Summary

This document details various bacterial infectious diseases, including their clinical syndromes, diagnosis, treatment, and potential sequelae. It covers Campylobacter, Bordetella, Chlamydia, and Haemophilus infections, providing insights into their relevant species, body regions affected, and treatment options.

Full Transcript

# Bacterial Infectious Diseases ## Campylobacter - Reed ### Clinical syndromes Campylobacter enteritis is typically caused by either *C. jejuni** or *C. coli*, both of which cause a gastroenteritis characterized by fever, severe abdominal pain, and diarrhea characterized by loose, watery, or bloody...

# Bacterial Infectious Diseases ## Campylobacter - Reed ### Clinical syndromes Campylobacter enteritis is typically caused by either *C. jejuni** or *C. coli*, both of which cause a gastroenteritis characterized by fever, severe abdominal pain, and diarrhea characterized by loose, watery, or bloody stools. - Fever usually resolves over the first 2 days, while diarrhea and abdominal pain may last 4-6 days. ### Diagnosis: Stool or blood culture - gram-negative curved rods - motile - non-spore-forming - *C. jejuni* and *C. fetus* are neither aerobes nor strict anaerobes, and are adapted for survival in the gastrointestinal mucous layer. ### Body regions - Originally found in the gastrointestinal tract of many animals used for food - GI tracts of many household pets (birds, dogs, and cats etc) - Gastrointestinal most common, but these organisms may cause infections in virtually all parts of the body, especially in immunocompromised hosts. ### Treatment The disease is self-limited, but its duration can be shortened modestly, by about 1 day, with antimicrobial therapy. - Azithromycin, 1 g orally as a single dose or 500 mg orally daily for 3 days. ### Potential sequelae May have late nonsuppurative sequelae. - Reactive arthritis in approximately 2% of those infected. - Guillain-Barré syndrome. - Potentially related to superantigens include multiple sclerosis and Grave's disease. - *C. fetus* causes systemic infections that can be fatal, including primary bacteremia, endocarditis, meningitis, and focal abscesses. It infrequently causes gastroenteritis. ### Relevant species w/in genera - *Campylobacter jejuni* = MOST COMMON (accounts for 80-90% of all cases of recognized illness due to campylobacters and related genera) - Others: - *Campylobacter coli* - *Campylobacter fetus* - *Campylobacter upsaliensis* - *Campylobacter lari* - *Campylobacter hyointestinalis* - *Arcobacter* and *Helicobacter* ## Bordetella Pertussis - Reed ### Clinical syndromes The organism's most important virulence factor is pertussis toxin. - Toxin ADP-ribosylates a guanine nucleotide - Toxin has important mitogenic activity, affects the circulation of lymphocytes, and serves as an adhesin for bacterial binding to respiratory ciliated cells. **Risk:** MC in children < 2 y/o. - Uncommon among infants ≤ 6 months. - Affects 80-100% among unimmunized (Dtap & tdap) household contacts. ### Signs/symptoms 1. Catarrhal phase (1-2 weeks): URI sx, conjunctival, fever, hacking cough that becomes diurnal and increases. 2. Paroxysmal phase (2-4 weeks): severe paroxysmal coughing fits with inspiratory high-pitched whooping sounds after fits. 3. Convalescent phase (begins ~ 4 weeks): resolution of cough, potential pneumonia & failure to thrive. ### Diagnosis: Clinical presentation - Should order nasopharyngeal secretion culture or PCR. - CBC shows absolute lymphocytosis. ### Gram stain/Morphology Small gram-negative coccobacillus - Aerobic - NOT motile. ### Body regions Infection with *B. pertussis* is initiated by attachment of the organism to the ciliated epithelial cells of the nasopharynx. ### Treatment Supportive care as needed + macrolide (Azithromycin PO x 5 days). - Azithromycin safe for pregnant patients - If contraindicated --> use TMP-SMX - Treat within 3 weeks of sx onset OR within 6 weeks if pregnant, immunocompromised, pulm co-morbidity, or age >65. ### Potential sequelae - Subconjunctival hemorrhages, abdominal and inguinal hernias, pneumothoraxes, and facial and truncal