MFD 12 Mibrobial Pathogenicity Flashcards

Learn a few famous diseases caused by an identified bacterium, and modern practices preventing another outbreak.

1
Q

Explain what is meant by pathogenicity

A

the ability of an organism to cause disease

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2
Q

Explain what is meant by pathogenicity factors.

A

same as virulence factors, Bacterial virulence factors enable a host to replicate and disseminate within a host in part by subverting or eluding host defenses e.g. fimbria

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3
Q

What is an epidemological agent?

A

the bacterium ( the shit it produces maybe e.g. p.gingivalis and gingipains), god damn didn’t see that coming

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4
Q

What diseases does Staphylococcus Aureus

cause?

A

Staphylococcal meningitis, Impetigo

Pneumonia

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5
Q

What are the biological characteristics of Staphylococcus aureus
?

A

In the micrococcaceae family. ( spherical in shape, arranged in grape like structures, gram +)
Produces coagulase and has novobiocin resistance
grows at 15-45 degrees C
Is commensal and pathogenic,

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6
Q

What is the virulence factors of s. aureus

A

Produces coagulase and has novobiocin resistance

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7
Q

Who does S.aureus usually infect? and incidence?

3) describe distribution of MRSA infections

A

1) young children and elderly
2) 10-30 per 100,00 people per year
3) not even

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8
Q

What is encompased when describing the epidemiology of an organism?

A

for example how common it is in the
population, the prevalence of the diseases that it causes or any specific
outbreaks of disease due to the organism.

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9
Q

What is Staphylococcal meningitis?

A

Inflammation of the meninges – the protective membranes around the brain and spinal cord

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10
Q

What are the biological characteristics of Staphylococcus aureus
?

A

In the micrococcaceae family. ( spherical in shape, arranged in grape like structures, gram +)
Produces coagulase and has novobiocin resistance
grows at 15-45 degrees C
Is commensal and pathogenic,

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11
Q

Treatments of Staphylococcal meningitis:

A

1_ Antibiotics such as nafcillin, linezolid and cefazolin.

2_ Meningitis caused by methicillin-resistant strains (MRSA) must be treated with Vancomycin.

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12
Q

Symptoms of impetigo:

A

Red sore, itchy and painful, red sores burst to develop golden crust,

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13
Q

Treatments of impetigo:

A

Usually clears up within 2-3 weeks but topical antibiotics such as mupirocin but oral antibiotics may be used in more serious cases of the disease.

A more serious form can develop called Ecthyma which cause causes fluid and pus-filled sores which turn into deep ulcers.

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14
Q

Symptoms of pneumonia:

A

similar to that of the flu, and include: cough, chest pain, difficulty breathing, fever, loss of appetite

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15
Q

Treatments of pneumonia:

A

Treatments include antibiotics such as zanamivir and amantadine, as well as vaccinations to help with herd immunity

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16
Q

What are the virulence factors of S.aureus?

A
Catalase
Hemolysins
Coagulase
Leukocidin
Also produce proteolytic enzymes, hyaluronidase, fibrinolysin, lipase, ribonuclease, and deoxyribonuclease
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17
Q

What is the pathogenesis of toxic shock syndrome?

A

an exotoxin, produce by S.aureus, called toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1) a superantigen
Toxin recruits large numbers of T cells, culminating in a massive inflammatory response

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18
Q

What is the pathogensis of food poisening?

A

another superantigen, causes a form of food poisoning
Ingestion of toxin-contaminated food, the toxin stimulates T cells localized along the intestine, resulting in a massive T cell response and release of inflammatory mediators
Severe but short-lived diarrhea and vomiting

19
Q

What is the pathogensis of food poisening?

A

another superantigen, causes a form of food poisoning
Ingestion of toxin-contaminated food, the toxin stimulates T cells localized along the intestine, resulting in a massive T cell response and release of inflammatory mediators
Severe but short-lived diarrhea and vomiting

20
Q

What are the biological characteristics of Neisseria gonorrhoeae
?

A

gram -.
diplococcus (occurs as pairs of cocci, 2 spheres)
aerobic
catalase positive
modulates immune response, resides within neutrophils
fastiduous ( specific nutrient requirements)

21
Q

How common is Neisseria gonorrhoeae

as an STI?

A

2nd most common STI,

22
Q

What is the prevalence of the diseases that Neisseria gonorrhoeae causes ?
2) What concerns are there?

A

78 million new cases of gonorrhea in 2016 worldwide
44,500 new cases in 2017 in the UK alone
2) becoming resistant to antibiotics

23
Q

What disease does neisseria gonorrhoeae cause?

A

gonorrhoeae

24
Q

What are the symptoms of gonorrhoeae?

Just a rough idea is enough

A

In women – pain and tenderness in the abdominal area, heavier periods and pain when passing urine, unusual vaginal discharge
In men – pain or a burning sensation when urinating, swelling/ inflammation of foreskin and unusual discharge
Infection in the throat, eyes and rectum which can cause pain and swelling
Gonorrhoea can be passed from a mother to her baby during childbirth. Symptoms in babies include the eyes becoming red and swollen and eyes have a thick, pus-like discharge.
If left untreated, it can cause infertility.
Patients complain of an initial burning sensation in the mouth. Within 1-2days the mouth becomes acutely painful and the sub-mandibular lymph nodes enlarge. Oral functions such as speech and swallowing become very painful.

