SuperDuperUltraMega MicroPara Table 2
SuperDuperUltraMega MicroPara Table 2
PARASITOLOGY
No Lancefield antigen
Viridans Oral flora Enters bloodstream Catalase-negative Glycocalyx enhances DENTAL CARIES: S. mutans Penicillin G +/- Gram-positive cocci in OVeRPaSs
Streptococci during dental adhesion to damaged aminoglycoside chains
Bile and optochin- SUBACUTE BACTERIAL ENDOCARDITIS OPTOCHIN
procedures heart valves (Gentamicin)
resistant (SBE): S. sanguis à most common cause Alpha-hemolytic Viridans
OVRPS (overpass) of subacute and native valve Vancomycin for
Protected from host Resistant
Viridans strep live in the endocarditis penicillin-resistance
mouth because they are defenses within Pneumoniae
not afraid of the chin vegetations Linezolid for
(op-to-chin resistant) BRAIN ABSCESSES: S. intermedius Sensitive
vancomycin-
resistant strains
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Bacillus anthracis Herbivores Contact with infected Aerobic (but since it Protein capsule: polymer of Exotoxin (encoded on CUTANEOUS ANTHRAX: Cutaneous Anthrax: Aerobic, gram-positive Bacillus anthracis is
(zoonotic): animals or inhalation can grow without gamma-D-glutamic acid; plasmin pXO1) - Most common route of entry (95%) DOC is ciprofloxacin box-car shaped rods; the only bacterium
- Sheep of spores from animal oxygen. It is classified antiphagocytic; encoded contains 3 separate - Direct epidermal contact with spores spore-forming; NON- with a capsule
- Goats hair or wool as a facultative on a plasmid called pXO2 proteins, which by causes localized tissue necrosis, Inhalational / MOTILE composed of protein
- Cattle (woolsorter’s disease) anaerobe) themselves are evidenced by a painless round black Gastrointestinal (poly-D-glutamic
nontoxic but lesion with a rim of edema Anthrax: Medusa head acid).
Habitat is soil Human-to-human Virulence depends on together produce the (malignant pustule) Ciprofloxacin or morphology on
transmission has never acquiring 2 plasmids. One systemic effects of - 20% mortality rate Doxycycline with 1 culture: dry “ground Infections result to
been reported. carries the gene for the anthrax: INHALATIONAL/PULMONARY ANTHRAX: or 2 additional glass” surface and permanent immunity
protein capsule (pXO2); the - Edema factor (EF): - inhaled spores from animals antibiotics irregular with (if the patient
other carries the gene for its the active A subunit (Woolsorter’s disease) or from (Rifampin, projections along lines survives)
exotoxin (pXO1) of the exotoxin; Vancomycin, of inoculation
weaponized preparations
calmodulin- Penicillin,
dependent (bioterrorism) RAXIBACUMAB:
- prolonged latent period (2mos) Imipenem, Serology monoclonal antibody
adenylate cyclase
before rapid deterioration Clindamycin, for use in inhalational
- Protective antigen
- massively enlarged mediastinal Clarithromycin) PCR of nasal swab anthrax
(PA): promotes
entry of EF into lymph nodes; pulmonary
hemorrhage (MCC of death); Vaccine: for high-
Cutaneous Anthrax phagocytic cells
meningeal symptoms risk individuals;
- Lethal factor (LF):
- 100% mortality rate without composed of the
zinc metallo- MCC of death is
immediate treatment protective antigen
protease that pulmonary
(PA); Animal
inactivates protein GASTROINTESTINAL ANTHRAX: hemorrhage in:
vaccine is
kinase; stimulates - ingestion of live spores leads to UGI - Anthrax
composed of a live
the macrophage to ulceration, edema, and sepsis - Leptospirosis
strain, attenuated
release TNF-a and - vomiting abdominal pain, bloody (Weil’s syndrome)
by loss of its
IL-1B à death diarrhea protein capsule
- Congenital syphilis
PA + EF = Edema Toxin - rapidly progressive course
PA + LF = Lethal Toxin - mortality approaches 100%
Bacillus cereus Endospores No capsule ENTEROTOXINS EMETIC FORM DIARRHEAL FORM Food Poisoning: Aerobic, gram-positive
Heat-labile: similar to Rice Meat, vegetables Symptomatic spore-forming rod;
Spores on grains such the enterotoxin of Short IP: <6 hrs Long IP: >6 hrs treatment only; MOTILE
as rice survive cholera and the LT (mean, 2h) (mean, 9h) food poisoning
steaming and rapid from E. coli; causes Vomiting, nausea, Diarrhea, nausea, is caused by the Culture specimen from
frying ADP-ribosylation, abdominal cramps abdominal cramps pre-formed suspected food source
increasing cAMP enterotoxin
Shorter duration: Longer duration:
Spores germinate
8-10h (mean, 9) 20-36h (mean, 24)
when rice is kept Heat-stable: Ophthalmitis:
Heat-stable Heat-labile
warm for many hours staphylococcal-like Vancomycin
enterotoxin enterotoxin
(e.g., reheated fried enterotoxin functions Clindamycin
Similar to Resembles
rice) à Chinese fried as superantigen Ciprofloxacin
staphylococcal clostridial
rice syndrome Gentamicin
food poisoning gastroenteritis
Resistant to beta-
OPHTHALMITIS: occur after penetrating
lactam antibiotics
eye injuries of the eye with soil-
contaminated object; complete loss of
light perception within 48 h of injury
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Clostridium tetani Habitat is soil Endospores: Spores germinate Motile: Flagella (so H- Tetanus Toxin TETANUS Debridement of Anaerobic, gram- Obligate Anaerobes
introduced through under anaerobic antigen-positive) (Tetanospasmin) - “the acute onset of hypertonia or … primary wound positive, spore-forming Can’t Breathe Fresh Air
wound or traumatic conditions in the painful muscular contractions (usually rods, often with an Clostridium
break in the skin wound Tetany occurs after the of the muscles of the jaw and neck) Metronidazole endospore at one end
tetanus toxin is taken up and generalized muscle spasms or Penicillin (see Bacteroides
- Skin popping in IV (terminal spore), giving
drug use at the neuromuscular without other apparent medical notes)
them the appearance Fusobacterium
junction (end plate) and cause” --CDC
- Stepping on a nail is transported to the
of a drumstick, tennis Actinomyces
- strong muscle spasm Tetanus toxoid:
central nervous system racket, or lollipop
- lockjaw (trismus) vaccination with
(retrograde transport).
- risus sardonicus formalin-
There the toxin acts on the
TETANUS PROPHYLAXIS inhibitory Renshaw cell - opisthotonos inactivated toxin
interneurons, preventing - respiratory muscle paralysis (toxoid), part of the
VACCINATION HISTORY Metronidazole (400
the release of GABA and DPT vaccine; given
Uncertain or <3 doses >3 doses mg rectally or 500 mg
WOUND glycine, which are in childhood and IV every 6 h for 7 days)
Toxoid Toxoid inhibitory NEONATAL TETANUS is defined by the q10yrs thereafter
TIG (ATS) TIG (ATS) is the preferred
(TeANA) (TeANA) neurotransmitters. This World Health Organization (WHO) as “an
inhibition of inhibitory
antibiotic. An
NO (Yes, only illness occurring in a child who has the Antitoxin (ATS):
interneurons allows motor alternative is penicillin
Clean, minor YES NO if last dose NO normal ability to suck and cry in the first 2 human tetanus (100,000–200,000
neurons to send a high Requires anaerobic
given >10y) days of life but who loses this ability immune globulin IU/kg per day),
frequency of impulses to conditions
NO (Yes, only muscle cells, which results between days 3 and 28 of life and becomes (TIG) at the wound although this drug
Contaminated YES YES if last dose NO in a sustained tetanic rigid and has spasms.” site à Passive theoretically may
given >5y) contraction. exacerbate spasms.
Supportive therapy: (Harrisons)
may require
ventilator
assistance
Clostridium Habitat is soil Endospores (heat Anaerobic Motile: Flagella (so H- Botulinum toxin: FOOD-BORNE BOTULISM: eye symptoms Trivalent Botulinum Anaerobic, gram- TRIAD OF BOTULISM:
botulinum resistant) antigen-positive) - heat-labile (BOV, diplopia, ptosis, mydriasis), bulbar Antitoxin (for food- positive, spore-forming - Symmetric
Alkaline neurotoxin signs (diplopia, dysphonia, dysarthria, borne and wound rods descending flaccid
vegetables such as - inhibits release of dysphagia) anticholinergic effects (dry botulism) paralysis (with
green beans, acetylcholine from mouth, constipation, abdominal pain), Culture: requires prominent bulbar
peppers and peripheral nerves à bilateral descending flaccid paralysis, Human botulism: anaerobic condition involvement)
mushroom: flaccid paralysis respiratory paralysis immunoglobulin (thioglycollate- - Absence of fever
Home-canned (descending (for infant botulism) enriched agar) - Intact sensorium
Zip-lock pattern) INFANT BOTULISM: when baby ingests Elimination of the
storage bags - Eight immunologic spores found in household dust or organism from GIT Patient’s serum BOTOX is a
Smoked fish types of toxins honey; due to absence of competitive (Judicious use of injected into mice commercial
- Types A, B, and E: bowel microbes; constipation, flaccid gastric lavage and results in death preparation of
Wild, raw honey: most common in paralysis (FLOPPY BABY SYNDROME) exotoxin A; used in
associated with metronidazole or
humans penicillin) wrinkle removal,
infant botulism - not secreted, rather WOUND BOTULISM: similar to food- torticollis
Bulging canned it is released upon borne except absence of GI prodromal Supportive therapy:
goods the death of the symptoms; due to traumatic incubation and
bacterium implantation and germination of spores ventilator
at the wound site assistance
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Clostridium Ubiquitous: Endospores Anaerobic NON-motile Alpha toxin: GAS GANGRENE Gas Gangrene: Anaerobic, gram- Looks motile, but not
perfringens Soil lecithinase (splits - Due to alpha toxin - Wound positive, spore-forming motile on blood agar
GI tract of humans Myonecrosis results lecithin into - Gas produced by anaerobic debridement rods à due to avidity for
and mammals from contamination of phosphocoline and metabolism - Radical surgery lecithin in the blood
wound with soil or diglyceride); cleaves - Pain, edema, and cellulitis with (may require Culture: requires membranes
feces cell membranes crepitation amputation) anaerobic conditions
- Hemolysis and jaundice are common - Penicillin
Food poisoning is 11 other tissue - Hyperbaric Double hemolysis on
transmitted by destructive enzymes FOOD POISONING oxygen blood agar
ingestion of - Due to production of enterotoxin
contaminated food which acts as superantigen Food Poisoning: Growth on egg yolk
- Incubation period: 8-16 hours - Supportive agar: non-motile but
- Watery diarrhea with cramps and PREVENTION: with rapidly spreading
little vomiting Proper wound care growth on culture
- Resolves in 24 hours Adequate cooking media
Clostridium difficile Carried in the Fecal-oral: ingestion of Anaerobic Motile: Flagella (so H- Exotoxins A and B PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS ENTEROCOLITIS: Metronidazole Anaerobic, gram- PO vancomycin
colon: endospores antigen-positive) inhibit GTPases à - antibiotic-associated diarrhea ORAL vancomycin positive, spore-forming because it has poor
- 3% of the general apoptosis and death of - antibiotics suppress normal flora, rods intestinal absorption,
population Hands of hospital enterocytes à allowing C. difficile to overgrow Withdraw causative hence, “coats” the
- up to 30% in personnel are pseudomembranes
nd rd
- Clindamycin, 2 and 3 generation antibiotic Exotoxin ins tool lesions with antibiotic
hospitalized important cephalosporins, ampicillin detected by cytopathic
Toxin A: diarrhea Replace fluids effect (final phase by
patients intermediaries - non-bloody diarrhea associated with Infection can
pseudomembranes (yellow-white Surgery if toxic which viral cells infect precipitate flare-ups
Toxin B: cytotoxic to cells) on cultured cells
colonic epithelial cells plaques) on the colonic mucosa megacolon of ulcerative colitis
- toxic megacolon can occur develops or ELISA
Colonoscopy
Corynebacterium Throat Respiratory droplets Facultative anaerobe Pseudo-membrane forms in Exotoxin (encoded by DIPHTHERIA Antitoxins Aerobic, non-spore- Schick test: injection
diphtheriae from carrier the pharynx, which serves ß-prophage); obtained - Mild sore throat with fever initially forming, non-motile of diphtheria
Catalase-positive as a base from where it from a temperate - Pseudomembrane forms on pharynx Penicillin or gram-positive rods; exotoxin into the
secretes its toxin bacteriophage by (results from death of mucosal erythromycin Club or comma-shaped skin, to determine
lysogenic conversion epithelial cells) rods arranged in V or L whether a person is
- Myocarditis Vaccine DPT configuration; looks susceptible to
Subunit A: has ADP- î A-V conduction block - DIPHTHERIA: like Chinese characters infection by
ribosylating activity; î dysrhythmia formalin- diphtheriae
blocks protein - Neural involvement: inactivated Culture:
synthesis by î peripheral nerve palsies exotoxin, as Potassium tellurite:
inactivating EF2 (which î GBS antibodies to the dark black colonies
is involved in translation î palatal paralysis B-subunit are ADP-ribosylation
of eukaryotic mRNA into î neuropathies Loeffler’s medium:
protective ß-prophage
proteins) after 12 hours of
- pertussis growth, stain with Corynebacterium
- tetanus methylene blue. Diphtheriae
Subunit B: provides
entry into cardiac and Elongation factor 2
Reddish
neural tissue metachromatic (Babes- Granules
Ernst / Volutin)
Exotoxin is like a granules can be seen
“human antibiotic”
(inhibits eukaryotic Modified Elek Test:
protein synthesis) for detection of
toxigenicity
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Listeria Ubiquitous Ingestion of Facultative anaerobe Motile (via flagella): so has The only gram positive EARLY-ONSET NEONATAL LISTERIOSIS Ampicillin Aerobic, non-spore- Facultative
