affecting the
    Nervous System

2
19.1 The Nervous System and Its Defenses
  • Two component parts to the nervous system
  • CNS
  • PNS
  • Three important functions
  • Sensory
  • Integrative
  • Motor
  • Brain and spinal cord made up of neurons, both
    surrounded by bone, encased with meninges
  • PNS cranial and spinal nerves

3
Defenses of the Nervous System
  • Mainly structural
  • Bony casings
  • Cushion of CSF
  • Blood-brain barrier
  • Immunologically privileged site

4
Figure 19.1
5
Figure 19.2
6
19.2 Normal Biota of the Nervous System
  • No normal biota
  • Any microorganisms in the PNS or CNS is a
    deviation from the healthy state

7
19.3 Nervous System Diseases Caused by
Microorganisms
  • Inflammation of the meninges
  • Many different microorganisms can cause an
    infection
  • More serious forms caused by bacteria
  • If it is suspected, lumbar puncture is performed
    to obtain CSF
  • Typical symptoms headache, painful or stiff
    neck, fever, and usually an increased number of
    white blood cells in the CSF

8
Neisseria meningitides
  • Gram-negative diplococcic lined up side by side
  • Commonly known as meningococcus
  • Often associated with epidemic forms of
    meningitis
  • Causes the most serious form of acute meningitis

9
Figure 19.3
10
Streptococcus pneumonia
  • Referred to as the pneumococcus
  • Most frequent cause of community-acquired
    meningitis
  • Very severe
  • Does not cause the petechiae associated with
    meningococcal meningitis- useful diagnostically
  • Small gram-positive flattened coccus that appears
    in end-to-end pairs

11
Haemophilus influenza
  • Tiny gram-negative pleomorphic rods
  • Sensitive to drying, temperature extremes, and
    disinfectants
  • Causes severe meningitis
  • Symptoms fever, stiff neck, vomiting, and
    neurological impairment

12
Listeria monocytogenes
  • Gram-positive
  • Ranges in morphology from coccobacilli to long
    filaments in palisades formation
  • Resistant to cold, heat, salt, pH extremes, and
    bile
  • In normal adults- mild infection with nonspecific
    symptoms of fever, diarrhea, and sore throat
  • In elderly or immunocompromised patients,
    fetuses, or neonates- affects the brain and
    meninges and results in septicemia

13
Cryptococcus neoformans
  • Fungus
  • More chronic form of meningitis
  • More gradual onset of symptoms
  • Sometime classified as a meningoencephalitis
  • Headache- most common symptom also nausea and
    stiff neck
  • Spherical to ovoid shape and a large capsule

14
Figure 19.7
15
Coccidioides immitis
  • At 25C forms a moist white to brown colony with
    abundant, branching, septate hyphae
  • Hyphae fragment into arthroconidia at maturity
  • Usually begins with pulmonary infection

16
Figure 19.9
17
Figure 19.10
18
Viruses
  • Aseptic meningitis
  • Majority of cases occur in children
  • 90 caused by enteroviruses
  • Generally milder than bacterial or fungal
    meningitis

19
Neonatal Meningitis
  • Almost always a result of infection transmitted
    by the mother, either in utero or during passage
    through the birth canal
  • Two most common causes
  • Streptococcus agalactiae
  • Group B strep
  • Escherichia coli

20
Meningoencephalitis
  • Encephalitis inflammation of the brain
  • Two microorganisms cause meningoencephalitis
    (both amoebas)
  • Naegleria fowleri
  • Acanthamoeba

21
Naegleria fowleri
  • Small, flask-shaped amoeba
  • Forms a rounded, thick-walled, uninucleate cyst
  • Infection begins when amoebas are forced into
    human nasal passages as a result of swimming,
    diving, or other aquatic activities
  • Amoeba burrows in to the nasal mucosa,
    multiplies, and migrates into the brain and
    surrounding structure
  • Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM)

22
Acanthamoeba
  • Large, amoeboid trophozoite with spiny pseudopods
    and a double-walled cyst
  • Invades broken skin, the conjunctiva, and
    occasionally the lungs and urogenital epithelia
  • Granulomatous amoebic meningoencephalitis (GAM)

