18-Clostridium Botulinum Flashcards

1
Q

Clostridium genus: gram stain, oxygen, shape

A

gram + rods, obligate anaerobes

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2
Q

Clostridium: what does it look like

A

subterminal spores = tennis racket

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3
Q

What are the MC serotypes of Botulinum toxin? (3)

A

A, B, E

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4
Q

What is the MOA of the Botulism toxin? and it’s effect on humans?

A

prevents release of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction (peripheral nervous system) –> flaccid paralysis

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5
Q

what are the names of toxin subunits “A” and “B”? and what are their general functions

A

A subunit = Light chain: cleaves SNARE proteins preventing dumping of ACh vesicle into synaptic cleft

B subunit = Heavy chain: binds neurons, allowing Light chain into the cytoplasm where it is active. Otherwise the toxin will be kept outside the cells!

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6
Q

Where specifically is the B. toxin active?

A

in the cytoplasm of neurons

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7
Q

What type of enzyme is the Light chain of B.toxin

A

zinc endopeptidase

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8
Q

What are 3 transmissions/diseases of the B.toxin?

A

food-borne
wound
infant botulism

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9
Q

What is the difference between food-borne, wound, and infant botulism?

A

Food = toxin ingestion

Both infant and wound = bacteria infection and toxin production inside human

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10
Q

Rank the three botulsim diseases in order of frequency

A

infant&raquo_space; wound > food borne

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11
Q

how is the toxin spread in a food-borne infection

A

by the bloodstream

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12
Q

early sx of food borne infx

A
  • CN deficits: difficulty seeing, swallowing, speaking

- symmetric, descending, flaccid paralysis

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13
Q

how do you differentiate Botulism from MG, or Guillane-Barre?

A

No fever, no sensory abnormalities, no mental status changes in botulism

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14
Q

what is sx difference between wound and food-borne infx

A

wound: paralysis begins at infx site then spreads locally and systemically

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15
Q

what is sx similarity and difference between infant and wound infx

A

bacteria infect and then produce toxin in both.

Ininfants the bacteria grow in intestines, in wound it grows at the infection site

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16
Q

B. toxin Sx in a baby other than floppy baby

A

Constipation, weak sucking ability, cranial nerve deficits

17
Q

how is Botulism dx?

A
Clinical presentation (particularly cranial nerve involvement) 
History of suspect food
18
Q

how do you treat adults and babies differently with botulism infx and why?

A

Adults get an anti-toxin because that’s what they have ingested

Babies get Ig because they have infection

19
Q

Why don’t you give ABX in infant botulism?

A

dead bacteria may release more toxin.

20
Q

why no vacine

A

too rare for cost of production