monocytogenes Plants (vegetables) contaminated raw H-antigen à tumbling bacteria that produces (Granulomatosis Infantiseptica) +/- Gentamicin forming gram-positive intracellular organism
milk or cheese from Catalase-positive motility LPS - transplacental transmission rods, arranged in V- or
Colonizes GI and infected cows - characterized by: TMP-SMX L-shape exhibiting Cell-mediated
female GUT Listeriolysin O: allows î late miscarriage (if allergic to penicillin) tumbling motility immunity is
Vaginally (during escape from the î birth complicated by sepsis, protective
birth) phagolysosomes of multiorgan abscesses, and Narrow zone of beta-
macrophages; major disseminated granulomas NOT hemolysis
Tranplacental virulence factor CEPHALOSPORINS: CAUSES OF
infection of fetus from LATE-ONSET NEONATAL LISTERIOSIS None of the Culture: can grow at NEONATAL
bacteremic mother Internalin: interacts with E- - transmitted during childbirth cephalosporins are temperature as low as MENINGITIS:
cadherin on the surface of - manifests as: active against 4-10C so use cold î GBS
cells î meningitis MRSA, LISTERIA, enrichment technique î Escherichia coli
î meningoencephalitis AND ENTEROCOCCI to isolate from mixed î Listeria
Actin Rockets: propel the flora monocytogenes
bacteria through the ADULT LISTERIOSIS
membrane of one human - second most common cause of
cell into another meningitis in people > 50yo
- most common cause of meningitis in
immunocompromised patients (with
lymphoma, on corticosteroids or
receiving organ transplantation)
- septicemia in pregnant women
Other Neisseriaceae
• Eikenella corrodens and Kingella kingae cause culture-negative subacute bacterial endocarditis in patients with preexisting heart disease
HACEK Organisms
ANTIMICROBIAL PROPHYLAXIS
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Neisseria Upper respiratory Respiratory droplets Ferments both Capsule: Endotoxin (LPS) MENINGITIS: Penicillin Gram-negative, Neisseria
meningitidis tract MALTOSE and î 13 serotypes based on î most common cause among aged aerobic, encapsulated, MeninGitidis
High carriage rate in GLUCOSE antigenicity of capsule No exotoxins 2-18 yrs Ceftriaxone (or kidney bean-shaped
Ferments both
HUMANS are the CLOSE QUARTERS: polysaccharides î fever, headache, stiff neck, and cefotaxime): DOC for diplococcus
only natural î Military recruits Oxidase-positive î Serotypes A, B, & C are increased level of PMNs in CSF the treatment of
Maltose and
hosts. î Dormitories colonies on associated with epidemics meningococcal meningitis Culture specimen on Glucose
î Camps chocolate agar of meningitis (usually type MENINGOCOCCEMIA: and septicemia blood agar that has
B) î dissemination of meningococci into been heated to 80°C
Neisseria
Neonates are very Grows best in high the bloodstream Rifampin/ for 15 minutes (called
Ciprofloxacin: chocolate agar) Gonorrhoeae
susceptible from 6 to CO2 environment Endotoxin (LPS): causes î multiorgan disease
prophylaxis Ferments
24 months, when blood vessel destruction î consumptive coagulopathy Selective media:
protective anti- (hemorrhage) and sepsis î petechial or purpuric rash of close contacts of Glucose only
prevents growth of
meningococcal lgG is (purpura fulminans) infected persons
bacteria using Thayer
low. IgA1 protease: cleaves IgA POLYSACCHARIDE
Martin Agar
WATERHOUSE-FRIDERICHSEN VACCINE: CAPSULE:
î Vancomycin: inhibits
Have unique proteins that SYNDROME: contains capsular (+) in Meningococci
G (+)
can extract iron from î most severe form of polysaccharide of (-) in Gonococci
î Colistin and
transferrin, lactoferrin and meningococcemia strains A, C, Y, and
trimethoprim: inhibit
hemoglobin î high fever, shock, widespread W-135 coupled to a AVAILABLE VACCINE:
G (-) except Neisseria
purpura, disseminated carrier protein (+) in Meningococci
î Nystatin: inhibits
Pili: allow attachment to intravascular coagulation, (diphtheria toxoid) to (-) in Gonococci
fungi
human nasopharyngeal cells thrombocytopenia, and adrenal enhance
and undergo antigenic insufficiency à bilateral immunogenicity Cell wall contains Complement
variation to avoid attack by hemorrhagic destruction of the cytochrome oxidase deficiencies in late-
the immune system adrenal glands The first meningococcal which oxidizes dye acting complement
vaccine for serogroup B tetramethylphenylene components (C5-C9)
was approved in diamine from colorless predispose to illness
October 2014. to deep pink. Used to à cannot form
identify colonies membrane attack
complexes
Neisseria Humans only (no Sexually-transmitted Facultative-anaerobe Pili: Endotoxin: GONOCOCCAL URETHRITIS Ceftriaxone plus Kidney bean-shaped N. gonorrhoeae is
gonorrhoeae immunity to î Adherence to epithelial lipooligosaccharide - urethritis and epididymitis in men Doxycycline (to cover with concave sides the most common
repeated Passage through birth Ferments GLUCOSE cells (LOS) - most common cause of urethritis for Chlamydia facing each other cause of hyperacute
infections) canal only î Antigenic variation trachomatis – usual co- forming the appearance bacterial
î Antiphagocytic, binds No exotoxins CERVICAL GONORRHEA of doughnut
infection)) conjunctivitis, the
Habitat is the Oxidase-positive bacteria tightly to host cell - in women, which can progress to Gram-negative most severe form of
human genital protecting it from pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) diplococci
Erythromycin conjunctivitis.
tract Grows best in high phagocytosis î Complications of PID
A. Sterility
ointment or Silver
CO2 environment Culture: Most common site of
B. Ectopic pregnancy nitrate to prevent
IgA1 protease Specimen on chocolate asymptomatic
C. Chronic Pelvic Pain ophthalmia
agar gonococcal infection
Outer membrane protein D. Dyspareunia neonatorum. Silver
nitrate is no longer used in women:
porins: promote E. Peritonitis Selective media: Thayer
invasion into epithelial cells F. Perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh-
because it can cause
Martin Agar ENDOCERVIX
chemical conjunctivitis.
Curtis Syndrome) à violin-
Opa proteins: promote string adhesions Cell wall contains
Complement
adherence and invasion into cytochrome oxidase
deficiencies in late-
epithelial cells; expression GONOCOCCAL ARTHRITIS which oxidizes dye
acting complement
results in opaque colonies - the most common cause of septic tetramethylphenylene
components (C5-C9)
arthritis in sexually active diamine from colorless
Have unique proteins that predispose to illness
individuals to deep pink; used to
can extract iron from à cannot form
identify colonies
transferrin, lactoferrin and OPHTHALMIA NEONATORUM membrane attack
PCR in bacterial DNA in
hemoglobin - purulent conjunctivitis in newborns clinical specimens complexes
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Moraxella Part of the normal OTITIS MEDIA in children Azithromycin or Resistant to penicilins
(Branhamella flora clarithromycin
catarrhalis) SINUSITIS
BRONCHITIS Amoxicillin with
PNEUMONIA clavulanate
TMP-SMX
Haemophilus Man only Transmitted via Haemophilus Capsule ENCAPSULATED H. INFLUENZAE: Amoxicillin Gram stain: small Haemophilus
influenzae (obligate human respiratory route influenzae requires î 6 types, a-f MENINGITIS: +/− clavulanate for gram-negative influenzae is
parasite) two factors for î Type b is most virulent î Most serious manifestation of mucosal infections (coccobacillary) rods formerly called
growth (both found î composed of Hib infection (otitis media, Pfeiffer's bacillus.
The non-typable in blood): polyribitol ribose î Haemophilus influenzae type B is conjunctivitis, Culture specimen on
H. influenzae X factor: Hematin the one of the primary causes of bronchitis) blood agar that has
phosphate o
(NTHi) strains V factor: NAD+ meningitis in infants from 3 to 36 been heated to 80 C
colonize the months of age Ceftriaxone for for 15 minutes (now Affects children
Attachment pili
nasopharynx in Satellite growth î antecedent upper respiratory meningitis called chocolate agar). from 6 months to 1
up to 80% of tract infections are common This high temperature year due to decline
around S. aureus lgA1 protease
individuals î Complications: sensorineural Rifampin lyses the red blood in maternal IgG and
colonies
hearing loss (6%), mental prophylaxis for close cells releasing both immature immune
retardation, seizure, deafness, contacts hematin (called X system
and death factor) and NAD+
ACUTE EPIGLOTTITIS: Hib vaccine: H. (called V factor). Like
î Most common cause influenzae the Neisseria, H.
î Cherry-red epiglottis polysaccharide influenzae grows best
î Fever, sore throat, dysphagia, capsule of type b when the chocolate
drooling, and difficulty breathing strain (Hib) is agar is placed in a high
î Thumb sign on X-ray conjugated to CO2 environment at
o
diphtheria toxoid 37 C
PNEUMONIA:
given between 2 and
î insidious onset and a history of
18 months of age Fluorescently labeled
fever, cough, and purulent
antibodies (ELISA and
sputum production
Passive latex particle
CELLULITIS: Immunization: agglunation)
î Most commonly involves the mother is immunized
th
buccal and periorbital regions; during 8 month of Positive Quellung
usually associated with fever pregnancy to test: due to its
SEPTIC ARTHRITIS in infants increase passive capsule, similar to
antibody transfer in Streptococcus
SEPSIS especially in patients without breast milk pneumoniae
functioning spleen
NON-ENCAPSULATED H.
INFLUENZAE:
OTITIS MEDIA
SINUSITIS
CONJUNCTIVITIS
COPD EXACERBATIONS
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Bordetella pertussis Habitat is upper Transmitted via Capsule Pertussis toxin: WHOOPING COUGH Erythromycin Small gram-negative
respiratory tract respiratory droplets î causes ADP - “Tuspirina” (most effective when rods
Beta-lactamase ribosylation - paroxysmal pattern of hacking given in catarrhal
î activates G proteins coughs, accompanied by stage) Culture:
Filamentous hemagglutinin that increases production of copious amounts of Bordet-Gengou agar
(FHA): cAMP resulting in: mucus, that end with an Vaccine: DaPT î potato extract
î pili rod that extends from - á sensitivity to inspiratory “whoop” (Given routinely at
the surface of B. pertussis, histamine ages 2, 4, 6, 15 mos Regan-Lowe charcoal
enabling the bacteria to - á insulin release Incubation Period and between 4-6yo.) medium
bind to ciliated epithelial - á number of î 7-10 days î charcoal, blood, and
cells of the bronchi lymphocytes in Pertussis vaccination antibiotic
Catarrhal phase
î mediates attachment blood during pregnancy is
î 1-2 weeks
î rhinorrhea, malaise, fever, safe Rapid serologic tests:
Extra-cytoplasmic
adenylate cyclase: sneezing, anorexia (ELISA)
î patient is highly contagious Treat household î Collect specimen
î “weakens”
î Antibiotics most effective contacts with from posterior
neutrophils
erythromycin. pharynx on a calcium
lymphocytes and Paroxysmal phase
monocytes alginate swab since
î 2-4 weeks B. pertussis will not
î inhibits î Whoop (burst of non-productive
phagocytosis grow on cotton
coughs)
Filamentous î Increased number of lymphocytes Direct fluorescein-
hemagglutinin: in blood smear labeled antibodies
î allows binding to î Antibiotics ineffective during this applied to
ciliated epithelial stage nasopharyngeal
cells Convalescent stage specimens for rapid
î 3-4 weeks (or longer) diagnosis
Tracheal cytotoxin:
î kills ciliated î Diminished paroxysmal cough
î Development of secondary PCR detection of
epithelial cells
complications (pneumonia, bacterial DNA in
î paralyze cilia
seizure, encephalopathy) respiratory secretions
î causes whooping
Legionella Ubiquitous in man No person-to-person Growth depends on Facultative intracellular Cytotoxins: kill PONTIAC FEVER Azithromycin Aerobic, motile, and Legionnaires disease
pneumophila and natural water transmission the presence of L- parasite hamster ovary cells î mild flu-like illness Levofloxacin nutritionally fastidious (LD) was recognized in
environments cysteine and iron î inhibits macrophage î headache, fever, muscle aches and Doxycycline pleomorphic poorly 1976 after an
î air conditioning PREDISPOSING in special media phagolysosome fusion Endotoxin is sole fatigue gram-negative rods; outbreak of
systems FACTORS: (charcoal yeast î cell-mediated immunity is virulence factor î self-limiting: recovery in a week is visualized with silver pneumonia at an
î cooling towers î Old age important common PREVENTION: stain American Legion
extract agar)
î Smoking Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase î Reducing cigarette convention in
Freshwater î High alcohol intake and catalase-peroxidase ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA and alcohol Serology (IFA and ELISA) Philadelphia.
Optimal growth
amoebae appear î Immunosuppression î protects bacteria from Accompanied by consumption
temperature is 28- Urinary antigen can be
to be the natural macrophage superoxide î confusion î Eliminating aerosols
40°C; organisms are detected by
reservoir for the and hydroperoxide î nonbloody diarrhea from water sources Legionella is non-
dormant below 20°C radioimmunoassay with
organisms. oxidative burst î hyponatremia î High temperatures encapsulated
and are killed at high sensitivity and
î proteinuria and facultative
temperatures above Pili and flagella specify and will remain
î hematuria hyperchlorination in intracellular parasite.
60°C. î promote attachment and positive for months
hospital water
invasion after infection. Urine
supply
antigen test only
Secretion of protein toxins detects L. pneumophilia
î like RNAase, serogroup 1, but this
phospholipase A and accounts for 90% of
phospholipase C cases.
