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Good Luck with the last chance!

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Title: Good Luck with the last chance!


1
Good Luck with the last chance!
1930-2130 Oct. 19th, Fri
2
Anaerobic Bacteria
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Obligate Anaerobes
  • In the presence of oxygen, anaerobic bacteria
    produce toxic products such as superoxide and
    hydrogen peroxide, but they lack superoxide
    dismutase (SOD), catalase and peroxidase that
    detoxify these products

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SOD O2-2H ? H2O2 Catalase
H2O2 ? H2O O2 Peroxidase H2O2 ? H2O /NAD to
NADH
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  • No oxidative phosphorylation
  • Infection caused by anaerobes usually occurs in
    the sites with low oxidation-reduction potential
    such as periodontal pocket, intestinal tract and
    vagina.
  • Anaerobes are co-infected with other facultative
    anaerobe which use up oxygen to establish a local
    anaerobic environment.

8
Source of anaerobic infection
  • Endogenous infection caused by anaerobes of
    normal flora which are non-spore formers.
  • Exogenous infection The pathogens are usually
    anaerobic spore-formers and come from the
    environment (e.g., soil). Clostridia is the
    unique genus of anaerobic spore-formers to cause
    human diseases.

9
Clostridia
  • There are at least 118 species, the clinically
    important species
  • Clostridia tetani
  • Clostridia perfringens
  • Clostridia botulinum
  • Clostridia difficile

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Clostridium tetani
spore
vegetative
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  • Gram-positive rods that form terminal spores

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  • Culture clustering growth with hemolysis occurs
    on blood agar.

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  • Biochemical activity does not ferment any
    carbohydrates.
  • Resistance spores but not its vegetative form
    can tolerate boiling for 60 min and stay alive
    for several ten years in soil.

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  • Clostridia tetani is found in soil. It is
    occasionally found in intestinal flora of humans
    and animals.
  • Clostridia tetani is the cause of tetanus when
    the spores enter wounds.

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Process to cause tetanus
Spore-contaminated soil or other foreign objects
  • Narrow deep wounds with limited blood and oxygen
    supply
  • co-infection with facultative anaerobe can use up
    the local oxygen

Spores germinate and then produce tetanus toxins.
The organism still remains in the local wound.
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  • Clostridia tetani produces two exotoxins called
    tetanus toxins
  • Tetanolysin its virulent role remains unknown.
  • Tetanospasmin it is a neurotoxin with strong
    toxicity and the most important virulent factor
    of the bacterium.

17
Pathogenesis of tetanospasmin
  • one heavy chain (H chain)
  • C endbinds to the ganglioside receptors of
    inhibitory neurones
  • N endhelps in entrance to the cells
  • one light chain (L chain)
  • It contains a zinc endopeptidase
  • Blocks the release of inhibitory neuronal
    mediators g-GABA (g-????) and glycin
    (???)
  • Stops inhibitory nerve impulse to skeletal
    muscles, resulting in persistent muscle
    contraction.

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  • Typical symptoms include sardonic smile, lockjaw,
    neck rigidity, opisthotonos and dyspnea

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This baby has tetanus. The infection is usually
caused by exposing to Clostridia tetani when
cutting umbilical cord.
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This the neonatal tetanus patient displays
sardonic smile, lockjaw and dyspnea
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The adult  tetanus patient shows opisthotonos
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  • Among all animal species, horses and humans, are
    most susceptible to tetanospasmin
  • If not treated in time, about 20 of the patients
    are died of suffocation and respiratory failure

23
  • The wound is treated by debridement (???) to
    destroy anaerobic environment.

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  • Although antibiotics (streptomycin and
    erythromycin) are used as part of the treatment,
    tetanus patients must be promptly treated with
    tetanus antitoxin (TAT) to neutralize free
    tetanospasmin.
  • 1500 3000 U for prevention
  • 100.000 200.000 U for therapy

25
  • Tetanus toxoid is a component of DPT vaccine
    (diphtheria toxoid, killed whole cell pertussis,
    tetanus toxoid).

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Clostridia
  • There are at least 118 species, the clinically
    important species
  • Clostridia tetani
  • Clostridia perfringens
  • Clostridia botulinum
  • Clostridia difficile

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  • Gram-positive rods, have capsule, can form
    terminal spores

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  • Form double hemolysis circles on blood agar
    plates.
  • The a-hemolysis is caused bya-toxin while the
    ß-hemolysis by?-toxin.

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Stormy fermentation
  • Clostridium perfringens shows stormy
    fermentation in litmus milk. Acid turns the pH
    indicator litmus from blue to pink. The acid and
    enzymes coagulate proteins to curd. The gas
    generated in the milk breaks the coagulated
    proteins.

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Diseases
  • Wound contaminated by soil (main source) and
    mammalian feces
  • Gas gangrene refers to serious tissue swelling
    due to release of gas (fermentation product of
    the bacterium) and tissue necrosis

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  • The death can occur within 2 days if untreated.
    Treatment includes debridement, antitoxin and
    antibiotic therapy.

