Anaerobic infections (clostridium) Flashcards

1
Q

Characteristics - Clostridium

A

Anaerobic, spore forming. 4 types, Clost. Difficile, perfringenes, tetani, botulinum. All gram positive rods and all motile except perfringens.

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2
Q

Diseases caused - Clostridium

A

Difficile: antibiotic associated diarrhoea
Perfringens: Food poisoning, gas gangrene, necrotic enteritis
Tetani: tetanus, lockjaw, tetanospasms
Botulinum: botulism (food-borne, wound, infant)

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3
Q

Virulence factors - C. Difficile

A

TcdA and TcdB are clostridial glycosylating toxins. Inactivates GTPases which alter actin cytoskeleton, disrupting barrier function and causing apoptosis as well as inflammatory response. Binary toxin CDT helps with barrier adherence.

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4
Q

Virulence factors - Tetani

A

Tetanus toxin is activated by proteolysis and disulfide reduction and targets neurons.

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5
Q

Virulence factors - Perfringens

A

Enterotoxin (CPE), lethal toxins (a,b,e,l)

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6
Q

Virulence factors - Botulinum

A

botulinum neuorotoxin

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7
Q

Pathogenesis - Difficile

A

antibiotics cause removal of protective microflora, allowing for Difficile to bind to the colon. From here it attaches to epithelial cells and releases toxins causing apoptosis and tissue damage. Reinfection is 20% likely due to antibiotics being the initial cause for infection.

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8
Q

Pathogenesis - Perfringens

A

2 pathways. Perfringens will start as a spore and germinate after being cooked, producing an enterotocin. Once ingested, CPE will attack tight junctions, leading to intestinal hypersecretion and fluidity of gut contents. Second pathway – if infected trauma would will use lethal toxin a to reduce blood flow at wound and allow for anaerobic growth. Phospholipase-C (part of lethal toxin a) will cleave the phosphate head off cell membranes and therefore cause apoptosis. If lethal toxin B is present, necrotic enteritis will also occur.

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9
Q

Pathogenesis - Tetani

A

tetanus toxin enters neuromuscular junction and enters inhibitory interneuron which is responsible for monitoring activity of lower motor neurons. Tetanospasmin blocks inhibitory signals and vesicle release by cleaving syanptobrevin-2 receptor. This causes hyperstimulation

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10
Q

Pathogenesis - Botulinum

A

botulinum neurotoxin blocks excitatory neurotransmitter acetylcholine release from motor neurons which leads to flaccid paralysis. Cleaves synaptobravin-2 but has opposite effect due to it acting at the neuromuscular junction.

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11
Q

How are the 4 types of Clostridium detected?

A

Difficile: faecal samples
Perfringens: testing on wounds, faecal samples
Tetani: physical exam
Botulinum: physical exam

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12
Q

How are the 4 types of Clostridium treated?

A

Difficile: antibiotics are first option. If relapse occurs, faecal transplant is promising to restore healthy normal flora.

Perfringens: surgery and penicillin for wound infections. Hyperbaric oxygen can be used to try and suppress growth. Food poisoning is self-limiting and just needs fluid replacement.

Tetani: immunisation, antibiotics, antitoxin if it hasn’t reached nervous system, sedation of muscle spasm.

Botulinum: antitoxins taken with supportive care. 25% mortality rate

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