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Escherichia coli Habitat is human Ascending infection to Indole-positive Fimbriae (pili): attachment/ Endotoxins NEONATAL MENINGITIS UTI: Ampicillin or Facultative Gram- LACTOSE
colon the urethra (UTI) colonization factor; causes î Lipid A portion of Sulfonamides negative rods FERMENTERS
UTI
Lactose-fermenting cystitis and pyelonephritis lipopolysaccharide Grow on MacConKEES
Colonizes the During birth (neonatal colonies on EMB or (LPS) NOSOCOMIAL SEPSIS Meningitis and Sepsis: Beta-hemolytic Citrobacter
vagina and meningitis) MacConkey’s agar Adhesins î Causes septic shock 3rd generation
NOSOCOMIAL PNEUMONIA Klebsiella
urethra cephalosporins Typing by O and H
Fecal-oral (diarrhea) Green metallic Capsule (K-antigen): causes Enterotoxins DIARRHEA antigens Escherichia coli
sheen on EMB agar pneumonia (Exotoxins) î ETEC Aminoglycosides Enterobacter
Colonization of LT (heat-labile): - releases LT and ST toxins
Serratia
catheters in TSI (Triple Sugar Flagella (H-antigen) î increases cAMP - traveler’s diarrhea (watery) Fluoro-quinolones EMB: purple/black
hospitalized patients Iron) agar shows acid (same as cholera MacConkey: pink/purple
Green metallic sheen Siderophore: obtains iron î EPEC
slant and acid butt toxin)
on EMB Aspiration - Watery diarrhea of long duration Rehydration is MOST COMMON
with gas but no H2S from human transferrin or ST (heat-stable) - Mostly in infants, often in effective in traveler’s CAUSES OF NEONATAL
lactoferrin diarrhea
î Increases cGMP developing countries MENINGITIS
Shiga-like toxin (SLT - Flattens villi à prevents î Group B strep
/ verotoxin) absorption î Escherichia coli
PREVENTION:
î inhibits protein î EIEC î Limit urinary î Listeria
synthesis by - Bloody diarrhea catheterization monocytogenes
inactivating the 60S - with pus in the stool and fever î Switch IV lines
subunit of promptly HEMOLYTIC-UREMIC
eukaryotic cells (E. î EHEC/STEC î Drink boiled water SYNDROME
coli O157:H7, STEC, - E. coli strain O157:H7 à MC î Renal Failure
EHEC) serotype î Microangiopathic
- Transmitted via undercooked hemolytic Anemia
HT and LT cause meat î Thrombocytopenia
watery diarrhea - secretes shiga-like toxin
SLT causes bloody (verotoxin) à causes Three Most Common
diarrhea (HUS) hemorrhagic colitis and Causes of Diarrhea in
hemolytic uremic syndrome the World:
- Does not ferment sorbitol î Campylobacter
- no fever, no pus in stool jejuni
î ETEC
î Rotavirus
Shigella species Habitat: human Fecal-oral route No H2S production Invades submucosa of Shiga toxin: BACILLARY DYSENTERY Fluoroquinolones Gram-negative non- IgA is best for
colon only 4Fs: Food, Fingers, intestinal tract (distal ileum î inactivates the 60S î Incubation period: 1-4 days (Ciprofloxacin) motile rods immunity
Feces, Flies Non-lactose and colon), but not the ribosome, î Fever and abdominal cramps à - in severe cases
SHIGELLA SPECIES GROUP fermenter lamina propria à local inhibiting protein diarrhea (initially watery then Have O antigens Shigella is more toxic
inflammation with synthesis and killing bloody) Azithromycin and invasive than
S. dysenteriae
Produce no gas from ulceration à bleeding intestinal epithelial î Diarrhea frequently resolves in 2 or TMP-SMX Cultured in XLD (xylose Salmonella
Type 1 Shiga bacillus Most severe form of
the fermentation of cells 3 days lysine deoxycholate)
bacillary dysentery
A glucose Shigella has a low infective î protein synthesis Fluid and electrolyte medium 4Fs of Shigella
MCC of epidemic
dose (200 bacilli) à highly inhibitor of replacement Transmission:
dysentery
infectious EUKARYOTES Stool culture: because Food
Type 2 Schmitz bacillus
** vs Salmonella with an Shigella is never a part Fingers
Flexner’s bacillus;
5 8 of the normal intestinal Feces
B S. flexneri Hiss and Rusell’s infective dose of 10 -10
flora Flies
bacillus
Newcastle Invasion of M cells is key
C S. boydii
Manchester bacillus to pathogenicity.
MCC of bacillary
D S. sonnei Duval’s bacillus
dysentery
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Salmonella species S. typhi is found S. typhi is transmitted Produces H2S Motile (H-antigen) ENTERO- S. enteritidis/ î Invasion of the epithelial and Ceftriaxone Facultative Gram- A. Facultative
only in humans via fecal-oral route COLITIS S. typhimurium subepithelial tissue of small Ciprofloxacin negative rods intracellular parasite:
(colon) Non-lactose Capsule (called the Vi and large intestines 1. Lives within
TMP-SMX
fermenter antigen): protects from î Infectious dose is HIGH WIDAL TEST: detects macrophages in lymph
S. enteritidis is intracellular killing î Gastrectomy or use of Azithromycin antibodies in patient’s nodes
found in enteric antacids lowers infectious serum 2. Can live in gall
tract of humans Siderophores dose significantly In the Philippines, bladder for years
and animals e.g., î Incubation period: 12-48hr first line drugs for Cultured in XLD (xylose (carriers secrete S.
chickens and î Nausea/vomiting à typhoid: lysine deoxycholate) typhi in stool)
domestic livestock abdominal pain and îAmoxicillin medium
nonbloody diarrhea îChloramphenicol B. Persons who are
COURSE OF TYPHOID FEVER TYPHOID S. typhi î Due to Vi capsular antigen îTMP-SMX Culture: blood, stool or asplenic or have non-
Week Presentation Culture Source FEVER î Organisms enter, multiply in urine may contain S. functioning spleens
Stepwise fever, anorexia, malaise, relative Blood Peyer’s patches, and then *Salmonella typhi (sickle cell anemia) are
1
bradycardia, and bacteremia Bone marrow spread to RES gastroenteritis: there at increased risk of
Urine î Predilection for invasion of is little benefit from NEVER part of the infection by this
Abdominal pain, bloating, constipation,
2 Rose spots the gallbladder à chronic antibiotic treatment; intestinal flora organism
rose spots, hepatosplenomegaly, jaundice
Bone marrow carrier state it may prolong carrier
Stool î Incubation period: 5-21days state
3 Bleeding ileitis, pneumonia
Bone marrow SEPTICEMIA S. choleraesuis î Bacteremia results in the PREVENTION:
4 Recovery or death Bone marrow seeding of many organs
î Public health
Bile, Stool, bone with osteomyelitis,
POST Chronic carrier state measures: sewage
marrow pneumonia, meningitis as disposal,
the MC sequelae
Gold standard for the diagnosis of typhoid fever: BONE MARROW CULTURE chorination,
î Commonly seen in patients
“The mainstay of laboratory diagnosis for typhoid fever is blood culture, although the handwashing, food
with sickle cell anemia or safety
gold standard is bone marrow culture” (American Society for Microbiology)
cancer
“Isolation of Salmonella Typhi from bone marrow is the current gold standard method î Vaccines for S. typhi
for confirming a case of typhoid fever” (WHO) î Fever but with little or no
- Oral: live
enterocolitis à focal attenuated S.
symptoms associated with typhi
affected organ (frequently
- IM: Vi Capsular
bone, lung, or meninges)
polysaccharide
Vibrio species V. cholerae: V. cholerae: Oxidase-positive Motile (H-antigen) Choleragen V. CHOLERAE: Cholera: Comma-shaped gram- Pandemics caused by
human colon only Fecal-oral route à Shooting star / fast (enterotoxin): CHOLERA: î Fluid and electrolyte negative rods with a Vibrio cholerae O1
Ferments sugar darting motility like LT of E. coli, acts î severe diarrhea with rice water replacement single polar flagellum biotype El tor
V. parahemoly- V. parahemolyticus: (except lactose) by ADP ribosylation; stools (no pus in stools) î Tetracycline or (cholera El Tor)
ticus and V. Contaminated raw á cAMP, à secretion î Washer woman’s hands sign à Azithromycin Dark field microscopy
vulnificus: seafood Non-lactose of electrolytes from wirnkled skin due to loss of skin shortens duration of stool reveals motile Death by dehydration:
saltwater fermenter the intestinal turgor due to dehydration organism that are children affected in
V. vulnificus: epithelium à î Complications: cardiac and renal V. parahemolyticus immobilized with endemic areas 1991:
Trauma to skin, V. secretory diarrhea failure, non-gap acidosis, and V. vulnificus antiserum Latin America
especially in shellfish parahaemolyticus: Mucinase: digest mucous hypokalemia infection: epidemic
handlers, or by halophilic layer so V. cholerae can Grows as flat yellow
V. cholerae: Comma- î Minocycline plus 1993: Epidemic in
ingestion of raw attach to cells V. PARAHEMOLYTICUS&VULNIFICUS:
shaped gram-negative, Fluoroquinolone or colonies on selective Bangladesh and India
shellfish GASTROENTERITIS
motile rods with a Fimbriae: helps with Cefotaxime media: Thiosulfate-
ADP ribosylation î Generally self-limited with an
single polar flagellum attachment to cells citrate-bile-salts- Only improvements in
Choleragen activates explosive onset of watery diarrhea
Short term immunity sucrose (TCBS) agar sanitation can lead to
Gs: turns the “ON” on and nausea, vomiting, abdominal
Non-invasive!!! using cholera vaccine effective control of
Pertussis toxin cramps, headache, low-grade fever
à may cause herd the disease
inactivates Gi: turns WOUND INFECTIONS
Has HIGH infectious dose immunity
the “OFF” off î Associated with exposure to
contaminated water
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Campylobacter Zoonotic: wild and Uncooked meat Microaerophilic Motile (H-antigen) Enterotoxin: similar to GASTROENTERITIS Symptomatic Microscopic exam of Three Most Common
jejuni domestic animal (especially poultry) cholera toxin and the î Most common cause of bacterial treatment only stool reveals motile, Causes of Diarrhea in
and poultry; Oxidase-positive Invasive: invades the LT of E. coli gastroenteritis curved/comma- or S- the World:
undercooked Unpasteurized milk mucosa of the colon but î Usually caused by ingestion of Erythromycin shaped gram-negative î Campylobacter
chicken Catalase-positive does not penetrate, Cytotoxins: destroy undercooked chicken - for severe disease rods with a single polar jejuni
Fecal-oral therefore, sepsis rarely mucosal cells î Watery, foul-smelling diarrhea flagellum î ETEC
occurs à produces followed by bloody stools Fluoroquinolone î Rotavirus
histologic damage to the accompanied by fever and severe Selective media with
mucosal surfaces of the abdominal pain o
antibiotic at 42 C:
jejunum î May mimic ulcerative colitis î Skirrow’s agar
Curved, comma- or S- Disease Associations: î Campy’s agar
shaped, gram-negative GUILLAIN-BARRE SYNDROME
rod with a single polar î Antigenic cross-reactivity between Optimum temperature
o
flagellum oligosaccharides in bacterial is 42 C – to inhibit the
capsule and glycosphingolipids on growth of other fecal
surface of neural tissues species
REACTIVE ARTHRITIS (REITER’S
SYNDROME)
î Triad of:
- Urethritis (can’t pee)
- Uveitis (can’t see)
- Arthritis (can’t climb a tree)
Helicobacter pylori Habitat Is the Transmission is by Microaerophilic Urease: produces No toxin PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Triple Therapy: Curved gram-negative Urease (+) Bacteria:
human stomach ingestion ammonia; makes the î most common cause of duodenal î Omeprazole rods with a tuft of polar PCHUNKSS
Oxidase-positive environment alkaline à ulcers and chronic gastritis î Clarithromycin flagella (lophotrichous)
î Proteus
helps H. pylori survive in î second leading cause of gastric î Amoxicillin or
Catalase-positive acidic mucosa ulcer Metronidazole EGD with biopsy î Cryptococcus
showing H. Pylori î H. pylori
Urease-positive Damages the goblet cells of Disease Associations: Quadruple Therapy: î Ureaplasma
gastric mucosa î GASTRIC CARCINOMA î Tetracycline Urease breath test,
“Triple Positive” î Nocardia
î MALT LYMPHOMA î Omeprazole H. pylori stool antigen:
Lophotrichous flagella î Klebsiella
î Metronidazole to document cure
î Bismuth î S. epidermidis
subsalicylate î S. saprophyticus
Klebsiella Habitat Is the Aspiration or Urease-positive Capsule NECROTIZING PNEUMONIA Culture-guided Facultative gram- 5A’s of KlebsiellA:
pneumoniae upper respiratory inhalation î Friedlander’s Pneumonia treatment negative rods with Aspiration pneumonia
and GIT Indole-negative î Most common cause in alcoholics large polysaccharide Abscess in lungs and
Ascending spread of **vs E. coli which is î Usually nosocomial Cephalosporins +/- capsule
indole-positive** liver
fecal flora î Thick, bloody sputum (currant Aminoglycosides
Alcoholics
jelly sputum) Extended spectrum
beta-lactamase (ESBL) Di-A-betics
URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS activity in drug- “Curr-A-nt jelly”
resistant strains sputum
SEPSIS
î Second to E. coli as the common
Very mucoid colonies cause of sepsis
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Proteus mirabilis Urease-positive: Motile No toxins COMPLICATED UTI: Ampicilin Facultative gram- WEIL-FELIX
hydrolyzes urea into î UTI associated with nephrolithiasis TMP-SMX negative rod REACTION: a test that
NH3 and CO2 Fimbriae: for adherence î Urease hydrolyzes urea in the urine Surgery: for large stones uses antibodies
to form ammonia à á pH à Culture: Swarming against certain strains
Indole-negative Lipopolysaccharide alkaline urine à struvite stone pattern colonies on BAP of Proteus to diagnose
formation (staghorn calculi; rickettsial disease
Non-lactose Urease production
composed of magnesium- (as certain rickettsiae
fermenter ammonium-phosphate) share similar antigens)
Gram-negative rod with
peritrichous flagella
SEPSIS
Pseudomonas Habitat is Transmission is via Non-lactose Motile (polar flagella) Endotoxin SKIN AND SOFT TISSUE INFECTIONS Combination of active Gram-negative rods, It is the most common
aeruginosa environmental water aerosols, fermenter î Burn wound infections antibiotics required obligate aerobe pathogen isolated
water sources aspiration, and fecal Elastase: causes vascular Exotoxin A î Hot tub folliculitis: spa pools, whirl pools, because of resistance from patients who
e.g., in hospital contamination Oxidase-positive necrosis and local tissue î similar to or inadequately chlorinated swimming to multiple antibiotics Culture: have been
respirators and destruction diphtheria toxin pools and hot tubs î Antipseudomonal î Grown on Cetrimide hospitalized longer
humidifiers Medical devices î inhibits protein î Skin graft loss due to infection penicillins agar than 1 week, and it is
Hands of healthcare Proteases: destroy synthesis by î Green nail syndrome (ticarcillin, î greenish, metallic a frequent cause of
Inhabits the skin, workers antibody and blocking EF2 BONE AND CARTILAGE INFECTIONS piperacillin) colonies on blood nosocomial infections.