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Diseases
  • Common diseases
  • Gas gangrene
  • Food poisoning
  • Other diseases
  • Necrotizing Enteritis
  • Cellulitis (????)
  • Septicemia

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Food poisoning
  • Marked hypersecretion in jejunum and ileum with
    loss of fluids and electrolytes in diarrhea.

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Necrotizing enteritis
  • an acute necrotizing process in the jejunum with
    symptoms of abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea and
    peritonitis.
  • The death rate of this disease is as high as
    approximately 50.

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Virulent factors
  • Clostridium perfringens produces over 10 types of
    toxins. Some toxins are hemolytic, proteolytic,
    saccharolytic enzymes. Some are lethal and
    necrotic.
  • alpha-toxin is the most important, it lyses
    erythrocytes, platelets, leukocytes and
    endothelial cells.

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  • According to antigenic differences of 4 major
    toxins, the bacterial strains can be divided into
    AE toxic types.
  • Type A is clinically the most important. Type A
    can also produce enterotoxin to cause food
    poisoning.

39
  • Morphology
  • Stormy fermentation
  • alpha-toxin (lecithinase)

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  • Debridement (Gas gangrene)
  • A large dose of antibiotics (penicillin)
  • Antitoxin against alpha-toxin and hyperbaric
    oxygenation (?????)
  • No vaccine is available

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Clostridia
  • There are at least 118 species, the clinically
    important species
  • Clostridia tetani
  • Clostridia perfringens
  • Clostridia botulinum
  • Clostridia difficile

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Clostridium botulinum
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  • Clostridium botulinum is a Gram-positive,
    anaerobic, spore-forming bacillus.
  • It produces an enterotoxin (botulinum toxin)
    that causes food poisoning (botulism).
  • According to the antigenicity of botulinum
    toxin, The microbe can be divided into AG types.
  • Among the 7 types, type A and then type B
    strains cause most disease.

44
  • The foods that are easily contaminated by the
    toxins or spores are sausage and canned foods
    abroad, and fermented-bean preparations in
    China.
  • In adult, the toxin or spore causes botulism
    (death rate 50-70).
  • In infant (especially younger than 6 months),
    the toxin or spore causes infant botulism (death
    rate 1-2) .

45
Pathogenesis of botulinum toxin
  • Botulinum toxin is a nuerotoxin. It binds to
    other non-toxic proteins to form a complex. It is
    released, when the bacteria are dead and broken.
  • When the complex enters intestines, the alkaline
    condition makes botulinum toxin released.

46
  • Botulinum toxin binds the cellular receptor of
    neuromuscular junction and then enters the cells
    to block the release of acetylcholine (????).
  • Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter, which
    mediates nerve impulses. Therefore, flaccid
    paralysis occurs.

47
  • The typical symptoms are double vision and squint
    (eye), dyscatabrosis (throat), and dyspnea. The
    patients are usually died of respiratory failure.
  • 10 ng of Botulinum toxin can kill an adult.

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  • Sample collection foods and patients feces.
  • Identification of botulinum toxin in the samples

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  • The patients must be promptly treated with A, B,
    E multi-valent antitoxin to neutralize the free
    toxins.
  • Sometimes antibiotic therapy is needed.
  • Vaccination does not protect hosts from botulism.

50
  • Non-spore-forming anaerobes are strict anaerobes
    and present in large numbers in intestine (95-99
    of the total bacterial mass), mouth and
    genitourinary tract as normal flora.
  • These anaerobes can be divided into anaerobic
    Gram-positive or negative cocci or rods belonging
    to 23 genera. 11 genera are associated with human
    diseases.

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Non-Spore-forming Anaerobes of medical
Importance  
  • Gram-negative rods
  • Bacteroides, Prevotella, Porphyromonas,
    Fusobacterium
  • Gram-positive rods
  • Propionibacterium, Actinomyces, Eubacterium,
    Bifidobacterium
  • Gram-positive cocci
  • Peptostreptococcus, Peptococcus
  • Gram-negative cocci
  • Veillonella

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  • Most non-spore-forming anaerobes are
    opportunistic pathogens, and a few of them show
    relatively stronger pathogenicity.
  • Co-infection with facultative bacteria.
  • Adhesion to host cells by pili.
  • Production of various virulent factors such as
    enterotoxin, collagenase, hyaluronidas, protease,
    hemolysin, DNase.
  • Oral, genitourinary, abdominal and perineal
    infections are most common.

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  • Most infections cause chronic pyogenic
    inflammation, local abscess or tissue necrosis.
  • The secretion or pus in foci are usually colored
    (black, brown, bloody, pink), putrid and
    gas-producing.

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  • Direct microscopy examination to observe the
    bacteria in the smear of secretion.
  • Typical bacteriological examination to isolate
    and identify the anaerobes from samples. In
    smear of secretion, bacteria can be seen, whereas
    the results of common cultivations are negative.

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  • Aminoglycoside antibiotics (e.g., streptomicin)
    and some ß-lactam antibiotics are ineffective.
  • Antibiotics such as nitrominazole (metronidazole)
    are used for treatment.
  • No vaccines are available.
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