Class of Path Bac Flashcards

1
Q

Staphylococci aureus

A
  • Gram positive
  • Coagulase positive
  • Commensal organism, carried in nose, groin, hairline: sweaty, salt rich environments
  • Wide range of diseases from boils and soft tissue infections to septicaemia and food poisoning
  • Commonly penicillin resistant due to β-lactamase
  • By a different mechanism, some are methicillin resistant - MRSA
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2
Q

Coagulase-negative staphylococci

A
  • Gram positive
  • Many different species
  • Skin commensals
  • Pathogenic in presence of foreign bodies/prostheses e.g. prosthetic heart valves, hips, pacemaker wires
  • Also pathogenic for immunocompromised e.g. neonates and BMT
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3
Q

Streptococci α-haemolytic

A
  • Gram positive
  • Partial haemolysis
  • Blood agar turns green
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae: pneumonia, meningitis, septicaemia
  • Viridans streptococci: normal oral flora, cause infective endocarditis
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4
Q

Streptococci β-haemolytic

A
  • Complete haemolysis
  • Blood agar turns clear
  • Identified based on surface antigens
  • Groups A-G, A, B and D most important
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5
Q

Group A Streptococci β-haemolytic

A
  • Streptococcus pyogenes

- Major pathogen: sore throats, cellulitis, necrotising fasciitis

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6
Q

Group B Streptococci β-haemolytic

A
  • Streptococcus agalatiae
  • Neonatal sepsis: meningitis, bacteraemia
  • Genital tract carriage common (25% women)
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7
Q

Group D Streptococci β-haemolytic

A
  • Enterococcus spp
  • Often non-haemolytic
  • Cause of UTI
  • Found in gut as normal commensal, if you have GI surgery, this is a risk
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8
Q

Clostridium difficile

A
  • Gram positive bacilli
  • Anaerobic
  • In gut of healthy people, 3% adults
  • Important cause of diarrhoea, associated with toxin production
  • Pseudomembranous colitis, breakdown of gut
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9
Q

Clostridium perfringens

A
  • Gram positive bacilli
  • Anaerobic
  • Found in soil and normal commensal in gut/faeces
  • Can contaminate food, food poisoning with enterotoxin-producing strains
  • Infects serious wounds, can lead to gas gangrene also seen in farmers that stand on nails
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10
Q

Clostridium tetani

A
  • Gram positive bacilli
  • Anaerobic
  • Toxins cause tetanus by loss of inhibition at NMJ
  • Antigenically modified toxin used for imms
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11
Q

Neisseria meningitides

A
  • Gram negative cocci

- Causes meningitis, inflammation of meninges and septicaemia

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12
Q

Neisseria gonorhoeae

A
  • Gram negative cocci
  • Causes urerthritis in men, pelvic inflammatory disease in female
  • Spread by sexual contact
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13
Q

Moraxella catarrhalis

A
  • Gram negative cocci
  • Aerobic
  • Diplococcus
  • Causative agent of respiratory tract infections
  • Especially if underlying pathology e.g. COPD
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14
Q

Preliminary test in identifying Gram negative bacilli

A

Lactose fermentation

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15
Q

Coliforms

A
  • Gram negative bacilli
  • Organisms which are in the family of Enterobacteriaceae
  • Mostly in gut
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16
Q

Escherichia coli

A
  • Coliform
  • Gram negative bacilli
  • Human and animal reservoirs
  • Several virulence mechanisms: pili, capsule, endotoxin, exotoxins produced
  • Ferments lactose
  • Strains vary considerably: UTIs, most common traveller’s diarrhoea, blood diarrhoea, haemolytic uraemic syndrome
17
Q

Salmonella spp

A
  • Coliform
  • Gram negative bacilli
  • Does not ferment lactose
18
Q

Salmonella enterica

A
  • Self limiting enterocolitis with or without bloody diarrhoea
  • Can be invasive
19
Q

Salmonella typhi

A
  • Cause of typhoid fever
  • Passed from human to human
  • Fever, constipation in early stages
  • Can do blood test as well as faecal culture
  • Vaccine available
20
Q

Shigella spp.

A
  • Coliform
  • Gram negative bacilli
  • Diarrhoea and dysentery
21
Q

Klebsiella spp.

