Gram Positive Cocci: Catalase Negative Flashcards

1
Q

Enterococcus General

Environment, transmission, significance, morph

A

Environment: facultative anaerobe, GI tract, grows more in normal flora eliminated by antibiotics
Transmission: endogenous, person to person
Significance: about 17 species, usually E. faecalis or E. faecium
GPC: pairs and short chains, cells may be elongated
Can grow in extreme conditions (alkaline, high temps, NaCl)

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2
Q

Enterococcus Lancefield Typing

What is it?

A

Antigen: carbohydrate structural component of cell wall
Rebecca Lancefield: identification of streptococci by precipitation reaction with homologous antiserum

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3
Q

Enterococcus: Virulence Factors

3

A

Surface adhesins: colonization and edherence to heart valves, renal epithelial cells
Enzymes: cytolysin: protein that inhibits G+ bacteria, hyaluronidase: spread in tissue
Antibiotic resistance: to vancomycin

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4
Q

Enterococcus: Infections

3

A

Nossocomial: UTI, bacteremia
Peritonitis: after surgery or trauma
Endocarditis: inflammation of heart valve linings (surface adhedsin virulence factor!)

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5
Q

Enterococcus Infection: Endocarditis

Symptoms, entry, and spread

A

Infection is IN the heart, not from another site and traveling through blood - actually coming from heart

Symptoms: flu, fever, chills, heart murmur, fatigue, aching, night sweats, swelling in feet, legs or abdomen
Entry and Colonization: transient bacteremia common, mucosal surface is diseased
- Vascular endothelium is resistant to bacteremia, *bacteria initially stick to platelet and fibrin aggregates
*
Spread: vegetation formations, cytokine release and tissue damage

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6
Q

Endocarditis Virulence Factors

2

A

Adherance to thrombotic vegetation or valve endothelium
Replicate the valve surface to avoid detection

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7
Q

Streptococcus Species General

A

G+ cocci in pairs or short chains, can be lancet shaped
Use hemolysis to identify

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8
Q

Streptococcus pyogenes Background

Group A Strep (GAS)
Where, transmission, clinical

A

Where: transient colonization skin, URT of humans
Transmission: person to person, droplets, breaks in skin direct contact or fomites
Clinical: pharyngitis, skin or pyodermal infections, sepsis

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9
Q

Streptococcus Virulence Factors

4

A

Capsule: resists phagocytosis
M proteins: resists phag., adhere and invade host cells
Teichoic/lipoteichoic acid: adhere and invade
Exotoxins

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10
Q

Streptococcus pyogenes Exotoxins

3

A

Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin: superantigen, necrotizing fasciitis and strep toxix shock syndrome
Streptolysin S and O: hemolysin, lyses blood cells, S version is why hemolyzed on SBA
Streptokinase: lyse blood clot and fibrin, spreads microbe

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11
Q

Streptococcus pyogenes Pharyngitis

A

Pharyngitis: 2-4 days, abrupt sore throat, fever, headache
Scarlet fever: diffuse rash, strawberry tongue, lasts 5-7 days

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12
Q

Streptococcus pyogenes Pyoderma

A

Impetigo, cellulitis
Erysipelas: acute spreading red lesion, face and lower extremities, upper layer of skin
Seen in mostly elders

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13
Q

Streptococcus pyogenes Necrotizing Fasciitis

A

Deep subcutaneous muscle and fat breakdown in fascial plane (right above muscle layer)
Comes in through a break in the skin
Surgery to remove infection

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14
Q

Streptococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome

A

Initial strep infection goes to shock, organ failure
Patients often have necrotizing fasciitis, bacteremic

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15
Q

Post-Strep Sequelae

And why

A

Rheumatic fever: inflammatory affecting heart, joints, can lead to damaged heart valves, disability, embolic stroke, endocarditis, heart failure
Why: molecular mimicry, response to microbe cross reacts with host antigens, autoimmunity
- Follows pharyngitis, not cutaneous infection
- Young children
Acute glomerulonephritis: inflammation of glomeruli, edema, hypertension, hematuria, proteinuria, sequealae of both pharyngitis and cutaneous

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16
Q

Streptococcus agalactiae Background

Group B Strep (GBS), where, transmission, clinical, virulence

A

Where: normal flora, female genital tract, lower GI tract, 1 in 4 pregnant women
Transmission: person to person, endogenous
Clinical: neonatal/postpartum infection
Virulence factor: capsule, adhesions

17
Q

Streptococcus agalactiae Infections

A

Neonatal disease
Earl onset: vertical transmission from mother, bacteremia, pneumonia, meningitis
Late onset: exogenous source, mostly meningitis
Pregnant women: post partum endometritis, wound infection, UTIs
Other: at risk if older, diabetes, heart disease || bacteremia, pneumonia, skin, soft tissue, bone, joint infections, UTIs

18
Q

Streptococcus agalactiae Prevention

A

Neonatal: screened for colonization
Chemoprophylaxis for all women at high risk or already colonized
Intrapartum temp of at least 38 C
Membrane rupture 18 hours before delivery
Vaginal or rectal culture positive

19
Q

Streptococcus pneumoniae Background

Where, transmission, clinical

A

Where: nasopharynx or oropharynx, common in children
Transmission: person to person droplet, endogenous
Clinical: meningitis, pneumonia, otitis media, bacteremia

20
Q

Streptococcus pneumoniae Virulence Factors

3

A

Protein adhesions
Pneumolysin that creates pores in cells so pathogen can spread into sterile tissue
Capsule for resisting phag

21
Q

Streptococcus pneumoniae Infections

A

Pneumonia: 25-60% all pneumonia, sudden chills, fever, chest pain, cough, pleural fluid effusion problems, cloudy lungs on x ray
Otitis media: inflammation of middle ear, 75% of children get it within 3 years of life

22
Q

Streptococcus pneumoniae Prevention

A

Vaccines available
Composed of polysaccharide antigen fused with a protein carrier molecule
The protein carrier is a stronger antigen that enhances effectiveness of vaccine because original polysacch. antigen can be weak

23
Q

Viridans streptococci Background

Where, transmission, clinical

A

Where: normal mouth flora, GI tract, female genital tract
Transmission: exogenous
Clinical: opportunistic

24
Q

Viridans Infections

A

Subacute bacterial endocarditis: prosthetic valves at risk, slow course of disease, S. sanguis and S. mitis
Dental caries and gingivitis: S. mutans
Gastrointestinal carcinoma: S. gallolyticus

25
Q

Antibiotic Resistance and General Prevention

A

Enterococci are antibiotic resistant, some GBS are vancomycin resistant
S. pneumoniae gaining some resistance too

Mostly just antibiotic treatments, clean wounds, keep hygiene/