Enteropathogenic Bacterial Infections Flashcards

1
Q

Escherichia coli

A
  • aerobic, G-
  • causes over 90% UTIs and leading cause of diarrheal disease
  • opportunistic - causes pneumonia and sepsis in immunocompromised and meningitis and sepsis in newborns
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2
Q

Enterotoxigenic E. coli

A
  • traveler’s diarrhea
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3
Q

Enteropathogenic E. coli

A
  • major cause of diarrheal illness in poor tropical areas in infants and young children
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4
Q

Enterohemorrhagic E. coli

A
  • bloody diarrhea, can be followed by hemolytic-uremic syndrome
  • source is usually contaminated milk or meat
  • destroys epithelial cells
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5
Q

Enteroinvasive E. coli

A
  • foodborne dysentery

- similarities to Shigella

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6
Q

E, coli UTI

A
  • most common in sexually active women or those with structural/functional abnormalities of urinary tract
  • derive from resident flora of perineum and periurethral areas
  • produce urgency, pain on urination
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7
Q

E. coli pneumonia

A
  • enteric G- bacteria, opportunistic infection

- often caused by aspiration of organisms

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8
Q

E. coli sepsis

A
  • G- rods
  • opportunistic infection due to impaired ability to eliminate low level bacteremias
  • septic shock via TNF stimulated by bacterial endotoxin
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9
Q

Neonatal E. coli meningitis and sepsis

A
  • E. coli and group B strep - main causes of meningitis or sepsis in first month after birth
  • both colonize in vagina, go to infant GI tract then bloodstream
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10
Q

Salmonella enterocolitis

A
  • G- rod
  • acute self limited GI illness
  • acquired by eating food with nontyphoidal Salmonella strains
  • spread via fecal-oral route
  • diarrhea 12-48 hrs after consuming food
  • tx: supportive (no abx)
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11
Q

Typhoid fever

A
  • Salmonella typhi
  • typically infects older women with gallstones or biliary scarring
  • spread by ingesting contaminated food, especially dairy products and shellfish
  • engulfed and multiply within phagocytes, then stimulates IL-1 and TNF
  • ulcers located along Peyer’s patches
  • forms granulomas on organs (typhoid nodules)
    1) Incubation: 1-14 days
    2) Active invastion/bacteremia: nonspecific symptoms (fever, malaise, HA, arthralgias, pain)
    3) Fastigium: increase in fever/malaise, may become toxic from endotoxins, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly
    4) Lysis: fever/toxic symptoms diminish. GI bleeding.
    5) Convalescence: Recovery with chance of relapse
  • tx: Abx, supportive care
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12
Q

Shigellosis

A
  • aerobic, G- rods
  • S. dysenteriae is most virulent
  • presents with abdominal pain and bloody, mucoid stools
  • fecal-oral spread
  • most common in areas with poor hygiene and sanitation
  • most virulent enteropathogens
  • produce potent shiga toxin that interferes with 60S ribosomal subunits
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13
Q

Cholera

A
  • Vibrio cholerae, aerobic curved G- rod
  • proliferates in lumen of small intestine
  • causes profuse watery diarrhea, rapid dehydration, shock and death within 24 hrs
  • acquired by ingestion of contaminated food or water
  • shellfish accounts for most cases in US
  • causes massive rise in cAMP which upsets balance of water and sodium
  • infected adults can lose up to 20L of fluid/day
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14
Q

Vibrio parahaemolyticus

A
  • G- bacillus

- causes acute gastroenteritis

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15
Q

Campylobacter jejuni

A
  • microaerophilic curved G- rod
  • most common cause of bacterial diarrhea in developed world
  • contaminated food or water
  • fecal-oral spread, can cause traveler’s diarrhea
  • have been associated with Guillain-Barre syndrome
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16
Q

Yersinia

A
  • Y. enterocolitica and Y. pseudotuberculosis, G- coccoid
  • facultative anaerobes
  • causes painful diarrhea