A
  • Coliform
  • Gram negative bacilli
  • Occasional cause of UTI and pneumonia
22
Q

Proteus spp

A
  • Coliform
  • Gram negative bacilli
  • Causes UTI often associated with stones
23
Q

Campylobacter spp

A
  • Curved Gram -ve bacilli
  • Non-coliform
  • Microaerophilic, likes low O2
  • Faecal-oral route
  • Foul smelling and then bloody diarrhoea
24
Q

Helicobacter pylori

A
  • Curved Gram -ve bacilli
  • Non-coliform
  • Natural habitat is human stomach
  • Damages mucosa and causes ulcers
25
Q

Haemophilus influenza

A
  • Curved Gram -ve bacilli
  • Non-coliform
  • Cocco-bacilli (mixed appearance)
  • Causes RTI
  • Capsulate form before HiB conjugate vaccine was important cause of meningitis
26
Q

Pseudomononas spp

A
  • Curved Gram -ve bacilli
  • Not coliforms
  • Can stay in sinks, drains, mops
  • Can contaminate medical equipment, why you wash your hands in special hand washing sinks
  • HAI: sepsis, pneumonia, UTI
  • Respiratory infection in cystic fibrosis
  • Sensitive to limited antibiotics
27
Q

Bacteriodes spp

A
  • Anaerobic Gram negative bacteria
  • Part of normal colonic flora
  • Causes intra-abdominal abscess
  • May spread to other sites
28
Q

Oral anaerobes

A
  • Prevotella, Porphyromonas, Pasteurella spp, Capnocytyophyga spp
  • Anaerobic Gram negative bacteria
  • Cause of dental abscess
  • Aspiration pneumonia
  • Human and animal bite infections
29
Q

Miscellaneous bacteria

A
  • Not all bacteria can be stained with Gram stains

- Not all can be cultured using standard methods

30
Q

Mycobacterium species

A
  • Seen using the Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN) stain
  • They are Acid and Alcohol Fast Bacilli (AAFB): Resistant to decolourisation by acid or alcohol following staining with carbol fuchsin
  • These don’t identify species and culture required for full I.D
  • TB caused Mycobacterium tuberculosis and linked with HIV
  • Non-TB Mycobacteria: wide range of environmental and atypical mycobacteria
31
Q

Mycobacteria leprae

A
  • Miscellaneous
  • Cannot be cultured
  • Attacks PNS
32
Q

Spirochaetes

A
  • Miscellanoeous bacteria
  • Long spiral shaped bacteria
  • Not easily cultured or visualised by light microscopy
  • Dark microscopy or immunofluorescence can be used
  • Often diagnosed by serology
  • BLT
33
Q

BLT

A
  • Borrelia burgdorferi
  • Leptospira interrogans
  • Treponema pallidum
34
Q

Borrelia burgdorferi

A
  • Lyme disease - ticks
    1. Skin rash
    2. Systemic illness: cardiac or neurological and musculoskeletal symptoms
    3. Chronic disease: chronic skin, nervous system or joint abnormalities
35
Q

Leptospira interrogans

A
  • Leptospirosis
  • Infects animals and concentrates largely in kidneys
  • Spreads via infected urine and other body fluids and tissues
  • Risk groups: sewerage workers, water sports
  • Presentations: Weil’s disease, febrile illness with systematic upset, liver and renal failure, aseptic meningitis
36
Q

Treponema pallidum

A
  • Syphilis
  • Primary infection: non-painful skin lesion at site of infection, skin or mucous membranes
  • Secondary infection: generalised systemic illness and rash
  • Tertiary infection: CNS
  • Congenital syphilis: stillbirth, neonatal death or disease
  • Management: antibiotics, contact tracing and screening, antenatal screening
37
Q

Chlamydia

A
  • Miscellaneous
  • Obligate intracellular bacteria
  • Don’t grow in agar, only in cell lines
  • Diagnosis with serology
  • Respiratory infection: Chlamydophila pneumoniae, Chlamydophila psittaci (birds)
  • Ophthalmic and genital tract infections: Chlamydia trachomatis.
38
Q

Chlamydia trachomatis

A
  • Trachoma, tropical eye infection
  • Genital and neonatal infection
  • Diagnosed by nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT) on first void urine, vulval/vaginal swabs