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Faculty: Dr' Alvin Fox

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poor sanitary conditions. Typhoid. acute phase, gastroenteritis. gall bladder. shedding, weeks ... sanitary measures. protect the water supply. food/water ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Faculty: Dr' Alvin Fox


1
ENTEROBACTERIACEAE, VIBRIO, CAMPYLOBACTER AND
HELICOBACTER
Faculty Dr. Alvin Fox
2
Key Words
Opportunistic diseases Shigella
Diarrhea/Dysentery Bacillary
dysentery Urinary tract infections Shiga
toxin Opportunistic infections Salmonella
enteritidis Lactose positive/negative salmonello
sis Enteropathogenic E. coli Salmonella
cholerae-suis Enterotoxigenic E. coli
Salmonella typhi Heat stable toxin
Typhoid Heat labile toxin Vi Enteroinvasive
E. coli Vibrio cholerae Enterohemorrhagic E.
coli Choleragen Vero toxin (Shiga-like)
Yersinia entercolitica Hemolysin
Helicobacter pylori pili Campylobacter
jejuni
3
Opportunistic diseases -Enterobacteriaceae
  • septicemia,
  • pneumonia,
  • meningitis
  • urinary tract infections


Citrobacter Enterobacter Escherichia Hafnia Morgan
ella Providencia Serratia
4
Enterobacteriaceae
  • gastrointestinal diseases
  • Escherichia coli
  • Salmonella
  • Shigella
  • Yersinia entercolitica

5
Reiter's syndrome
  • Histocompatibility antigen (HLA) B27
  • Enterobacteriaceae
  • Salmonella
  • Shigella
  • Yersinia
  • Not Enterobacteriaceae
  • Campylobacter
  • Chlamydia

6
Enterobacteriaceae
  • community acquired
  • otherwise healthy people
  • Klebsiella pneumoniae
  • respiratory diseases
  • prominent capsule
  • urinary tract infection
  • fecal contamination
  • E. coli
  • Proteus
  • urease (degrades urea)
  • alkaline urine


7
Enterobacteriaceae
  • Gram negative facultative anaerobic rods
  • oxidase negative (no cytochrome oxidase)

8
Feces
  • E. coli
  • lactose positive
  • not usually identified
  • lactose positive sp. common, healthy intestine
  • Shigella
  • Salmonella
  • Yersinia
  • lactose negative
  • identified

9
Enterobacteriaceae
  • other sites
  • identified biochemically


10
Serotypes
  • reference laboratory
  • antigens
  • O (lipopolysaccharide)
  • H (flagellar)
  • K (capsular)


11
Diarrhea and Dysentery
12
Escherichia coli
13
Escherichia coli
  • E. coli and Shigella
  • genetically indistinguishable
  • many similarities in diseases

14
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli
  • destruction of surface microvilli
  • fever
  • diarrhea
  • vomiting
  • nausea
  • non-bloody stools

15
Enterotoxigenic E. coli
  • diarrhea like cholera
  • milder
  • travellers diarrhea

16
Enterotoxigenic E. coli
  • Heat labile toxin
  • like choleragen
  • Adenyl cyclase activated
  • cyclic AMP
  • secretion water/ions
  • Heat stable toxin
  • Guanylate cyclase activated
  • cyclic GMP
  • uptake water/ions

17
Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC )
  • Dysentery
  • resembles shigellosis

18
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
  • Usually O157H7

19
Meat
  • Hemorrhagic
  • bloody, copious diarrhea
  • few leukocytes
  • afebrile
  • hemolytic-uremic syndrome
  • hemolytic anemia
  • thrombocytopenia
  • kidney failure

20
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
  • Vero toxin
  • shiga-like
  • Hemolysins

21
Treatment -gastrointestinal disease
  • fluid replacement
  • antibiotics
  • not used unless systemic
  • e.g. hemolytic-uremia syndrome

22
E. coli fimbriae
Type 1
mannose
P
  • galactose
  • glycolipids
  • glycoproteins

23
Shigella
  • S. flexneri, S. boydii, S. sonnei, S. dysenteriae
  • bacillary dysentery
  • shigellosis
  • bloody feces
  • intestinal pain
  • pus

24
Shigellosis
  • within 2-3 days
  • epithelial cell damage

25
Shigella sonnei
26
Shiga toxin
  • neurotoxic
  • enterotoxic
  • cytotoxic
  • inhibits protein synthesis
  • lysing 28S rRNA