upper respiratory complement î causes tissue î Puncture wound osteomyelitis î Penicillin + Beta- agar
tract, and colon of (major pathogen for necrosis î Pubic osteomyelitis in IV drug users lactamase inhibitor î with sweet, fruity Nosocomial
about 10% of nosocomial infections Pyocyanin: damages the î Type III secretion ticarcillin- grape-like odor organisms similar
Ecthyma gangrenosum people because of its cilia and mucosal cells; system facilitates EAR INFECTIONS clavulanate, î produces pigments: to Pseudomonas:
ubiquitous presence generates reactive exotoxin transfer î Most common cause of: piperacillin- - Pyocyanin (blue) î Acinetobacter
Soil, Water, Plants, in the hospital oxygen species - Otitis externa tazobactam - Pyoverdin (green,
rd baumannii
Animals, Intestinal environment) - Malignant otitis externa in diabetics î 3 gen fluorescent î Elizabethkingia
Flora, Skin Verdoglobin: from - Chronic suppurative otitis media cephalosporins: meningo-septicum
hemoglobin breakdown PNEUMONIA ceftazidime î Burkholderia
th
î Ventilator-associated pneumonia î 4 gen cepacia
Hemolysins: lyses RBC î Necrotizing pneumonia (fleur-de-lis cephalosporins:
pattern) cefepime
PSEUDOMONAS
Collagenase î High-risk CAP: î Monobactam:
aztreonam
Pneumonia, pyocyanin
- Immunocompromised
Fibrinolysin î Carbapenems: Sepsis
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics
- Steroid therapy imipenem, Ecthyma gangrenosum
Phopholipase C: - Structural lung lesions meropenem, UTIs
degrades cell membranes • Bronchiectasis doripenem, Diabetes, drug use
Green nail syndrome ertapenem
• Cystic fibrosis Osteomyelitis (eg,
DNAse î Fluoroquinolones: puncture wounds)
GASTROINTESTINAL INFECTIONS ciprofloxacin
î Typhlitis (necrotizing enterocolitis) Mucoid
Antiphagocytic polysaccharide
î Shanghai fever (mild form of typhoid) Examples of suitable
mucopolysaccharide capsule
î Peritonitis in peritoneal dialysis patients combinations:
capsule: may contribute Otitis externa
to chronic pneumonia in URINARY TRACT INFECTONS î Ceftazidime +
(swimmer’s ear)
cystic fibrosis patients rd
î 3 MCC of nosocomial UTIs Amikacin
î Piperacillin +
Nosocomial infections
due to biofilm formation (catheters,
SEPSIS Amikacin
î Ecthyma gangrenosum (hemorrhagic î Azlocillin + equipment)
lesions) Ciprofloxacin Exotoxin A
î Febrile neutropenia Skin infections (hot
- Leukemia or lymphoma post chemo- Rifampicin is added for tub folliculitis)
or radiation therapy refractory cases
- Severe burns
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Bacteroides fragilis Predominant Spreads to blood or Capsular polysaccharide: Lipid A does not elicit Infections commonly due to Metronidazole – DOC Anaerobic, gram- Obligate Anaerobes
anaerobe of the peritoneum during antiphagocytic and a strong host combinations of bacteria in for anaerobic infections negative rods Can’t Breathe Fresh Air
human colon bowel trauma, anticomplement inflammatory synergistic pathogenicity Clindamycin Clostridium
perforation, or response (attenuated) Chloramphenicol
Carbapenems
Bacteroides
surgery Succinate: inhibits PMN à LPS with low ABDOMINAL ABSCESS
phagocytosis endotoxic activity
nd
2 gen FQ Fusobacterium
PERITONITIS Actinomyces
Attachment factors: pili Enterotoxins: causes Surgical drainage of
diarrhea PERICARDITIS abscess Most Common
Bacteria in Colon
ENDOCARDITIS Chloramphenicol is
static, but cidal to the Bacteroides fragilis
following: E. coli
CEREBRAL ABSCESS
î Chloramphenicol is ideal because it No Bf Since Highschool Enterococcus
is lipophilic N. meningitidis
B. fragilis
S. pneumoniae
H. influenzae
Yersinia Zoonotic: can be Ingestion of Non-lactose Virulence factors are Enterotoxin: MESENTERIC LYMPHADENITIS Antibiotics do not Stool or blood cultures Survives refrigeration
enterocolitica found in pigs contaminated food or fermenter temperature sensitive; î similar to the heat- î in children alter the course of the may be positive
o
water expressed at 37 C stable toxin (ST) of î pseudo-appendicitis diarrhea. However, Closely related to
E. coli patients with positive Examination of the Yersinia pestis
Unpasteurized milk V and W antigens î á cGMP levels ACUTE ENTEROCOLITIS blood culture should terminal ileum with
î with fever, diarrhea (MC be treated with colonoscopy will reveal
Motile manifestation) and abdominal pain antibiotics mucosal ulceration
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Brucella spp. Direct contact with Obligate aerobe Non-motile BRUCELLOSIS: Pasteurization of milk Aerobic gram-negative Facultative intracellular
contaminated livestock or î Undulating fever (fever peaks in the coccobacilli parasite
aborted placentas Brucellae are that Tropism for erythritol, a evening, and returns to normal by Treat with combination of
Brucella meltitensis Goats
possess a unique ability sugar found in animal morning) doxyxycline Culture blood, bone
(highest pathogenicity)
Ingestion of infected/ to invade both î Weakness and one other drug:
phagocytic and
placentas marrow (best yield), liver,
contaminated/ î Loss of appetite - gentamicin or lymph nodes
Brucella abortus Cattle nonphagocytic cells and
unpasteurized dairy - streptomycin
to survive in the
products Includes ABORTIONS in animals - rifampin Serologic tests
Brucella suis Pigs intracellular
environment by finding
Aerozolization in All cattle are immunized Skin test: Indicates
Brucella canis Dogs ways to avoid the
laboratory or possibly due immune system. with a living attenuated exposure only
to bioterrorism strain of Brucella abortus
Francisella Rabbits and Bite of tick (e.g. Obligate aerobe Capsule antiphagocytic TULAREMIA Streptomycin (DOC) Culture (but very Facultative intracellular
squirrels Dermacentor), deerfly Ulceroglandular: at the site of tick bite Gentamicin dangerous due to its high parasite
tularensis Non-motile infectivity, requires
or infected animals Requires cysteine or direct contact with contaminated rabbit,
Ticks can serve as a an ulcer develops, with swelling of focal Doxycycline addition of cysteine to
reservoir Direct contact with The ability of F tularensis to lymph nodes blood agar media
infected animal tissue impair phagocyte function and Attenuated vaccine: only
(usually rabbit) survive in infected cells is central Pneumonia: inhalation, or through the for high-risk individuals Skin test
to its virulence. This intracellular
blood
life cycle has been shown to be Measure rise in IgG
Inhaled aerosolized
related to the tightly regulated antibody titer (IgM is not
organisms Oculoglandular: direct inoculation into
expression of a series of genes. very good)
eyes
Ingestion of contaminated
meat or water Typhoidal: ingestion results in
gastrointestinal symptoms (abdominal
Easily transmitted to lab pain) and fever
personnel
Yersinia pestis Wild rodents Flea bite Facultative anaerobe Fraction 1 (F1): this capsular Pesticin: kills other BUBONIC PLAGUE Streptomycin or Gram-negative rods MOST VIRULENT
antigen is antiphagocytic bacteria (including E. coli) î Regional lymph nodes (usually groin) Gentamicin with bipolar staining: BACTERIA!!!
City rats Contact with infected Virulence factors are swell, and become red, hot and tender the ends of these rod-
animal tissue temperature sensitive: V and W proteins Intracellular murine (called a bubo) shaped bacteria take up
o Doxycycline Facultative intracellular
Squirrels and prairie only expressed at 37 C toxin: lethal to mice î high fever stain more than the center parasite
dogs in the US Inhaled aerosolized (temperature inside î conjunctivitis (closed safety pin
Non-motile Killed vaccine is
organisms: human to macrophages)
effective only for a few appearance) Yersinia can accept
human transmission Requires calcium at 37 C.
o SEPTICEMIC PLAGUE months (attenuated plasmids in E. coli, and
Virulence is plasmid-
occurs during epidemics î bacteria survive in macrophages, and vaccine is more effective Blood culture shares many antigens
mediated If insufficient calcium, Y. pestis
spread to blood and organs but also has more side with enteric bacteria
alters its metabolism and protein
î death occurs in 75% in untreated effects) Culture bubo aspirate
production. This trait assists with
its intracellular state Subcutaneous
PNEUMONIC PLAGUE Serology hemorrhage result in a
The bacteria elaborate a î during epidemics, pneumonia occurs, as blackish skin
lipopolysaccharide bacteria are spread from person to Rapid diagnostic test: discoloration, giving the
person by aerosolized respiratory antibody against F1 name “Black Death”
endotoxin, coagulase, and a secretion (capsular antigen)
fibrinolysin, which are the î 100% fatal if untreated
principal factors in the
pathogenesis of plague.
Pasteurella Part of the normal Bite from dog or cat Facultative anaerobe Capsule WOUND INFECTIONS (following dog Penicillin G Short encapsulated NOT a facultative
flora of domestic and or cat bites): may progress to infection of Doxycycline gram-negative rod that intracellular organism
multocida wild animals Non-motile nearby bones and joints Third generation exhibits bipolar staining
cephalosporin Human bite infection:
Buttery colonies with Eikenella corrodens
musty odor due to
indole production
TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM VIRULENCE FACTORS TOXINS CLINICAL SYNDROMES DIAGNOSIS NOTES
PREVENTION
Mycobacterium Habitat is human Transmission is via Produces catalase Mycolic Acid: large fatty acid No exotoxin nor TYPES OF LESIONS: (see next page) Aerobic, acid-fast, thin, Purified Protein
tuberculosis lungs inhalation of and niacin endotoxin EXUDATIVE LESIONS non-motile rods Derivative (PPD) Test
respiratory droplet Mycoside: a mycolic acid DIAGNOSTICS 1. Measure zone of
î pus from acute inflammatory - Ziehl-Neelsen (or
nuclei produced by bound to a carbohydrate RAPID CULTURE: induration:
response Kinyoun)
Facultative forming a glycolipid Bactec radiometric Positive reaction:
coughing culture: a liquid broth in a
High lipid content: 40% intracellular growth: GRANULOMATOUS LESIONS > 5mm (immune-
bottle, with radioactive Slow-growing on
of total cell dry weight is M. tuberculosis can Cord factor î central area of Langhan’s type compromised host)
lipid palmitate as a carbon Lowenstein-Jensen
survive and multiply î a mycoside formed by union giant cells surrounded by a zone of source. Mycobacteria > 10 mm (have
in macrophages of 2 mycolic acids with a
medium
epithelioid ells grow and use the carbon, chronic disease or risk
disaccharide (trehalose) î tubercle is a granuloma surrounded allowing early detection factors for exposure to
Mycolic acids are also
î only found in virulent strain TB)
by fibrous tissue that has (in 1-2 weeks) even found in Nocardia (which
î most important virulence before colonies can be also is acid fast) >15mm (all others)
undergone central caseation
factor seen.