petechiae, rib fractures. - Pertussis pneumonia, which occurs in up to 10% of infants with pertussis is usually due to *B. pertussis*. - *B. parapertussis* causes an illness in humans that is similar to pertussis but is typically milder. - *B. holmesii*. - Older children and adults with pertussis, pneumonia is often due to secondary bacterial infection with streptococci or staphylococci. ## Chlamydia - Christian ### Clinical syndromes *C. Trachomatis* - STD that causes lesions of the genitalia. - Serotype A, B, C: present with conjunctivitis. - Serotype L1, L2, L3: present with tender and swollen lymph nodes in groin (lymphogranuloma venereum) - Dx: - Men: urine culture - Women: cervical swab or urine - Followed by NAAT testing of the sample. ### Gram stain/Morphology - Gram- - Anaerobic - Ovoid shape - Non-motile. ### Body regions Oral, vaginal, anal - Conjunctivitis in babies through vaginal canal during birth ### Treatment *Azithromycin* or *doxy* is first line for chlamydia. ### Potential sequelae - PID (50% of cases) - Ectopic pregnancy - Infertility - Urethritis - Epididymitis ### Relevant species w/in genera - *C. psittaci*: affects animal. Typically bird --> human - *C. pneumoniae*: can cause pneumonia - *C. trachomatis*: STD - Shares some of the same risks as HIV. ## Haemophilus - Flu ### Clinical syndromes *H. Flu* - Epiglottitis: - Sx: Abrupt high fever, drooling - Dx: thumb print sign on x-ray. - Meningitis - Otitis media - Septic arthritis - Non-typeable: - Otitis media - Sinusitis - Pneumonia ### Gram stain/Morphology - Gram - Coccobacilli, enters through respiratory tract. - Facultative anaerobe. - Encapsulated: Capsule allows resistance to phagocytosis. Capsule gets broken down in spleen. ### Body regions Mostly nose and throat/ respiratory system - Can get just about anywhere. ### Treatment Antibiotics: - Bactrim if producing a beta lactamase. - First gen cephs if skin infection. - Ampicillin or Rocephin IV for epiglottitis. ### Potential sequelae - Epiglottitis: breathing failure - *H. ducreyi*: painful genital chancre. - *H. aegyptus*: causes conjunctivitis ### Links with other infectious organisms - Considered a opportunistic infection - Can take advantage of a immune system that was already weakened by influenza, RSV. ## Moraxella - Christian ### Clinical syndromes Can cause: - Sinusitis - Otitis media - Bronchitis (opportunistic) - Pneumonia (opportunistic) - Opportunistic infections more common in COPD pt. ### Gram stain/Morphology Gram negative aerobic diplococcus (Extremely similar to *Neisseria*) ### Body regions Very frequently colonizes the respiratory tract of healthy adults. ### Treatment Produces beta lactamase, so preferably treat with antibiotics like Augmentin or Unasyn. ### Potential sequelae - Bacteremia or meningitis in the immunocompromised (not common) - Mastoiditis following Otitis media ### Relevant species w/in genera *Moraxella catarrhalis* - (M. lacunata is a conjunctivitis causing pathogen) - Similar to *Neisseria* sp., Has been found to also cause meningitis and bacteriemia in severely immunocompromised individuals. ## Neisseria - Christian ### Clinical syndromes - Gonorrhea (*N. gonorrhea*) - Colonizes mucosal surfaces of genital tract. - Cervical or penile milky white discharge - Burning dysuria - Dx: urine test male, cervical swab female - Meningitis (*N. Meningitidis*) - Colonizes mucosal surfaces of nasopharynx. - Travels through epithelium to reach submucosa, invades blood stream causing bacteremia and ultimately reaches the meninges where infection occurs. - Petechial rash. - High fever - Mental status changes - Meningismus - Headache - Dx: Lumbar puncture - stain and Cx ### Meningococcal septicemia/meningococcemia (*N. Meningitidis*) - Blood stream infection: - Dark purple petechial rash - Fever - Cold distal extremities - Severe diffuse body pains - Mental status changes - Fatigue - Diarrhea. ### Gram stain/Morphology - Gram negative - Diplococci - Aerobic - *Encapsulated* (only *N. meningitidis*) - Oxidase positive - Have pili and outer membrane proteins - *Obligate human pathogens* ### Body regions *N. meningitidis* is found in the nasopharyngeal region of 3-25% of all individuals (colonization). - *N. gonorrhea* is NOT normal genital flora. Introduced through sexual contact (STI). Can become diffuse infection if untreated. ### Treatment - **Gonorrhea:** - Single IM gluteal ceftriaxone injection (500mg) - Rifampin for prophylactic Tx after exposure. - **Meningococcal meningitis:** - IV ceftriaxone 2g every 12h ### Potential sequelae - **Gonorrhea:** - Vertically transmitted neonatal conjunctivitis - Diffuse Gonococcal infection (Triad: arthralgia, synovitis, rash) *note: not reactive arthritis, that's chlamydia* - **Meningococcal meningitis:** - Hearing loss, seizures, vision damage, neurodevelopmental disability, other permanent neurological damage. ### Relevant species w/in genera - *Neisseria meningitidis* - *Neisseria gonorrhea* ### Links with other infectious organisms Similar morphology to *Moraxella* ## Salmonella - Kylee ### Clinical syndromes Salmonellosis (type of gastroenteritis). - RF: eating undercooked food or improper food prep. - One of the most common causes of diarrhea. - Symptoms develop 12-36 hours after infection. - Spread by eating contaminated meat, eggs, or milk - Symptoms: - Diarrhea, fever, abdominal cramps, vomiting, dehydration - Associated with: - Reactive arthritis and risk of sepsis in immunocompromised/elderly/young - Test stool (Fecal WBCs) or blood. ### Typhoid/Enteric Fever - RF: Poor hand hygiene, lack of access to clean water, eating food handled by an infected person, and living in areas with inadequate sanitation. - Transmitted through contaminated food or drink. - Incubation 5-14 days. - Infects intestines -> lymphatics -> rest of organs. - Symptoms: - Malaise, sore throat, low grade fever, diarrhea, weight loss (pea soup). - Culture in early stages. *gold standard for diagnosis of Salmonella infection is by the culture at the focus of infection: stool, blood, urine, bile, cerebrospinal fluid, and bone marrow.* ### Gram stain/Morphology - Gram negative, motile rod. - Peritrichous flagella. - Non-spore forming. - Facultative aerobe. ### Body regions - Primarily intestines ### Treatment - Salmonellosis: no treatment normally needed: - Can also affect bone, joint, blood. - Correct dehydration and electrolyte imbalances. - Ciprofloxacin in severe illness. - Typhoid fever: Quinolone (Cipro). ### Potential sequelae Typhoid fever can present with: - Neurological complications: delirium, psychosis, acute cerebellar ataxia, and Guillain-Barré syndrome. - Cardiovascular complications: myocarditis and pericarditis. - Gastrointestinal complications: intestinal hemorrhage and perforation. - Reactive arthritis. - Risk of sepsis/shock in immunocompromised/elderly/young - Salmonella bongori: - Cold blooded animals (reptiles) - Salmonella enterica: - Warm blooded animals/environment - Salmonella typhi (enteric fever bacteria!!) - Patients with lower respiratory tract disease (INTS) often have co-infections with other pathogens, such as *Streptococcus pneumoniae* and *Mycobacterium tuberculosis*. ## Borrelia- Kylee ### Clinical syndromes Lyme Disease (borreliosis) - RF: recent hiking/camping. Transmitted via ixodides (deer tick!!). - 3 stages: - Early localized infection (7-10 days after bite) - Erythema migrans (pathognomonic) - Fever, fatigue, malaise, headache. - Early disseminated infection (days to weeks later) - Stiff neck, intermittent musculoskeletal symptoms. - Cardiac (pericarditis, arrhythmias, heart block). - Neurologic (aseptic meningitis, bilateral bell's palsy, encephalitis) - Late persistent infection - Chronic arthritis - CNS/PNS manifestations (encephalopathy) - Diagnostics: - Mostly clinical. - Antibodies can be detected by immunofluorescent assay or ELISA - Western blot assay is confirmatory test. ### Gram stain/Morphology - Spirochetes - Grows slowly and hard to culture in lab. - Skin, joint, heart, brain, bladder. ### Treatment - Doxycycline*** - Amoxicillin (children or pregnant women) ### Potential sequelae - Arthritis, CNS/PNS manifestations, bilateral bells palsy, aseptic meningitis ### Relevant species w/in genera *Borrelia burgodorferi* - A single tick can make a person sick with multiple diseases at once, including anaplasmosis, babesiosis, Powassan virus, and B. miyamotoi infection. ## Staphylococcal - Shelton ### Clinical syndromes *Staph Aureus* - Conditions: skin Infections; Impetigo; abscesses; TSST-1; pneumonia; osteomyelitis - RF: skin & nasal carriage, dec immune system, broken cutaneous barrier (ex. cuts, cracks). - Dx/Testing: positive wound or blood culture - Specific conditions: - Osteomyelitis: bone infection - Etiology: - Non-hematogenous: direct inoculation (bone fx or jt replacement) OR spread from surrounding tissue - Hematogenous: infection that seeds the bone in the setting of bacteremia (from innate inf) - S/Sx: pain, TTP, warmth/redness, fever (bacteremia), malaise, diaphoresis, bone pain - Bacteremia: presence of viable bacteria in the circulating blood - Etiology: - Endocarditis (from vegetation). - Osteomyelitis: - Implantable device or sx hardware - Dx: positive blood culture - Tx: - If skin is the source: 10-14 days abx. - Other: 4-6 wks of IV abx; removal of hardware after stabilization. - Toxic Shock Syndrome Toxin (TSST-1) - Etiology: - Life-threatening complication of bac inf. - D/t Super T-cell antigen - TSST-1 binds to T-cell receptor and MHC II molecules. - Induces expansion of both CD4+/CD8+ subsets of T-lymphocytes (massive T-cell activation and cytokine release). - Release large amts of IL-1/2 and TNF - Associated w/super absorbent tampons, skin wounds (burns) and sx. *Staph Epidermidis* - Etiology: - Part of normal skin flora - RF: Immunocompromised, hospital-acquired, prosthetics devices and indwelling catheters - Bio-films + endocarditis. - Dx: positive blood culture // signs of infection - Tx: 4-6 wks of IV abx // remove device *Staph saprophyticus* - Etiology: - Found in normal flora of female genital tract and perineum - 10-20% of UTI in females 17-27 yo - 2nd most common cause of community-acquired UTIs. ### Gram stain / Morphology - Gram + - Grape-like clusters ### Body regions Skin; Indwelling prosthetic devices; female genital tract/perineum ### Affected - Incision & Drainage - Wound care ### Treatment (Abx/Route) - Abx: - MSSA (methicillin-sensitive): - Penicillin - 1st gen cephalosporin (Keflex) - MRSA (methicillin-resistant) - Bactrim (sulfonamides) - Doxycycline (tetracycline) - Clindamycin - Vancomycin ### Potential complications - Bacteremia ### Relevant species within genera that cause disease - *S. lugdunensis*: Somewhat more aggressive than other coagulase-negative staphylococci. - *S. haemolyticus*: Can cause device-related infections. - *S. simulans*: Can cause device-related infections. - *S. warneri*: Can cause device-related infections. ### Links with other infectious organisms Sepsis; septic arthritis ## Streptococcus - Shelton ### Gram stain/Morphology - Gram + - Arrangement: Pairs / chains (bent/twisted) - Most are facultative anaerobes (grow both Aerobic + Anaerobic) - Species: - α-hemolytic: oxidation of iron in Hgb - β-hemolytic: complete rupture of RBC (wide clear areas on blood agar) - γ-hemolytic: no hemolysis ### Clinical syndromes LIST OF DISEASES: Strep Pyogenes - Pyogenic Pharyngitis (strep throat) - Scarlet fever (s/sx: sandpaper rash, strawberry tongue) - Impetigo - Cellulitis - Toxigenic (Toxic shock-like syndrome) - Immunogenic (rheumatic fever, M-protein antibodies) - Acute glomerulonephritis ### Strep Pharyngitis --> (strep throat) - Etiology: - Group A strep (GAS) aka strep pyogenes - Transmitted vis respiratory droplets or touching. - S/Sx: - Fever, anterior cervical adenopathy, lack of cough, tonsillar exudate, strawberry tongue. - D/Dx: - Inc WBC count w/neutrophils - Rapid strep test + culture. - Tx: Abx (PCN/amoxicillin/Augmentin) ### Strep Skin infection - Etiology: - GAS aka Strep pyogenes (strep is NOT normal flora; inf is secondary to colonization) - Strep spreads through tissue (staph = local) - Dx: positive wound and blood cultures for GAS - Tx: Abx (PCN, 1st gen cephalosporin ex. Keflex, clindamycin) ### Pneumococcal Pneumonia - Etiology (most common community-acquired pneumonia) - Pathogen: - Strep pneumoniae. ### Shape: - Lancet-shaped diplococci. - Facultative anaerobe. - Transmission: respiratory droplets. - IgA protease: protein produced by *S. pneumoniae* that destroys IgA (antibody made by plasma), allowing bacteria to evade the immune system by hindering its ability to neutralize the pathogen at mucosal surfaces (ex. mouth, eyes, respiratory tract). - α-hemolytic: type of pneumonia caused by *S. pneumonia* under aerobic conditions that breaks down RBC. ### S/Sx: - Rusty/red sputum, productive cough, fever, pleuritic pain (chest pain). ### Dx: - CXR (lobular infiltrate or consolidation) - Sputum and blood culture ### Tx: - PCN, 2nd/3rd gen cephalosporin, macrolide (ex. Clarithromycin), fluoroquinolone (ex. Levaquin). ### Prevention - VACCINATE w/PCV15, boost w/PPSV23 1yr later - Conjugate vax has better immunogenicity (more likely to produce immune response). ### Pneumococcal Meningitis (“Bacterial Meningitis”) - Etiology - Pathogen: Strep pneumoniae - CSF leak; pneumonia; sinusitis; head trauma - S/Sx: - Fever; headache; meningismus (neck rigidity w/positive Brudzinski's/Kernig's sign); mental status change (No rash). - Dx: Lumbar puncture (LP) - Bacterial: - Clear, cloudy, or purulent fluid - ↑ opening pressure + protein - ↓ glucose - Elevated neutrophils - Viral: - Clear fluid - Body regions: Skin // respiratory tract - Affected: Normal / ↑ opening pressure; ↑ glucose + protein; Low neutrophils - Treatment (Abx/Route): Abx (PCN) - Potential complications: See above for condition-specific tx. - Complications of strep throat: - Sepsis in pts w/splenectomy - MOPS (Meningitis, Otitis media, Pneumonia, Sinusitis) - Abscess - Glomerulonephritis - Rheumatic heart dz - Relevant Species within Genera that Cause Disease: - Group B, C, G, F, L strep. - Viridans group --> includes *Streptococcus mutans*, *Streptococcus salivarius*, and *Streptococcus sanguinis*. - Links with other infectious organisms: - Scarlet fever, Rheumatic fever. ## Bacillus - Meghan ### Clinical Syndromes ***Anthrax - Bacillus Anthracis*** - 3 Types: - Cutaneous: - Occurs 2 weeks after exposure from spores in soil and contamination through compromised skin barrier. - Large, painless ulcer with black eschar and surrounding edema. - Pulmonary (Inhalation) Woolsorter's disease: - Lung infection through inhalation of spores moving to mediastinal lymph nodes and causing hemorrhagic mediastinitis. - Dry cough, substernal pressure - Gastrointestinal: - Exposure to meat products with spores - N/V/D, fever, bloody diarrhea - Patho: - Exotoxin has three components: protective antigen binds to cells; edema factor is an adenylate cyclase; lethal factor is a protease that inhibits cell growth resulting in cell death (necrosis) - Dx: Mediastinal widening on Chest X-Ray for pulm. - Nonhemolytic colonies on blood agar and colonies on blood agar have flared “comet's tail" appearance. - Tx: Ciprofloxacin and doxycycline - Prevention: 6 dose BioThrax vaccine ### Gram stain/Morphology - Bacillus Anthracis - Large Gram (+) rods, "Box-Car like chains" - Aerobic - Unique capsule of D-glutamate - Spore forming - Nonmotile ### Body regions - Skin, Pulmonary, Gl tract ### Treatment: - Ciprofloxacin or doxycycline ### Potential sequelae - Cutaneous: - Untreated infection can lead to bacteremia. - Pulmonary: - Hemorrhagic meningitis, can rapidly progress to hemorrhagic pleural effusions, shock, death (sepsis) ### Relevant species w/in genera - B. Cereus - Gastroenteritis (food poisoning) - Transmission: Spores on grains such as rice from reheating and kept warm for long time. - Patho: 2 exotoxins: similar to cholera toxin, it increases cyclic AMP, and one similar to staphylococcal enterotoxin, it is a superantigen - Clinical Findings: One syndrome has 4 hr incubation with N/V/D & other syndrome has 18 hr incubation with watery, nonbloody diarrhea. - B. Subtilis - bacteremia, endocarditis, pneumonia, septicemia - Most commonly linked with other infectious organism like Staph, Strep, and Listeria as they are gram (+) and often share similar environments. ## Escherichia (Addy) ### Clinical syndromes - Escherichia Coli - Forms: - EIEC- Enteroinvasive E. coli (uncommon) → bloody diarrhea - ETEC- Enterotoxigenic E. coli → most common cause of traveler's diarrhea - EPEC- Enteropathogenic E. coli → causes watery diarrhea primarily in infants and young children - EHEC (or STEC)- Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (0157:H7) - UPEC- Uropathogenic E. coli → responsible for most UTIs - Transmission: Fecal-oral - If foodborne- undercooked meat, unpasteurized milk, raw fruits and veggies, contaminated water - Others- petting Zoo, improper hand hygiene - MOA: - Food poisoning/Bloody diarrhea: Shiga-toxin (verotoxin) producing E. coli (EHEC) → toxin damages intestinal lining - Sx- vomiting, diarrhea (bloody), abdominal cramps - Dx- + stool culture (using sorbitol-MacConkey agar) - Peripheral leukocytosis 10-20k (most common) - Tx- mainly supportive (rehydration and antidiarrheals), abx NOT recommended first line - If severe (more than six stools per day, fever, dehydration necessitating hospitalization, diarrhea lasting more than seven days, or bloody diarrhea) → cipro, doxy, TMP-SMX (Bactrim) - Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome- Toxin released into blood stream → damages endothelial cells within the glomerulus → inflammation and the activation platelets → decreased platelet count - Sx- abdominal pain/cramps, vomiting, bloody diarrhea, fever, seizures, lethargy, oliguria/hematuria - Dx- - Triad: Hemolytic anemia (d/t microangiopathic hemolysis), AKI, Thrombocytopenia - most common cause of acute renal failure in children - + stool culture or detectable antibody to Shiga Toxin in the blood - CBC- low platelets - CMP- High BUN and creatinine - Normal coag studies (PT, aPTT, Fibrinogen) - Hemolysis- High bilirubin, High LDH, Low haptoglobin + schistocytes on peripheral smear - Tx- mainly supportive, NO antibiotics (can give corticosteroids) - Kidney- Dialysis - Thrombocytopenia- Plasmapheresis/IVIG, blood transfusions PRN - Uncomplicated UTI- UPEC produces α and β-hemolysins → damage of urinary tract cells → inflammation - Transmission: contamination of the vagina from the GI tract (rectum) - Sx- Dysuria, urinary urgency/frequency, suprapubic pain, back pain (if pyelonephritis), hematuria - Dx- + UA (nitrates, leukocyte esterase), CBC- Normal WBC count - Tx- Nitrofurantoin, TMP-SMX (Bactrim), cipro ## Shigella - Eric ### Clinical syndromes - Shigellosis - Shigella can cause disease only in primates. - Transmitted by fingers, flies, food, and feces. - Fecal-oral route - Incubation 1-4 days - Produces shiga enterotoxin that is neurotoxic, cytotoxic, enterotoxic. ### At risk: - Children in daycare centers - Travelers to endemic regions - Immunocompromised ### Sx/symptoms: - Bloody, mucoid diarrhea - dysentery - High fever - Abdominal cramps, tenesmus - urge to defecate with little stool - Nausea and vomiting - Loss of appetite - Neurological manifestations - Especially in younger children, febrile seizures, encephalopathy. ### Diagnosis: - Stool culture: definitive, isolate shigella species, positve fecal WBC and RBCs (inflammatory invasive diarrhea) - PCR testing: rapid identification ### Lab - Elevated WBC count in stool microscopy - May have mild leukocytosis - Sigmoidoscopy - reveal punctate areas of ulceration and inflammation. ### Treatment - Mild cases: - Suppurative care (rehydration, rest) - Generally self limiting - Anti-motility drugs should be avoided. - Severe cases: ciprofloxacin (1st line adults), azithromycin (1st line in children) ### Gram stain/Morphology - Gram negative rod - Facultative aerobe ### Body regions - Highly virulent infection of colon, usually rectosigmoid portion of colon. ### Treatment - See above. ### Potential sequelae: - Reactive arthritis, hemolytic uremic syndrome, toxic megacolon, proctitis, rectal prolapse, interstitial obstruction, colonic perforation. ### Relevant species w/in genera - Shigella Sonni (most common in US) - Shigella flexneri (common in developing countries, linked to reactive arthritis) - Shigella dysenteries – severe dysentery, associated with shiga toxin production - Shigella boydii – rare, typically isolated in south asia ### Links with other infectious organisms - E coli, salmonella, entamoeba histolytica (clinically mimics), rotavirus, norovirus ## Mycobacteria - Eric ### Clinical syndromes - Forms: - Tuberculosis: - Leading cause of death from infectious agent worldwide - Mycobacterium avium complex - Mycobacterium marinum - Transmission: - TB: - Inhalation of infected aerosolized microdroplets - Prolonged exposure, increase risk of infection - MAC: - Present in soil and water - Marinum: - Inoculation of break in skin barrier with exposure to contaminated fresh or salt water, including aquariums, marine organisms, and swimming pools - Risk: - TB: - Close contact with active TB, immigrant from endemic region, crowed conditions (prsion, homeless shelter), healthcare workers, lab workers, HIV, DM, immunosuppression, kids under 5, injection drug and alch, over 65 - MAC: - Underlying pulmonary disease (bronchiectasis, COPD) - Immunocompromised- HIV with CD4 less than 50 - Marinum: - Occupational hazard of aquarium handlers, marine workers, fisherman, and seafood handlers - Clinical manifestations: - TB: - Pulmonary: - Prolonged fever, cough (often mild and nonproductive but can be productive, > 2-3 weeks), chest pain, dyspnea, hemoptysis, chills, night sweats - Lymadenopathy, fatigue, pharyngitis - Consumption and malaise - Extrapulmonary: - Can affect any organ – cervical lymph nodes (scrofula), meningitis, Pott disease, milary Tb, pericarditis, adrenal gland involvement, UG - Physical exam: - Crackles, signs of consolidation - Clubbing - MAC: - Pulmonary: - Present similar to TB. - Disseminated: - Fever of unknown origin, sweating, weight loss, fatigue, diarrhea, dyspnea - Lymphadenitis in children - age 1-4, prim involving unilateral cervical lymph nodes - Marinum: - Localized cutaneous disease - erythematous bluish papule or nodule at site of trauma, can ulcerate - Subsequent lesion may occur along path of lymphatic drainage - Diagnosis: - TB: - Isolation from body secretion, fluid, or tissue - Sputum acid fast staining: if imaging suspicous of TB 3 sputum specimens, AFB smear, mycobacterial culture - NAA testing - positive NAA sufficient to dx - Histology - caseating granulomas - Tuberculin skin test - Interferon gamma release assay - Chest xray: - Prim TB - middle/lower lobe consolidation - Reactive TB - focal infiltration (pathy or lobar consolidation) upper lobes, cavities in upper portion of lungs - Miliary TB - small fibronodular lesion - MAC: - Acid fast bacillus staining and culture sputum, blood and urine if disseminated suspected - x-ray indistinguishable from T---------- - Marinum - Culture - Treatment: - TB: - Active TB: - 4 drug RIPE treatment, all 4 for 2 months, Rifampin and isoniazed for 4 more months - Streptomycin can be used for ethambutol - Latent TB: - Rifampin daily 4 months - ISO and Rif daily 3 months - Iso monotherapy for 6-9 months - MAC: - Triple therapy: clarithromycin + ethambutol + rifamycin/rifampin - Amikan can be added in life threatening situation - Prophy in HIV: Claritho or Azithro with cd4 below 50 - Marinum: - Superficial papules – clarithro or bactrim - Deeper/more extensive - clarithro combo ethambutol or rifampin. - Typically 3-4 months - Gram stain/Morphology: - Gram positive acid fast bacilli - Rod shaped - Non-motile with high lipid content in cell wall - Detected using acid fast staining – high levels of mycolic acid in cell walls - Fluorescent stains such as auramine - Body regions: - TB - primary lung, lymph nodes, cns, bones, and UG tract, kidney, spine - MAC - lungs, lymph nodes, disseminated - Marinum - skin, soft tissue - Treatment: See above - Potential sequelae: - TB: - Fibrosis, chronic pulmonary complications, neurological deficits (TB meningitis), spinal deformity (Potts) - NTM: - Chronic lung damage, recurrence - Mac: - m. tuberculosis, m. bovis, m. africanum - Marinum: - M. avium, M. intracellulare - M. Marinum - Links with other infectious organisms: - HIV - Fungal co-infection – histoplasma, cryptococcus - Bacterial superinfections

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