27
Shigellosis
  • man only "reservoir"
  • mostly young children
  • fecal to oral contact.
  • children to adults
  • transmitted by adult food handlers
  • unwashed hands

28
Treating shigellosis
  • manage dehydration
  • patients respond to antibiotics
  • disease duration diminished

29
Salmonella
30
Salmonella
  • 2000 antigenic "types
  • genetically single species
  • S. enterica
  • disease category
  • S. enteritidis
  • many serotypes
  • S. cholerae-suis
  • S. typhi

31
Salmonellosis
  • S. enteritidis
  • the common salmonella infection
  • poultry, eggs
  • no human reservoir
  • Gastroenteritis
  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • non-bloody stool
  • self-limiting (2 - 5 days)

32
Salmonellosis
uncomplicated cases (the vast majority)
antibiotic therapy not useful
33
S. cholerae-suis
  • much less common
  • septicemia
  • antibiotic therapy essential

34
Typhoid
  • enteric fever.
  • severest salmonella disease
  • Salmonella typhi
  • rare in US
  • epidemics
  • third world
  • Europe
  • historical

35
Salmonella typhi
  • human reservoir
  • carrier state common
  • contaminated food
  • water supply
  • poor sanitary conditions

36
Typhoid
  • Septicemia
  • -occurs 10-14 days
  • lasts 7 days
  • gall bladder
  • shedding, weeks
  • acute phase, gastroenteritis

gastrointenteritis
37
S. typhi
  • Vi (capsular) antigen
  • protective

38
Typhoid -Therapy
  • Antibiotics
  • essential
  • Vaccines
  • ineffective

39
Yersiniosis
  • Yersinia entercolitica
  • gastroenteritis
  • Scandinavia common
  • US
  • colder regions

40
Yersiniosis
  • transmission
  • fecal contamination, domestic animals
  • water
  • milk
  • meat

41
Yersinia
Diarrhea fever abdominal pain antibiotic therapy
recommended occassional bacteremia
42
Yersinia -isolation
cold enrichment
43
Y. pseudotuberculosis
  • similar
  • less severe disease

44
Vibrio cholerae
45
Vibrios
  • Gram negative rods
  • comma shaped
  • facultative anaerobes
  • oxidase positive
  • simple nutritional requirements
  • readily cultivated

46
Occurrence -cholera
  • third world
  • US
  • uncommon
  • traveler
  • ingestion of sea-food

47
Transmission - V. cholerae
feces
  • water
  • fresh
  • salt
  • food

48
Cholera - attachment
49
Cholera toxin- Choleragen
  • B binds to gangliosides
  • provides channel for A
  • A catalyses ADP-ribosylation
  • regulator complex
  • activates adenylate cyclase

50
Cholera -therapy
  • massive secretion of ions/water into
  • gut lumen
  • dehydration and death
  • therapy
  • fluid replacement
  • antibiotic therapy
  • vaccination
  • partially effective
  • not generally used
  • international travelers

51
Vibrio parahemolyticus
  • raw sea-food
  • grows best in high salt
  • not common in US
  • diarrhea

52
CAMPYLOBACTER HELICOBACTER
  • Gram negative rods
  • curved or spiral
  • genetically related.

53
Campylobacter
54
C. jejuni.
  • infects the intestinal tract of animals
  • cattle and sheep
  • major cause of abortions.

55
Transmission
  • milk
  • meat products

56
Campylobacter
57
Isolation - Campylobacter
  • microaerophilic
  • grows best 42oC.

58

Campylobacter - symptoms
  • diarrhea
  • malaise
  • fever
  • abdominal pain
  • usually self-limiting
  • antibiotics occassionally
  • bacteremia
  • small minority

59
Helicobacter pylori
  • stomach mucosa
  • ulcers

60
Urease
  • Important in neutralizing stomach acid

61
Diagnosis -Helicobacter
  • 1. Culture
  • 2. urease NH4 CO2
  • mucosal endoscopy NH4
  • radioactive CO2 in breath
  • after feeding radioactive urea

62
Therapy -Helicobacter
  • Antibiotics
  • cures ulcers

63
Summary statement
  • sanitary measures
  • protect the water supply
  • food/water borne epidemics
  • rare US
  • common third world.
  • zoonotic infections
  • contaminated animal products
  • less well controlled
  • common US and elsewhere

64
Therapy
  • severe diarrhea
  • fluid replacement essential
  • antibiotic therapy sometimes used in local
  • infection but always in systemic disease
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