î inhibits neutrophil PPD skin test 2. A positive reaction
PHASES OF INFECTION
migration and damages Chest X-ray (“seroconversion”)
PRIMARY COMPLEX indicates:
mitochondria PCR and DNA probes
î usually in middle or lower lobes - current infection /
î may be responsible for
release of tumor necrosis î subpleural granuloma (Ghon’s Mycobacterium Tb Direct active disease
factor à cachexia focus) + associated lymph node = Test (MTDT): amplifies - past exposure but
Ghon’s complex ribosomal RNA in does not mean active
Sulfatides respiratory secretions, disease
î radiologically detectable - BCG vaccination
î mycoside that resemble cord allowing rapid
calcification (Ranke’s complex) identification of M.
factor with sulfates attached
to the disaccharide REACTIVATION TUBERCULOSIS tuberculosis 3. Negative Test
î exported repetitive indicates:
î usually in apices (Simon’s focus)
QuantiFERON-TB - - no infection
protein î CXR: cicatrical changes, subpleural measures interferon - anergy à
î inhibit phagosome- blebs, cavitation, fibrosis, nodules gamma levels produced in immunocompromised,
lysosome fusion o Secondary colonization with whole blood in response malnutrition, steroids,
A. fumigatus (fungus ball) to addition of specific sarcoidosis
Wax D î Can lead to pneumothorax tuberculosis antigens;
î acts as an adjuvant relative specificity for 4.PPD skin test is type IV
î activates the protective Mycobacterium hypersensitivity mediated
SPECTRUM OF DISEASE
cellular immune system tuberculosis; not positive
î Pulmonary tuberculosis in patient in previous BCG Isoniazid for 9 months
Tuberculin surface protein: î Miliary tuberculosis vaccination for patients who show
î Elicits delayed î Scrofula
seroconversion but no
hypersensitivity î Erythema nodosum Luciferase Reporter clinical symptoms
î Tuberculous meningitis Mycobacteriophage
Iron siderophore î Spondylitis (Pott’s disease) (LRP) Assays - can
(mycobactin) î Gastrointestinal tuberculosis detect M. tuberculosis and Bacillus Calmette-
(ileocecal) characterize Guérin vaccine is also
î Renal tuberculosis mycobacterial drug used as intravesical
î Abdominopelvic tuberculosis susceptibility patterns chemotherapy in
within 24 to 48 h in patients with bladder
positive cultures
cancer
(Luciferase is an enzyme
obtained from fireflies)
MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS
Diagnostic Algorithm
Mycoplasma Habitat is human Respiratory droplets Aerobic Protein P1 adhesin ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA (WALKING Macrolides NOT SEEN ON GRAM STAIN Mycoplasma has
pneumoniae respiratory tract î Toll-like receptor 2 protein PNEUMONIA) (erythromycin, î No cell wall limited biosynthetic
Requires STEROL for î adheres to epithelial cells of î Mycoplasma pneumoniae is the most azithromycin, î Only bacteria with cholesterol capabilities.
tiniest free-living membrane formation the respiratory tract common cause of atypical pneumonia clarithromycin) in cell membrane
organisms capable of î causes inhibition of ciliary î insidious onset, headache, dry, They can be grown in
self-replication motion (ciliostasis) and nonproductive hacking cough, patchy or Tetracyclines High titer of cold agglutinins cell-free media.
necrosis diffuse interstitial infiltrate (doxycycline) (IgM), which can agglutinate or lyse
î Chest X-ray will show patchy infiltrates that RBCs
Hydrogen Peroxide look worse than clinical findings Quinolones
î contributes to the damage CULTURE:
(ciprofloxacin,
to the respiratory tract cells TRACHEOBRONCHITIS levofloxacin) î Eaton’s agent
î takes 2-3 weeks
Motile (glides) EXTRAPULMONARY MANIFESTATIONS î Requires cholesterol and nucleic
î Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (most common PENICILLIN AND acids
Community-acquired infectious cause is M. pneumoniae) CEPHALOSPORINS î Add penicillin to inhibit growth
respiratory disease toxin î Erythema multiforme î do NOT work as of contaminating bacteria
(CARDS) î Hemolysis mycoplasma does not î Dome-shaped colonies with
î An exotoxin î Raynaud’s have a cell wall “fried egg” appearance or
î Major role in damage to the î Guillain-Barre syndrome “mulberry” appearance (in the
respiratory epithelium case of Mycoplasma pneumoniae)
î ADP-ribosylating and Children with sickle cell disease and functional
Complement fixation test
vacuolating cytotoxin asplenia may be at greater risk for severe
similar to pertussis toxin. respiratory tract disease PCR/Nucleic acid probes
VIRULENCE FACTORS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE / TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM DIAGNOSIS NOTES
TOXINS / PATHOGENESIS CLINICAL SYNDROMES PREVENTION
Treponema Habitat is the Sexual Microaerophilic Motile PRIMARY SYPHILIS Benzathine Penicillin G Coiled spirochete / thick rigid FALSE-POSITIVE VDRL
pallidum pallidum human genital î Within hours, enters lymphatics and spirals RESULTS
tract Transplacental Highly sensitive to multiplies Erythromycin Viruses (EBV,
elevated î Local non-tender / painless chancre Not seen on Gram stain Hepatitis)
temperatures - Versus painful chancroid of H. ducreyi Doxycycline î Too thin Drugs (Marijuana)
SECONDARY SYPHILIS Rheumatic fever,
î maculopapular rash on palms and soles Jarisch-Herxheimer Cannot be cultured in vitro: Rheumatoid arthritis
î Condylomata lata: painless, wart-like lesion î lacks tricarboxylic acid (Kreb’s)
reaction: acute Lupus, Leprosy
which occurs in warm, moist places (vulva or cycle
worsening of symptoms
scrotum) after Penicillin is started;
î Occurs after 1-3 months DARKFIELD MICROSCOPY: most
due to lysis of
Pathogenic treponemes î Fever, headache, malaise, anorexia, important (definitive) diagnostic
treponemes
are associated with the lymphadenopathy test for primary syphilis The antigens in non-
following diseases: treponemal tests
LATENT SYPHILIS contain measured
NON-TREPONEMAL TESTS:
T. pallidum pallidum: î 25% may relapse back to the secondary amounts of
VDRL, RPR
Venereal syphilis stage cardiolipin,
î Screening test for syphilis
T. pallidum pertenue: TERTIARY SYPHILIS î Correlates with disease activity cholesterol, and
Yaws î many years after inoculation î Used to monitor treatment purified lecithin in
T. pallidum endemicum: î granulomas (gummas) of skin and bone quantities sufficient to
Endemic syphilis (bejel) î Cardiovascular syphilis (aortitis) TREPONEMAL TESTS: yield a standardized
- Obliterative invasion of small blood FTA-ABS, TPHA amount of reactivity.
T. carateum: Pinta vessels and vasa vasorum, causing Historically, the
î Confirmatory test
endarteritis î DO NOT repeat even after cardiolipin was
î Neurosyphilis treatment extracted from beef
- Tabes dorsalis î Remain positive throughout life heart or liver with
o Argyll-Robertson pupil (prostitute despite treatment added lecithin and
pupil; can accommodate but do not cholesterol to enhance
react) VDRL: Venereal Disease Research
reaction with syphilitic
- Dementia paralytica Laboratory; RPR: Rapid Plasma Reagin; “reagin” antibodies.
Fluorescent Treponemal Antibody Reagin is a mixture of
CONGENITAL SYPHILIS ABSorption (FTA-ABS); Treponema Pallidum IgM and IgG antibodies
î Snuffles/saddle nose Haemagglutination Assay (TPHA) reactive with the
î Mulberry molar cardiolipin–cholesterol–
î Hutchinson triad (Hutchinson teeth, lecithin complex.
sensorineural hearing loss, interstitial Take Note!!!
keratitis)
î Saber shins FTA-ABS
- Most specific
î Rhagades
- Earliest positive
î Higoumenakis sign (unilateral enlargement
of the sternoclavicular portion of the clavicle - Remains positive longest
à detachment)
î Clutton’s joints (synovitis)
î Pulmonary hemorrhage (MCC of death)
BORRELIA RECURRENTIS
Relapsing Fever
î rapid antigenic changes due to programmed rearrangements of bacteria DNA encoding surface proteins
î transmitted by human body louse (Pediculus humanus)
î Diagnosed by microscopy
î DOC: Tetracycline or Erythromycin
VIRULENCE FACTORS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE / TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM DIAGNOSIS NOTES
TOXINS / PATHOGENESIS CLINICAL SYNDROMES PREVENTION
Borrelia Animal Bite from deer ticks Microaerophilic LYME DISEASE Early Localized or Weakly staining, gram-negative Thiomargarita
burgdorferi Reservoirs: (Ixodes ticks) Stage 1: Early localized stage Disseminated Lyme spirochetes namibiensis is the
î White-footed - Together with î Erythema chronicum migrans (ECM) Disease: largest bacteria ever
Largest medically mouse Babesia microti Doxycycline (DOC) Stains well with aniline dyes discovered (not
important bacterium î White-tailed Stage 2: Early disseminated stage Amoxicilin (Giemsa or Wright stain) medically important).
deer Ixodes scapularis: î Multiple smaller ECM Cefuroxime BAKE a Key LYME Pie
East & Midwest î Neurologic: aseptic meningitis, cranial nerve Cultured on Barbour-Stoenner-
palsies (Bell’s palsy), and peripheral
Bell’s Palsy
Late Manifestations: Kelly (BSK) medium
Ixodes pacificus: neuropathy Arthritis
IV Penicillin
West coast î Cardiac: transient AV block or myocarditis Ceftriaxone (for Elevated levels of antibodies Kardiac Block
î Brief attacks of arthritis of large joints neurologic disease) against Borellia burgdorferi can be Erythema chronicum
(knee) detected by: migrans
î ELISA
Stage 3: Late stage
î Western immunoblotting
î Autoimmune migratory polyarthritis (onion PREVENTION:
î Insectides
skin lesion)
î Insect repellents
î Acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans
î Protective clothing
î Encephalopathy
Leptospira Zoonotic (dogs, Direct contact with Obligate aerobe Leptospires penetrate intact Incubation Period: 2-20 days Mild Leptospirosis: Thin-coiled spirochetes The traditional system
interrogans cats, livestock, and infected urine or (the other spirochetes mucous membranes or skin î Doxycycline divided the genus into
wild animals) animal tissue: are microaerophiles) through small cuts or ACUTE LEPTOSPIREMIC PHASE: Spiral shaped, with hooks on both 2 species: the
î Ampicillin
Organism penetrate abrasions î organisms in blood and CSF ends (“ice tongs”) à Shepherd’s pathogenic Leptospira
î Amoxicillin
broken skin (i.e. on â î causes high spiking temperature, chills, crook appearance interrogans and the
feet) and mucous Multiply rapidly and damage intense headache nonpathogenic
endothelium of small blood î rapid multiplication of leptospires in Severe Leptospirosis:
(The resting site membranes Darkfield Microscopy: insensitive; Leptospira biflexa.
for leptospires in (swallowing urine- vessels (VASCULITIS) muscles with high oxygen tension à severe î Penicillin G not recommended
the natural host is contaminated water) muscle aches (calf tenderness) î Ampicillin
the lumen of the Organisms found in: î damaged and leaky conjunctival vessels à î Ceftriaxone Microscopic agglutination Test:
Two axial flagella wrap nephron tubules.) History of wading in blood and CSF (early in the conjunctival suffusion (painful and itchy î Cefotaxime î LeptoMAT
rd
around and run along flood water (in 3 disease) and in the but with minimal tearing) î the gold standard / criterion
the length of the world setting) urine (later stages) Jarisch-Herxheimer standard for serologic
organism under the IMMUNE LEPTOSPIRURIC PHASE: reaction may develop identification of leptospires
outer membrane History of exposure to Immune complex-mediated î correlates with emergence of IgM within hours after starting
(periplasmic flagella) animals (butcher) meningitis and î involves recurrence of the above symptoms therapy CULTURE:
glomerulonephritis î aseptic meningitis î Grown on Ellinghausen-
- CSF pleocytosis with or without McCullough-Johnson-Harris
meningeal symptoms PREVENTION: (EMJH) medium or Fletcher’s
- Coincides with appearance of antibody î Doxycycline for medium
titer postexposure î only becomes positive after 2
î Pulmonary involvement chemoprophylaxis weeks of incubation
- Snowflake lesions on CXR î Rat control î First week: culture blood or CSF
î Hepatic necrosis î Vaccination of domestic (on lab media, or by inoculation
î Glomerulonephritis (due to immune livestock and pets into animals
complex deposition î Second week to months: culture
urine
WEIL’S SYNDROME:
î most severe form of leptospirosis Antibody based ELISA to detect
î triad: Bleeding, Jaundice, Uremia Leptospira antigens in the urine
î orange cast skin (severe jaundice)
î MCC of death: respiratory failure due to Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
massive pulmonary hemorrhage to detect bacterial DNA in serum,
CSF and urine
VIRULENCE FACTORS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE / TREATMENT AND
MICROORGANISM RESERVOIR TRANSMISSION METABOLISM DIAGNOSIS NOTES
TOXINS / PATHOGENESIS CLINICAL SYNDROMES PREVENTION
Chlamydia Habitat is the Sexual Energy parasites Obligate intracellular TRACHOMA GENITAL AND EYE Gram-negative TRACHOMA
trachomatis human genital that use host ATP bacteria î C. trachomatis types A-C INFECTIONS: lacks classic peptidoglycan layer TYPES A, B, C
tract and eyes During passage î leading infectious cause of blindness Doxycycline (use only due to reduced muramic acid Africa
A-C: trachoma through birth canal Resistant to lysozyme (since î Chronic keratoconjunctivitis for adults) (rendering Beta-lactam antibiotics Blindness
D-K: genital, neonatal (C. trachomatis is their cell wall lacks muramic î scarring of the inside of the eyelid, resulting ineffective)
strictly human Hand-to eye contact Chronic infection
L1-L3: LGV acid) in redirection of the eyelashes onto the Erythromycin (especially
pathogen) corneal surface à corneal scarring and for infants and pregnant Cytoplasmic inclusions in
Prevents phago–lysosome blindness woman) Giemsa: (Halberstaedter-
FORMS: fusion î Scraping from the surface of the conjunctiva Prowazek inclusions)
ELEMENTARY BODY RETICULATE (INITIAL) BODY will show round to oval intracytoplasmic Azithromycin
Non-motile inclusion bodies within conjunctival Can classically be grown in chick
Inactive Metabolically active
Extracellular Intracellular No pili epithelial cells (Halberstaedter-Prowazek For STD, add yolk sacs: More commonly
Enters the cells by endocytosis Seen microscopically inclusions) CEFTRIAXONE for chlamydia is cultured in certain cell
No exotoxins possible concomitant lines (McCoy cells for example)
Infectious Replicates the binary fission
GENITAL TRACT INFECTIONS gonorrhea - To enhance the sensitivity of
Elementary body: Enfectious, Enters the cell via Endocytosis
PATHOGENESIS: î C. trachomatis types D-K McCoy cells to C. trachomatis
Reticulate body: Replicates in cell by fission, Reorganizes into
î balance that is often î Most common cause of STDs Note: Systemic treatment growth, cycloheximide was
elementary bodies. reached between host and î Men: Nongonococcal urethritis, epididymitis is required for any added to culture medium for
parasite, resulting in and prostatitis chlamydial eye infection. cultivating infected cells.
prolonged persistence of î Women: Urethritis, cervicitis and pelvic This is especially true for
infection inflammatory disease (PID) infants, who can develop PCR
î Infection persists in the î Associated with Reiter’s syndrome: triad chlamydial pneumonia
presence of high antibody of conjunctivitis, urethritis, and arthritis following chlamydial Nucleic acid amplification test
titer î Birth complications: neonatal pneumonia, conjunctivitis. (NAAT)
neonatal conjunctivitis
NEONATAL PNEUMONA
î C. trachomatis types D-K
î Late-onset (2-4 weeks)
î Striking tachypnea, characteristic
paroxysmal cough (staccato cough),
absence of fever, and eosinophilia
LYMPHOGRANULOMA VENEREUM
î C. trachomatis types L1-L3
î Papule or vesicular which ulcerates leads to
Elementary body (EB): dense spherule that infects cells
Initial (reticulate) body: After EB enters cell, it transforms into an initial
suppurative inguinal lymphadenitis
body; larger, osmotically fragile; can produce via binary fission; (buboes)
requires ATP from the host. The initial body transform back into EB, î (+) Frei test: intradermal injection of antigen
which leaves the cell to infect the other cells.