23
Acute Encephalitis
  • Encephalitis can present as acute or subacute
  • Always a serious condition
  • Acute almost always caused by viral infection
  • Signs and symptoms vary but may include behavior
    changes, confusion, decreased consciousness,
    seizures

24
Arborviruses
  • Borne by insects most feed on the blood of hosts
  • Common outcome acute fever, often accompanied
    by rash

25
Herpes Simplex Virus
  • Can cause encephalitis in newborns born to
    HSV-positive mothers
  • Prognosis is poor

26
JC Virus
  • Infection is common
  • In patients with immune dysfunction, cause
    progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML)-
    uncommon but generally fatal

27
Subacute Encephalitis
  • Symptoms take longer to show up and are less
    striking
  • Most common cause Toxoplasma

28
Toxoplasma gondii
  • Flagellated parasite
  • Most cases go unnoticed
  • In the fetus and immunodeficient people, severe
    and often fatal
  • Asymptomatic or marked by mild symptoms such as
    sore throat, lymph node enlargement, and
    low-grade fever

29
Figure 19.13
30
Measles Virus Subacute Sclerosing
Panencephalitis (SSPE)
  • Occurs years after an initial measles episode
  • Seems to be caused by direct viral invasion of
    neural tissue

31
Prions
  • Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs)
    neurodegenerative diseases with long incubation
    periods but rapid progression once they begin
  • Human TSEs
  • Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)
  • Gerstmann-Strussler-Scheinker disease
  • Fatal familial insomnia

32
Figure 19.14
33
Rabies
  • Slow, progressive zoonotic disease
  • Characterized by fatal encephalitis
  • Average incubation time 1-2 months or more
  • Prodromal phase begins with fever, nausea,
    vomiting, headache, fatigue, and other
    nonspecific symptoms
  • Furious rabies
  • Periods of agitation, disorientation, seizures,
    and twitching
  • Spasms in the neck and pharyngeal muscles lead to
    hydrophobia
  • Dumb rabies
  • Patient is not hyperactive but is paralyzed,
    disoriented and stuporous
  • Both forms progress to the coma phase, resulting
    in death

34
Poliomyelitis
  • Acute enteroviral infection of the spinal cord
  • Can cause neuromuscular paralysis
  • Often affects small children
  • Most infections are contained as short-term, mild
    viremia
  • Some develop mild nonspecific symptoms of fever,
    headache, nausea, sore throat, and myalgia
  • Then spreads along specific pathways in the
    spinal cord and brain
  • Neurotropic the virus infiltrates the motor
    neurons of the anterior horn of the spinal cord
  • Nonparalytic invasion but not destruction of
    nervous tissue
  • Paralytic various degrees of flaccid paralysis
  • Rare cases bulbar poliomyelitis

35
Tetanus
  • Also known as lockjaw
  • Clostridium tetani
  • Gram-positive, spore-forming rod
  • Releases a powerful neurotoxin, tetanospasmin,
    that binds to target sites on peripheral motor
    neurons, spinal cord and brain, and in the
    sympathetic nervous system
  • Toxin blocks the inhibition of muscle contraction
  • Results in spastic paralysis
  • First symptoms clenching of the jaw, followed
    in succession by extreme arching of the back,
    flexion of the arms, and extension of the legs
  • Risus sardonicus

36
Figure 19.21
37
Figure 19.22
38
Botulism
  • Intoxication associated with eating poorly
    preserved foods
  • Can also occur as a true infection
  • Three major forms
  • Food-borne botulism
  • Ingestion of preformed toxin
  • Infant botulism
  • Entrance of botulinum toxin into the bloodstream
  • Wound botulism
  • Entrance of botulinum toxin into the bloodstream

39
  • Symptoms double vision, difficulty in
    swallowing, dizziness later symptoms include
    descending muscular paralysis and respiratory
    compromise
  • Clostridium botulinum
  • Spore forming anaerobe
  • Releases an exotoxin

40
African Sleeping Sickness
  • Trypanosoma brucei
  • Also called trypanosomiasis
  • Affects the lymphatics and areas surrounding
    blood vessels
  • Usually a long asymptomatic period precedes onset
    of symptoms
  • Symptoms include intermittent fever, enlarged
    spleen, swollen lymph nodes, and joint pain
  • Central nervous system is affected with
    personality and behavioral changes that progress
    to lassitude and sleep disturbances

41
Figure 19.24
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