Gram negative Bacillus Flashcards

1
Q

ANTIGENS of Gram-negative Bacilli

A

Cell Wall Antigen O

Flagella Antigen H

Capsule Antigen K

Lipid A = Endotoxin

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2
Q

Etiologic Agent of Cholera – enterocolitis syndrome (gastroenteritis)

Gram-negative bacillus, curved

A

Vibrio cholerae

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3
Q

Poor sanitation/contaminated water

A

vibrio cholerae

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4
Q

Organisms ingested in large numbers

localize in small intestine

A

vibrio cholera

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5
Q

Enterotoxin exotoxin

stimulates hypersecretion of water/chloride

reverses ion transport

A

Vibrio cholera

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6
Q

“rice water stools”

massive diarrhea/severe dehydration

A

vibrio cholera

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7
Q

etiologic agent of a gastroenteritis due to ingestion of contaminated shellfish (esp. oysters)

Common in coastal waters worldwide

A

vibrio parahemolyticus

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8
Q

Lab diagnosis is by special request.. due to rarity in US

And need special media (alkaline/selectiev)

A

vibrio cholera

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9
Q

Acute gastroenteritis and primary septicemia due to ingestion of raw or undercooked seafood, particularly raw oysters. (very high fatality rate ~50%)

A

Vibrio vulnificus

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10
Q

Severe cellulitis due to seawater contaminating a break in the skin – causes severe skin/tissue infection with hemorrhagic bullae and necrotizing fasciitis. (high fatality rate ~15%)

A

Vibrio vulnificus

Found in warm, coastal seawater (numbers in US are increasing)

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11
Q

Gram-negative bacillus, thin curved rods, occasional “s” or gull wing shapes

Generally originates from ingestion of fecal contaminated food, especially undercooked chicken or contamination of other foods from uncooked chicken, raw milk (from cattle feces), and non-chlorinated water

A

Campylobacter jejuni

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12
Q

Pathogenicity – gastroenteritis (enterocolitis syndrome) – prevalence # 1 or 2 in North America (similar to Salmonella)

A

Campylobacter jejuni

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13
Q

Virulence factors:

(a) Grows in human bile
(b) Flagella promote chemotaxis to colonize the intestine
(c) Adhesive molecules promote attachment
(d) Production of Cytolethal Distending Toxin (CDT) – AB-type toxin that has DNase activity (directly damages DNA)

A

Campylobacter jejuni

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14
Q

(d) Production of Cytolethal Distending Toxin (CDT) – AB-type toxin that has DNase activity (directly damages DNA)

A

Campylobacter jejuni

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15
Q

Microaerophile – Transport & incubate in reduced oxygen (about 5%) & increased CO2

Selective culture media with antibiotics

A

Campylobacter jejuni

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16
Q

GNB (curved)

etiologic agent of peptic ulcers – causes chronic inflammatory lesions of the gastric mucus layer

A

Helicobacter pylori

17
Q

(1) Breath test to detect urease production

(2) Endoscopy and biopsy – Culture requires microaerophilic environment and special growth media; DNA probe

A

Helicobacter pylori