Chlamydophila Humans (spread Respiratory route Life cycle similar to ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA Doxycycline Examine blood for elevated titers TWAR: Taiwan Acute
pneumoniae from human to Chlamydia î Viral-like atypical pneumonia (similar to a of antibodies with complement Respiratory agent
(strain TWAR) human) trachomatis Mycoplasma pneumonia) in young adults Erythromycin fixation and immunofluorescence
tests
Associated with atherosclerosis, meningo- Intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies
encephalitis, arthritis, myocarditis, Guillain- that DO NOT STAIN with iodine
Barre syndrome
Chlamydophila Parrots, parakeets, Humans are infected PSITTACOSIS (BIRD FANCIER’S DISEASE) Azithromycin
psittaci macaws, cockatiels by inhaling Chlamydia- î Sudden onset pneumonia with malaises,
laden dust from fever, anorexia, sore throat, photophobia,
feathers or dried-out and severe headache
feces.
RICKETTSIAE
î Classical detection using Weil-Felix Reaction (cross-reaction with antigens of OX strains of Proteus mirabilis)
î Drug of choice for all rickettsial infections is DOXYCYCLINE.
MISCELLANEOUS BACTERIA
Culture:
- On SDA (at room temperature):
fine, septate hyphae and
rosette/daisy-like clusters of
conidia on thin conidiophores
- On BHIA (at 37ºC): round to oval
yeast cells
NAME RESERVOIR / TRANSMISSION MORPHOLOGY PATHOGENESIS / CLINICAL SYNDROME DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT NOTES ANATOMIC LOCATION
Coccidioides immitis Desert areas of the Dimorphic: - Arthospores form spherules filled with Biopsy of affected tissue: lung Drugs-of-Choice: Common oppurtunisitc SYSTEMIC
southwestern United States - Mycelial (mold) forms biopsy, skin biopsy, etc. Amphotericin B infection in AIDS patients
o endospores of coccidiodes
and northern Mexico with spores at 25 C Itraconazole from the southwest The most common
- Granulomata in bones and CNS
(soil) Silver stain or KOH prep United States mode of infection of
- Dissemination in those who have defective
Transmission: Respiratory - Spherule (not yeast) CMI If meningitis occurs, systemic fungi is thru
o
via inhalation of forms at 37 C (tissues) Culture on Sabouraud’s agar Fluconazole inhalation.
arthrospores VALLEY FEVER
Serology
î Very common in Filipinos living in Latin Systemic mycoses are
America and Southwestern USA caused by dimorphic
Skin test fungi: cold (20°C) =
î Asymptomatic (in most persons)
î Influenza-like illness mold; heat (37°C) =
î Lung infiltrates, adenopathy, or effusions yeast. Only exception is
Spherule (much larger than RBC) î Erythema nodosum (desert bumps) Coccidioides, which is
filled with endospores of î Arthralgias (desert rheumatism) a spherule (not yeast)
Coccidioides î Meningitis in tissue. (USMLE)
Histoplasma capsulatum Endemic in Mississippi and Dimorphic: - Inhaled microconidia develop into budding Lung biopsy Drugs-of-Choice: Can survive SYSTEMIC
Ohio River Valleys - Mycelial forms with Amphotericin B intracellularly within
o
yeast inside macrophages
spores at 25 C Silver stain specimen Itraconazole macrophages
o - Spreads to liver and spleen
Grows in soil contaminated - Yeast forms at 37 C
- Dissemination in those who have defective Culture on Sabouraud’s agar will
with bird droppings If meningitis occurs,
CMI o
reveal hyphae at 25 C and yeast at
(Starling) or bat guano Two types of asexual Fluconazole
o
spores: 37 C
Trabeculate HISTOPLASMOSIS
Transmission: Respiratory î Asymptomatic (in most persons)
macroconidia: typical Serology
via inhalation of airborne î Chronic Pneumonia: lesions calcify, which
thick walls and fingerlike
microconidia projections; Important in can be seen on chest X-ray (closely mimics Skin test (test for exposure only)
lab identification PTB)
Macrophage filled with î Disseminated: can occur in almost any
Histoplasma Microconidia: smaller, Urine antigen test
thin, smooth-walled organ, especially in lung, spleen, or liver
spores; if inhaled, î Erythema nodosum
transmit the infection î Tongue ulcerations in AIDS patients
Blastomyces Eastern and Central US Dimorphic: BLASTOMYCOSIS Biopsy of affected tissue: lung biopsy, Drug-of-Choice: Rarest systemic fungal SYSTEMIC
dermatitidis - Mycelial forms with î Chronic pneumonia skin biopsy, etc. Itraconazole infection.
o
Transmission: Respiratory spores at 25 C î Ulcerated granulomas
o
via inhalation of conidia - Yeast forms at 37 C î Verrucous skin lesions can simulate SCC Silver stain specimen For severe infections,
î Lytic bone lesions Amphotericin B
Round yeast with î Prostatitis Culture on Sabouraud’s agar
broad-based bud
Blastomyces Serology
Buds
Broadly Skin test (test for exposure only)
HHAPPPPy DNA Viruses: Hepadna, Herpes, Adeno, Pox, Parvo, Papilloma, Polyoma
All DNA viruses have double stranded DNA EXCEPT: PARVOVIRUS (single-stranded) All RNA viruses have single stranded RNA EXCEPT: REOVIRUS (ROTAVIRUS) (dsRNA)
All DNA viruses have linear DNA EXCEPT: PAPILLOMAVIRUS (circular, supercoiled) All RNA viruses have replicate in the cytoplasm EXCEPT: INFLUENZA VIRUS
POLYOMAVIRUS (circular, supercoiled) RETROVIRUSES
HEPADNAVIRUS (circular, incomplete)
All DNA viruses are icosahedral EXCEPT: POXVIRUS (complex)
All DNA viruses replicate in the nucleus EXCEPT: POXVIRUS (cytoplasm; carries own DNA-dependent RNA
polymerase)
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
NAKED DNA VIRUSES
PARVOVIRIDAE: The smallest DNA virus; the only DNA virus that is single-stranded.
Parvovirus B-19 Naked icosahedral Respiratory Droplets ERYTHEMA INFECTIOSUM (FIFTH DISEASE) Illness is self-limited RBC destruction in fetus
î affects children between the ages of 4 to 12 leads to hydrops fetalis and
Single-stranded linear DNA Transplacental î bright red cheek rash (“Slapped cheek”) with fever, coryza, and sore I.V. immunoglobulin can be used death, in adults leads to
virus (negative stranded) throat with aplastic crisis pure RBC aplasia and
rheumatoid arthritis–like
APLASTIC CRISIS:
One serotype symptoms
î Transient but severe aplastic anemia in children with sickle cell anemia,
thalassemia, or spherocytosis
î occurs when the Parvovirus stops the production of red blood cells in the
bone marrow
FETAL INFECTIONS
î First trimester: Fetal death
î Second trimester: Hydrops Fetalis
ARTHRITIS
î Immune-complex arthritis of small joints
CHRONIC B-19 INFECTION
î pancytopenia in immunodeficient patients
ADENOVIRIDAE
Adenovirus Naked icosahedral Aerosol droplet URT: Pharyngitis, conjunctivitis, coryza Histopathology: Illness is self-limited
Double-stranded linear DNA LRT: bronchitis, atypical pneumonia Cowdry type B intranuclear
41 serotypes Fecal-oral GIT: acute gastroenteritis basophilic inclusion bodies
Only virus with fiber GUT: acute hemorrhagic cystitis
Direct contact
JC Polyoma Virus Naked icosahedral - Only causes disease in immunocompromised hosts JC: Junky Cerebrum
(John Cunningham virus) Double-stranded circular - Causes progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in patients
DNA with AIDS
î Demyelinating disease that affects the oligodendrocytes
characterized by deficits in speech, coordination, and memory
BK Polyoma Virus Naked icosahedral - causes disease in immunocompromised hosts BKV blood test or a urine test BK: Bladder, Kidney
Double-stranded circular - causes hemorrhagic cystitis and nephropathy in patients with solid for decoy cells
DNA organ (kidney) and bone marrow transplants Biopsy of the kidneys
PCR techniques
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
ENVELOPED DNA VIRUSES
HERPESVIRIDAE
Herpes Simplex Enveloped icosahedral HSV 1: saliva or - Vesicle filled with virus particles and cell debris Tzanck smear: Drug-of-choice: HSV-1 is the most
Double-stranded linear DNA direct HSV-1 (HHV-1) HSV-2 (HHV-2) multinucleated giant cells Acyclovir common cause of sporadic,
Viruses (HSV)
Gingivostomatitis Genital herpes - Shortens duration of the fatal encephalitis in the
HSV 2: sexual or Herpes labialis (lips) Neonatal herpes (TORCH) Large, pink to purple Cowdry lesions USA
transvaginal Keratoconjunctivitis Aseptic meningitis Type A eosinophilic - Reduces the extent of
shedding of the virus
TEMPORAL LOBE:
Temporal lobe encephalitis intranuclear inclusions
- No effect on the latent state principal target area of the
Herpetic whitlow (fingers)
virus
Herpes gladiatorum (trunk)
Site of Latency CSF-PCR for herpes
Trigeminal ganglia Lumbosacral ganglia encephalitis
Varicella-Zoster Virus Enveloped icosahedral Airborne-droplet - Infects the URT, then spreads via the blood to the skin HP: multinucleated giant cells Mild: NO TREATMENT USES OF ASPIRIN IN
Double-stranded linear DNA - Becomes latent in the dorsal root ganglia, which may reactivate as with intranuclear inclusions
(VZV) / HHV-3 PEDIATRIC DISEASES:
Direct contact with zoster Moderate to Severe:
the lesions
- Kawasaki
Large, pink to purple Cowdry Acyclovir
VARICELLA / CHICKEN POX - Shortens duration of the
- ARF
Type A eosinophilic
î Incubation period: 14-21 days lesions - JRA
intranuclear inclusions
î Period of communicability: 48 hours before vesicle formation and 4-5 - Most effective if given within
days after until all vesicles are crusted 24 hours of the onset of rash
î Vesicular rash (‘dewdrop on a rose petal appearance’) that begins on
trunk; spreads to face and extremities (centrifugal) with lesions of Ramsay-Hunt Syndrome:
different stages Valacyclovir
î Complications: Pneumonia, Encephalitis, Reye’s syndrome, Prednisone
Cerebellar ataxia, secondary bacterial infection
POSTEXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS:
HERPES ZOSTER / SHINGLES Active vaccine can be given
î Unilateral painful vesicular eruption with a dermatomal distribution within 5 days of exposure to
(thoracic and lumbar) modify course
î Debilitating pain (postherpetic neuralgia) à most common complication Anti-VZV Ig: given within 96h
after exposure; for pregnant,
RAMSAY-HUNT SYNDROME / HERPES ZOSTER OTICUS
newborns exposed to maternal
î Reactivation of latent VZV residing within geniculate ganglion
varicella, and
î A triad of ipsilateral facial paralysis, ear pain, and vesicles on the face, on
immunocompromised
the ear, or in the ear is the typical presentation.
CONGENITAL VARICELLA
î Fetuses infected at 6-12 weeks’ AOG: maximal interruption with limb
development (short and malformed limbs covered with cicatrix – skin
lesion with zigzag scarring associated with atrophy of the affected limb)
î Fetuses infected at 16-20 weeks’ AOG: eye and brain involvement
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
Cytomegalovirus Enveloped icosahedral Human body fluids - Immediate early proteins Cultured in shell tubes Drug-of-Choice:
Double-stranded linear DNA o Translated from premade mRNAs Ganciclovir
(CMV) / HHV-5
Transplacental o Impair assembly of the MHC class 1-viral peptide complexes Negative heterophil test - CMV is largely resistant to
CONGENITAL CMV INFECTION acyclovir
Organ î Most common infectious cause of congenital abnormalities Giant cells with owl’s-eye
transplantation î Most common intrauterine viral infection DOC for prevention of CMV disease
î Most common when the mother is infected in first trimester
nuclear inclusion in solid-organ transplant patients is
î Microcephaly, seizures, deafness, jaundice, and purpura valganciclovir
owl’s-eye nuclear inclusion
î Periventricular calcifications
HEPATIC ENCEPHALOPATHY
The only positive during window period: Anti-HBc IgM
The only positive among vaccinated patients: Anti-HBs
What can differentiate chronic active infection from chronic carrier: HBeAg
Coxsackie virus Naked (+) ssRNA Oral-fecal Coxsackie A viruses Coxsackie B viruses NOTE:
î Herpangina (vesicular pharyngitis) î Pleurodynia (Bornholm disease, Pleurodynia is pain due to
Classification is based on î Acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis “devil’s grip”) an infection of the
pathology in mice î Hand-foot-and-mouth disease î Severe generalized disease of intercostal muscles
(vesicular rash on hands and feet infants (myositis), not of the pleura.
and ulcerations in the mouth) î Myocarditis, pericarditis (Most
î Aseptic meningitis commonly identified causative
agent of heart disease in humans)
î Aseptic meningitis
ECHO virus Naked (+) ssRNA Oral-fecal ASSOCIATED DISEASES: Orphan virus means a
(Enteric Cytopathic î Aseptic meningitis virus that is not associated
î Upper respiratory tract infection with any known disease.
Human Orphan) î Febrile illness with and without rash Even though Echoviruses have
î Infantile diarrhea since been identified with
various diseases, the original
î Hemorrhagic conjunctivitis name is still used.