25
Q

What are the virulence factors of Neisseria gonorrhoeae ?

A

1) Pilli – Piliated gonoccoci are usually virulent, whereas nonpiliated strains are avirulent.
2) Lipooligosaccharides (LOS)
3) Outer membrane proteins and Opa proteins e.g Porin A:
4) lgA protease

26
Q

Pilli is a virulence factor of neisseria gonorrhoeae, how does it cause disease? (Pathogenic mechanism)

A

Pilli mediate attachment to mucosal cell surfaces and also are antiphagocytic.

27
Q

Lipooligosaccharides (LOS) is a virulence factor of neisseria gonorrhoeae, how does it cause disease? (Pathogenic mechanism)

A

like LPS but low molecular weight form, has non-pathogenic role and also is an endotoxic and initiates host immune response

28
Q

Outer membrane proteins and Opa proteins e.g Porin A, is a virulence factor of neisseria gonorrhoeae, how does it cause disease? (Pathogenic mechanism)

A

Mediates invasion of the epithelial cells.

29
Q

lgA protease is a virulence factor of neisseria gonorrhoeae, how does it cause disease? (Pathogenic mechanism)

A

It hydrolyzes secretory lgA, which could otherwise block attachment to the mucosa.

30
Q

What are the essential biological characteristics of Legionella pneumophila?

A

gram -, aerobic, fastidious, have a pilli so are motile, rod or coccoid shape, optimal temperature for in-vitro growth is 36°C
Falcultative intracellular parasite (can reproduce outside and within a cell)

31
Q

Epidemology of legionella pneumophila:

1) outbreaks?
2) environment found in

A

1) Legionnaires’ disease , 1976, Philadelphia convention of the american legion
2) air-conditioning and water distribution systems

32
Q

What diseases are caused by legionella pneumophilia?

A

Legionnaire’s disease

Pontaic fever

33
Q

What are the symptoms of Legionnaires’ disease?

A

cough,shortness of breath, highfever, chest pains (as leads to pneumonia), headaches, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. It feels like a severe flu.

34
Q

What is the treatment for Legionnaires’ disease?

A

antibiotics (venous), oxygen administration and respiratory ventilator. Antibiotic prophylaxis not effective

35
Q

What are the symptoms of Pontaic fever?

A

cute, nonfatal respiratory that causes a mild upper respiratory infection. It resolves spontaneously and often goes undiagnosed

36
Q

What traditional virulence factors doe L.pneumophila have?

A

includes lipopolysaccharide (LPS), flagella, pili, a type II secretion system , and outer membrane proteins.

37
Q

What additional virulence factor does L.pneumophila have

2) What does it do?
3) How does this cause damadge to the host cell, and result in disease?

A

type 4 secretion system,

2) its secretes proteins when within a cell (alveolar macrophage) allowing the bacterium to exsist within a vesicle similiat to the ER,
3) this legionella containing vacoule prevents the host cell signalling for help, allowing further replication to take place

38
Q

What is the essentional biology of Clostridium Difficile?

A

gram +, spore forming,
saccharolytic and proteolytic metabolism,
thrives in dysbiotic environemtn (where colonic microfloura have been altered)

39
Q

What is the effect of the toxins TcdA and TcdB produced by Clostridium difficile

A

Disrupts GTPases, causing cell rounding and eventually death.
Both toxins enter the cell by endocytosis, where they are then cleaved, activating them.
Toxin A disrupts colonic mucosal cell adherence to colonic basement membrane and damages villous tips
Toxin B triggers apoptosis
They target GTPases – proteins involved in epithelial barrier function and host immune response
Both toxins stimulate monocytes and macrophages causing release of interleukin 8, resulting in tissue infiltration with neutrophils

40
Q

what are the virulence factor of Clostridium difficile?

A

1) Produces toxin TcdA and TcdB
2) Has fimbriae/pilus (they are the same thing)
3) has adhesins
4) Colonisation upregulates genes for fermentation

41
Q

What sort of hosts does clostridium difficle infect?

2) Where is there an increased incidence rate?

A

1) as an opportunistic pathogen, usually infects young children and elderly
2) young children and elderly

42
Q

What does clostridium difficile cause?

A

infectious diarrhoea

43
Q

Why would you prescribe metronidazole or vancomycin for C.diff infections? Which one would you use?

A

. Although neither drug has clearly been superior in head-to-head comparisons, some clinicians feel that vancomycin is the “stronger drug.” However, because of vancomycin’s expense and the ever-present worry about drug resistance, current guidelines recommend reserving vancomycin for patients with severe disease.

44
Q

What conditon does Clostridium difficile cause?

2) symptoms?

A

Clostridium difficile colitis (infection of the colon)

2) symptoms of C. difficile colitis are fever, diarrhea, and abdominal pain