Rhinovirus Naked (+) ssRNA Aerosol droplets - replicate better at 33°C than at 37°C à affect primarily the nose and Common cold: most
conjunctiva rather than the lower respiratory tract common human infection
More than 100 serotypes Hand-to-nose - acid-labile à they are killed by gastric acid when swallowed à do not
contact infect the GIT (unlike the enteroviruses)
- Host range is limited to humans and chimpanzees
Hepatitis A virus Naked (+) ssRNA Oral-fecal - The virus replicates in the GI tract and then spreads to the liver during a Anti-HAV IgM: most useful PREVENTION: There is no antigenic
brief viremic period. test to diagnose acute Vaccine contains killed virus. relationship between
(aka Enterovirus 72)
Virus has a single serotype - The virus is not cytopathic for the hepatocyte. infection Hepatitis A and other
- Hepatocellular injury is caused by immune attack by cytotoxic T cells. Administration of immune hepatitis viruses.
globulin during the incubation
HEPATITIS A INFECTION period can mitigate the disease
î Children most frequently infected
î Self-limited hepatitis
î Short incubation hepatitis
î Anicteric hepatitis: asymptomatic or only mildly ill, absence of jaundice,
with positive serologic evidence of infection
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
HEPEVIRIDAE
Hepatitis E virus Naked icosahedral (+) ssRNA Oral-fecal î Causes outbreaks of hepatitis (epidemics), primarily in developing Liver Biopsy: Hepatitis E
countries Patchy necrosis - Expectant (pregnant)
î no chronic carrier state, no cirrhosis, and no hepatocellular mother
carcinoma - Enteric
î Infection is frequently subclinical
- Epidemic
î Fulminant hepatitis in pregnant women
CALICIVIRIDAE
Norwalk virus Naked icosahedral (+) ssRNA Oral-fecal VIRAL GASTROENTERITIS RNA viruses with
î Most important cause of epidemic viral (nonbacterial) gastroenteritis icosahedral symmetry
(Norovirus)
in adults § Flaviviruses
î Sudden onset of vomiting, diarrhea, accompanied by fever and abdominal § Caliciviruses
cramping § Reoviruses
§ Picornavirus
§ Togaviruses
§ Hepevirus
REOVIRIDAE: only RNA virus with a double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) genome
Rotavirus Naked double-layered capsid - Rotavirus is resistant to stomach acid and hence can reach the small ROTAVIRUS VACCINE SEGMENTED GENOME
with segmented double- intestine î 1st dose: 6 weeks of age Bunyaviruses
stranded RNA (10 or 11 - Villous destruction with atrophy à â absorption of Na+ and loss of K+ î Last dose: not later than 32
weeks of age Orthomyxoviruses
segments) VIRAL GASTROENTERITIS
î Monovalent (RV1)/Rotarix: 2- (influenza)
î Most common cause of childhood diarrhea
dose series Arenaviruses
î Severe cases: stools are clear (“white stool diarrhea”) î Pentavalent (RV5)/RotaTeq: 3-
Reoviruses
dose series
î Min interval: 4 weeks
SPECTRUM OF DISEASE
î Incubation period: 24-48 hours
î Fever, myalgia, headache, sore throat, and cough
î Complications:
- Fatal bacterial superinfection
• S. aureus
• S. pneumoniae
• H. influenzae
- Reye’s syndrome
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
PARAMYXOVIRIDAE
Measles Virus Enveloped, helical, non- Respiratory droplet Measles virus infects the cells lining the URT à enters the blood à infects HP: Multinucleated î Vitamin A supplementation:
segmented ss-negative reticuloendothelial cells à spreads via the blood to the skin à cytotoxic T-cells attack the can reduce morbidity and
RNA
giant cells (Warthin-
measles virus-infected vascular endothelial cells in the skin à rash à virus can no longer be mortality from measles,
recovered à patient can no longer spread virus to other Finkelday bodies), particularly in malnourished
which form as a result of children
Can transiently depress cell-mediated immunity
the fusion protein in the
Infection confers lifelong immunity spikes, are characteristic PREVENTION Warthin-Finkelday bodies
of the lesions. Measles Vaccine
SPECTRUM OF DISEASE
- live attenuated vaccine
î aka red measles, rubeola, “first disease” - Given subcutaneously Cardinal Manifestations
î Incubation Period: 10-14 days - Age: 9 months of Measles
C
î Period of communicability: 4 days before and 4 days after the onset of the rash - may be given as early as 6 ough
î Pathognomonic enanthem: Koplik’s spots (bright red lesions with a white central dot on months of age in cases of oryza
the buccal mucosa) outbreaks onjunctivitis
î Timing of appearance of rash: Height of the fever oplik spots
î Cephalocaudal appearance of maculopapular rash (face – trunk – extremities – MMR Vaccine
palms/soles) - Given subcutaneously
ENVELOPE SPIKES OF PARAMYXOVIRUSES î Rash fades in the same sequence in which it appears à branny desquamation and - Given at 15 months
Virus Hemagglutinin Neuraminidase Fusion Protein disappears within 7-10 days - 2 doses recommended PaRaMyxoviruses
Measles (+) (-) (+) î Complications: Parainfluenza virus
Mumps (+) (+) (+) o Otitis Media POSTEXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS
RSV (-) (-) (+) o Giant cell Pneumonia, Secondary Bacterial Pneumonia î Measles Ig for prevention & RSV
Parainfluenza (+) (+) (+) o Higher rate of activation of PTB attenuation within 6 days of Measles
Hemagglutinin: binds sialic acid and promotes viral entry o Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis (SSPE) / Dawson disease exposure
Neuraminidase: promotes progeny virion release - neurodegenerative disease caused by persistent infection of the brain by an altered î Measles Active Vaccine can
Mumps
form of the measles virus; manifests 5-7 years after initial infection be given to susceptible children
î Final common pathway to a fatal outcome is the development of bronchiolitis obliterans >1yo within 72 hours
Mumps virus Enveloped, helical, non- Respiratory droplet - The virus infects the URT à spreads through the blood à infects the: PREVENTION Three MCC of viral
segmented (-)ssRNA o parotid glands à Parotitis (increase in pain when drinking citrus juices) MMR Vaccine (aseptic) meningitis
o testes à Orchitis - live attenuated vaccine
- Given subcutaneously î Mumps virus
o ovaries
o meninges à aseptic Meningitis - Given at 15 months î Coxsackie virus
o pancreas à Pancreatitis - 2 doses recommended î Echovirus
- Infection confers lifelong immunity
Respiratory Enveloped, helical, non- Respiratory droplet - Surface spikes are fusion proteins, not hemagglutinins or neuraminidase Ribavirin
segmented (-)ssRNA - Fusion protein causes cells to fuse, forming multinucleated giant cells (syncytia)
Syncytial Virus
(RSV) VIRAL PNEUMONIA Palivizumab (monoclonal
Humans are the antibody against F protein)
î RSV is the most important cause of pneumonia and bronchiolitis in infants
natural hosts of prevents pneumonia caused by
î Severe disease in infants due to immunologic cross-reaction with maternal antibodies
RSV. RSV infection in premature
RSV is also an important cause of otitis media in children and of pneumonia in the elderly
infants.
and in patients with chronic cardiopulmonary diseases.
Parainfluenza Enveloped, helical, non- Respiratory droplet LARYNGOTRACHEOBRONCHITIS / CROUP Racemic epinephrine
segmented (-)ssRNA î results in a “seal-like” barking cough and inspiratory stridor
virus 1 and 2
î Narrowing of upper trachea and subglottis à steeple sign on x-ray
î Severe croup can result in pulsus paradoxus secondary to upper airway obstruction.
In addition to croup, these viruses cause a variety of respiratory diseases such as the
common cold, pharyngitis, laryngitis, otitis media, bronchitis, and pneumonia.
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
RHABDOVIRIDAE
Rabies virus Bullet-shaped Animal Reservoirs: - When a human is bitten, the virus replicates locally at the wound site for a few days, then HP: Negri bodies Pre-exposure:
enveloped, helical, non- Dogs, cats, skunks, migrates (15-100 mm/day) up to nerve axons to the CNS (retrograde transport) (cytoplasmic, round to Vaccine
segmented, (-)ssRNA raccoons, and bats oval, eosinophilic inclusions (PVRV or PDEV or PCEV – D0, D7,
SPECTRUM OF DISEASE and D21/28)
that can be found in
Transmission by Incubation 2 weeks to 6 years (depending on the site of the bite)
pyramidal neurons of the
animal bite Period The only time when vaccination is effective hippocampus and Purkinje Post-exposure:
Prodrome Nonspecific symptoms of fever, headache, sore throat, fatigue, nausea cells of the cerebellum, Vaccine +/- Immunoglobulin Negri bodies
1st rabies symptom: pain / itchiness / paresthesia sites usually devoid of
Acute ENCEPHALITIC / FURIOUS RABIES WHO GUIDELINES FOR POST-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS
inflammation
neurologic - Phobic spasms: hydrophobia, aerophobia Category I Touching or feeding animals, No Treatment
period - Fluctuating consciousness licks on intact skin
Immunofluorescent Category II Minor scratches or abrasions Vaccine
- Autonomic instability
antibody test without bleeding or licks on
PARALYTIC / DUMB RABIES (IFAT): gold standard in broken skin and nibbling of
- Percussion myoedema: mounding of the muscles at the percussion site the detection of rabies uncovered skin
which disappears after a few seconds specific antigen Category III Single or multiple transdermal Vaccine +
Coma Follows the acute neurologic period, regardless of the presentation bites or scratches; Immunoglobulin
Death occurs secondary to respiratory center dysfunction contamination of mucous
Rabies has the highest case fatality ratio of any infectious disease membranes with saliva from
licks; exposure to bat
bites/scratches
All Category II exposures on
head and neck areas
FILOVIRIDAE: longest viruses
Ebola virus Enveloped, helical, non- Natural Host: fruit - targets endothelial cells, phagocytes, hepatocytes ELISA Supportive care, no definitive Ebola virus is named for the
segmented, (-)ssRNA bats of the - Incubation period: 2- 21 days treatment. river in Zaire that was the site
Pteropodidae family - abrupt onset of flu-like symptoms, diarrhea/vomiting, high fever, myalgia Antigen tests of an outbreak of
thread-like viruses - can progress to DIC, diffuse hemorrhage, shock Strict isolation of infected hemorrhagic fever in 1976.
Transmission: - high mortality rate (100%) RT-PCR individuals and barrier practices
direct contact with for health care workers are key
bodily fluids, to preventing transmission
fomites (including
dead bodies),
infected bats or
primates (apes/
monkeys)
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
ENVELOPED RNA VIRUSES (POSITIVE SENSE)
CORONAVIRIDAE
Coronavirus Enveloped, helical, non- Reservoir: SPECTRUM OF DISEASE
segmented, (+)ssRNA Horseshoe bat COMMON COLDS
with prominent club- î Second to rhinovirus as the most common cause of common colds
shaped spikes form a Immediate host: SEVERE ACUTE RESPIRATORY SYNDROME
“corona” (halo) Civet cat î Incubation Period: 2-10 days (mean, 5 days)
î Receptor for SARS-CoV on surface of cells is angiotensin-converting enzyme-2 (ACE-2)
Two serotypes: Transmission:
î Binding of the virus to ACE-2 on the surface of respiratory tract epithelium à dysregulation
229E and OC43 Respiratory Droplet
of fluid balance à alveolar edema
î Severe atypical pneumonia rapidly progressing to ARDS
î Leukopenia and thrombocytopenia are seen
î CXR: interstitial “ground-glass” infiltrates that do not cavitate
MIDDLE EAST RESPIRATORY SYNDROME
î MERS-CoV binds to CD-26 on the respiratory mucosa (not ACE-2)
î clinical findings of MERS are similar to those of SARS
FLAVIVIRIDAE
Dengue virus Enveloped, icosahedral, Bite of female DENGUE FEVER (BREAKBONE FEVER) • NS1 Antigen: to detectPREVENTION: Dengue is the most
non-segmented, Aedes aegypti î Influenza-like syndrome characterized by biphasic fever, myalgia, arthralgia, rash, gene product (NS1 î Insecticides common insect-borne viral
(+)ssRNA mosquito, Aedes leukopenia and lymphadenopathy î Draining stagnant water
glycoprotein) from day 1 disease in the world.
albopictus until day 6 from the î Mosquito repellent
DENGUE HEMORRHAGIC FEVER
Four serotypes: onset of fever î Dengue Vaccine FLAVIVIRUSES
DEN-1, 2, 3, 4 î severe, often fatal, febrile disease characterized by capillary permeability, abnormalities of
hemostasis and a protein-losing shock syndrome - Dengvaxia® (CYD-TDV) î West Nile virus
(Each serotype Aedes aegypti is • RT-PCR: to detect dengue - first licensed in Mexico in
provides specific lifetime recognized by white î Hemorrhagic shock syndrome is due to the production of large amounts of cross-reacting î Hepatitis C and G virus
viral genes (RNA) in December 2015 for use in
immunity, and short- markings on its legs antibody at the time of a second dengue infection (antibody-dependent enhancement) acute phase serum î Yellow fever virus
individuals 9-45 years of
term cross-immunity) and a marking in DENGUE WITHOUT DENGUE WITH samples which coincide age living in endemic areas î Japanese enceph virus
the form of a lyre SEVERE DENGUE with theonset of î Dengue virus
WARNING SIGNS WARNING SIGNS - live recombinant
on the upper Probable dengue: Lives in or travels to dengue- Lives in or travels to a viremia tetravalent dengue vaccine î Zika virus
surface of its thorax Lives in or travels to dengue- endemic area, with fever dengue-endemic area - given as a 3-dose series on
endemic area, with fever, plus any lasting for 2-7 days, plus any of with fever of 2-7 days and • Dengue IgM: marker of a 0/6/12-month schedule
two of the following: the following: any of the above clinical recent infection RNA viruses with
• Headache • Abdominal pain or tenderness manifestations for dengue icosahedral symmetry
• Body malaise • Persistent vomiting with or without warning • Dengue IgG: marker of
• Myalgia • Clinical signs of fluid signs, plus any of § Flaviviruses
past infection; a fourfold
• Arthralgia accumulation the following: § Caliciviruses
increase confirms the
• Retro-orbital pain • Mucosal bleeding • Severe plasma leakage, § Reoviruses
diagnosis
• Anorexia • Lethargy, restlessness leading to: § Picornavirus
• Nausea • Liver enlargement - Shock § Togaviruses
• Vomiting • Laboratory: increase in Hct - Fluid accumulation with • CBC-PC: Characteristic
• Diarrhea and/or decreasing platelet respiratory distress findings are § Hepevirus
• Flushed skin count • Severe bleeding thrombocytopenia with
• Rash (petechial, Herman’s sign) • Severe organ leukopenia. A
AND Confirmed dengue: impairment hematocrit level
• Laboratory test, at least CBC • Viral culture isolation - Liver: AST or ALT >1000 increase >20% is a sign
(leucopenia with or without • PCR - CNS: e.g., seizures, of hemoconcentration
thrombocytopenia) and/or dengue impaired consciousness and precedes shock.
NS1 antigen test or dengue IgM - Heart: e.g., myocarditis
antibody test (optional) - Kidneys e.g., renal failure
Confirmed dengue:
• Viral culture isolation
• PCR
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
FLAVIVIRIDAE (continued)
Hepatitis C virus Enveloped, icosahedral, Humans are the PATHOGENESIS: Anti-HCV antibodies: ACUTE HEPATITIS C: A chronic infection is
non-segmented, reservoir for HCV. - Replication of HCV in the liver is enhanced by a liver-specific micro-RNA called miR-122. screening Peginterferon alfa characterized by elevated
(+)ssRNA This micro-RNA acts by increasing the synthesis of HCV mRNA. - significantly decreases the transaminase levels, a
HCV is the most
- Death of the hepatocytes is probably caused by immune attack by cytotoxic T cells Recombinant immunoblot number of patients who positive RIBA, and
prevalent blood-
Has at least six - Alcoholism greatly enhances the rate of hepatocellular carcinoma in HCV-infected assay (RIBA): confirmatory become chronic carriers detectable viral RNA for at
borne pathogen in
genotypes and multiple individuals. test least 6 months
the United States. CHRONIC HEPATITIS C:
subgenotypes based on - Rate of chronic carriage of HCV is much higher than that of HBV
differences in the genes • PCR–based test that combination of
Major mode of î Peginterferon alfa-2a
that encode one of its SPECTRUM OF DISEASE: detects the presence of
transmission:
two envelope - Incubation period: 8 weeks HCV-RNA (viral load) in î Ribavirin
blood-borne
glycoproteins. - Acute infection: milder than infection with HBV the serum should be If genotype 1, add:
Setting: IV drug
This genetic variation - Hepatitis C resembles hepatitis B as far as the ensuing chronic liver disease, cirrhosis, and performed to determine î Protease inhibitor
users
results in a the predisposition to hepatocellular carcinoma are concerned whether active disease - Boceprevir, Simeprevir,
“hypervariable” region - HCV infection also leads to significant autoimmune reactions and extrahepatic exists. Telaprevir
Minor modes:
in the envelope manifestations, including:
Needle-stick
glycoprotein. o Thyroiditis o DM Cirrhosis resulting from chronic
injuries, during
birth, sexual o Autoimmune hemolytic anemia o leukocytoclastic vasculitis HCV infection is the most
Genotype 1: most
common in US o ITP o á risk of B-cell NHL common indication for liver
o MPGN o lichen planus transplantation
o porphyria cutanea tarda
- HCV is the main cause of essential mixed cryoglobulinemia
Zika virus Enveloped, icosahedral, Aedes mosquito - Causes conjunctivitis, low-grade pyrexia, muscle and joint pain, malaise, headache, and Supportive care, no definitive Zika virus was first identified
non-segmented, bites itchy rash in 20% cases treatment. in Uganda in 1947.
(+)ssRNA - These symptoms are usually mild and last for 2-7 days.
Sexual and vertical
transmission Complications:
possible î Microcephaly
î Guillain-Barre Syndrome
Yellow Fever virus Enveloped, icosahedral, Reservoir: - characterized by jaundice and fever May see Councilman PREVENTION: Arbovirus is an acronym for
non-segmented, monkey or human - severe, life-threatening disease that begins with the sudden onset of fever, headache, bodies (eosinophilic î mosquito control arthropod-borne virus and
(+)ssRNA myalgias, and photophobia apoptotic globules) on liver î vaccine containing live, highlights the fact that these
- After this prodrome, the symptoms progress to involve the liver, kidneys, and heart biopsy attenuated yellow fever virus viruses are transmitted by
- Prostration and shock occur, accompanied by upper gastrointestinal tract hemorrhage arthropods, primarily
with hematemesis (“black vomit”) mosquitoes and ticks. Most
arboviruses are classified in
West Nile virus Enveloped, icosahedral, Bite of Culex - bird-mosquito-man cycle three families, namely,
non-segmented, mosquito - Virus transmitted via blood from bite site to brain.
togaviruses, flaviviruses,
(+)ssRNA Reservoir: Wild - Initial self-limited febrile illness with progression to neuroinvasive disease
and bunyaviruses
birds - The most important clinical picture is encephalitis with or without signs of
Humans are meningitis, typically in a person over 60 years of age.
dead-end hosts - Asymptomatic in 80%; fever and headache in 20%; encephalitis in 1%
Japanese B Enveloped, icosahedral, Bite of Culex - most common cause of epidemic encephalitis PREVENTION:
Encephalitis virus non-segmented, mosquitoes - most prevalent in Southeast Asia JE vaccine
(+)ssRNA - Thalamic infarcts on CT scan - live attenuated recombinant
Principal vector: monovalent viral vaccine
Culex - given 0.5ml subcutaneous for
tritaeniorhynchus children 12 months and above
summarosus - primary series: single dose
- booster dose: 12-24 months
after the 1st dose
VIRUS MORPHOLOGY TRANSMISSION PATHOGENESIS / SPECTRUM OF DISEASE DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT / PREVENTION NOTES
TOGAVIRIDAE
Rubella virus Enveloped, icosahedral, Respiratory RUBELLA / GERMAN MEASLES / 3-DAY MEASLES PREVENTION: 5Bs of Congenital Rubella
non-segmented, droplets î Incubation period: 14-21 days MMR Vaccine Syndrome
(+)ssRNA î Period of communicability: 1 week before up to 1 week after the appearance of rash - live attenuated vaccine Bulag (cataracts)
Transplacentally î Prodrome: malaise, fever and anorexia for several days; may be accompanied by mild - Given subcutaneously
Only one known coryza and conjunctivitis (children may not have a prodrome) - Given at 15 months
Bingi (SN deafness)
serotype î Cephalocaudal appearance of maculopapular rash - 2 doses recommended Bobo (mental retardation)
î Postauricular lymphadenopathy: most characteristic clinical feature - should not be given to Butas puso (PDA)
î Enanthem: Forchheimer’s spots (petechiae on soft palate; not pathognomonic) immunocompromised patients Blueberry muffin rash
î polyarthritis caused by immune complexes (especially in adult women) or to pregnant women
î Natural infection leads to lifelong immunity.
gp41
î Mediates the fusion of the viral envelope with the cell
membrane at the time of infection
GENOME:
Gene Proteins Function
Structural genes found in all retroviruses
p24, p7 Nucleocapsid
gag
p17 Matrix
Reverse Transcribes RNA genome into DNA
transcriptase
pol Protease Cleaves precursor polypeptide
Integrase Integrates viral DNA into host cell DNA
Attachment to CD4 protein
gp120
env Antigenicity changes rapidly
gp41 Fusion with host cell à Inhibited by INFUVIRTIDE
î Transmembrane protein, TM (fusion protein, also called gp41), Regulatory genes found in HIV that are required for replication
which is linked to a surface protein, and SU (attachment Activation of transcription of viral genes
tat Tat
protein, gp120)
Transport of late mRNAs from nucleus to
î Cone-shaped, icosahedral core containing the major capsid rev Rev
cytoplasm
protein (CA also called p24)
Regulatory genes found in HIV that are not required for replication
î MA (outer matrix protein, p17) – directs entry of the double-
Decreases CD4 proteins and class I MHC
stranded DNA provirus into the nucleus, and is later essential
for the process of virus assembly. There are two identical
nef Nef proteins on surface of infected cells; induces
death of uninfected cytotoxic T cells
copies of the positive sense, single-stranded RNA genome in
Enhances infectivity by inhibiting the action
the capsid (that is, unlike other viruses, retroviruses are diploid)
vif Vif of APOBEC3G (an enzyme that causes
î The RNA is tightly complexed with a basic protein, NC
hypermutation in retroviral DNA)
(nucleoprotein, p7), in a nucleocapsid structure that differs in
morphology among the different retrovirus genera. Transports viral core from cytoplasm into
vpr Vpr
nucleus in non-dividing cells
vpu Vpu Enhances virion release from cells
Transmission: Pathogenesis:
î Original source: chimpanzees î Virus binds CD4 as well as a coreceptor, either CCR5 on
î Transfer of body fluids macrophages (early infection) or CXCR4 on T cells (late infection)
î Transplacental o The drug MARAVIROC is a CCR5 receptor antagonist.
î Perinatal î Preferentially infects and kills helper (CD4+) T lymphocytes
î Needlestick o Loss of cell-mediated immunity
o High probability of opportunistic infections
î also targets a subset of CD4+ cells called Th17 cells, which are
important mediator of mucosal immunity
o Th17 cells produce IL-17, which attracts neutrophils to the site
of bacterial infection.
o loss of Th17 cells à bloodstream infections by bacteria in the
normal flora of the colon (eg., E.coli)
î Main immune response consists of cytotoxic (CD8+) lymphocytes
STAGES OF INFECTION
Plasmodium
Babesia
Protozoa Apicomplexa Sporozoa
Cytoisospora
(no organelle of locomotion) (no locomotory organ)
Cryptosporidium
Toxoplasma
Ciliophora
Balantidium
(move by cilia)
Microspora
Enterocytozoa
(spore-forming)
Metazoa
ASCHELMINTHES PLATYHELMINTHES
(Round worms) (Flat worms)
Appear round in cross-section Dorsoventrally flattened
With body cavities No body cavity
With straight alimentary canal and an And if present, the alimentary canal is
anus blind-ending
Giardia lamblia î Flagellate that lives in the Fecal-oral Cysts Trophozoite î Adhesive disc and lectin facilitate ACUTE INFECTION î Metronidazole
duodenum, jejunum, and - found only in diarrheal attachment to avoid peristalsis î abdominal pain
upper ileum stools î Villous flattening, crypt î watery, foul-smelling diarrhea
- pear-shaped with two hypertrophy and disruption of î excessive flatus, smelling like rotten
î Falling leaf motility nuclei, four pairs of flagella, cytoskeleton eggs
î Simple asexual life cycle and a suction disk with î Ultimately leads to enterocyte î No fever and non-bloody (does not
which it attaches to the apoptosis invade the mucosa and does not enter the
î Covered with variant intestinal wall î trophozoite causes inflammation of
bloodstream)
Multinucleated
surface proteins the duodenal mucosa à trophozoites
CHRONIC INFECTION
Cyst malabsorption of protein and fat. î constipation, weight loss, and STRING TEST: swallowing
- found in diarrheal and a weighted piece of string
steatorrhea
formed stools à trophozoites adhere to
the string and can be
visualized after
withdrawal
Cryptosporidium î Opportunistic infection Fecal-oral Thick-walled Thick-walled oocysts î The oocysts excyst in the small î Self-limited nonbloody diarrhea in î Nitazoxanide:
oocysts - using a modified Kinyoun intestine, where the trophozoites immunocompetent patients DOC for immuno-
hominis / parvum î Undergoes schizogony and
acid-fast stain (and other forms) attach to the gut î Severely debilitating prolonged diarrhea if competent patients
gametogony wall. CD4 <200 (due to autoinfection)
î Invasion does not occur. î NO effective drug
î Autoinfection in
î The jejunum is the site most heavily therapy for severely
immunocompromised
infested. immunocompromised
patients
patients, but Oocysts on acid-fast
î Acid-fast organism paromomycin may be stain
useful in reducing
diarrhea.
UROGENITAL PROTOZOA
Trichomonas î Exists only as Sexual intercourse Trophozoites Trophozoite TRICHOMONIASIS î Metronidazole 2g
vaginalis trophozoite (“ping-pong” (seen in wet mount of î Watery, foul-smelling, greenish single dose
î Pear-shaped flagellated transmission) vaginal fluid) discharge accompanied by itching and - Treat both the
trophozoite with jerky burning patient and the
motion î Strawberry cervix partner
î cannot exist outside human
because it cannot form cysts
Motile Trophozoites
Life cycle of Entamoeba histolytica, showing the sites of action of amebicidal drugs
Entamoeba dispar morphologically similar to E. histolytica but their DNA and ribosomal RNA are
different
Entamoeba hartmanni similar to E. histolytica but is much smaller and does not ingest RBC, sluggish
Entamoeba coli cosmopolitan in distribution, harmless inhabitant of colon, has a larger cyst and
greater number of nuclei than E. histolytica
Entamoeba polecki parasite of pigs and monkey, cyst is uninucleated
Entamoeba gingivalis has no cyst stage and does not inhabit the intestines, found in the mouth,
moves quickly and has numerous blunt pseudopodia, transmission is via kissing
or droplet spray
Endolimax nana small size, sluggish movement
Iodamoeba butschlii no peripheral chromatin granules on the nuclear membrane
PROTOZOA PARASITE BIOLOGY TRANSMISSION INFECTIVE STAGE DIAGNOSTIC STAGE PATHOGENESIS/VIRULENCE FACTORS SPECTRUM OF DISEASE TREATMENT NOTES
BLOOD AND TISSUE PROTOZOA
Plasmodium î Most important parasitic Bite of infected Sporozoites Trophozoite (ring forms) î Most of the pathologic findings of î Paroxysmal fever with malaise and bone PREVENTION BUZZ WORDS
disease in man female mosquito malaria result from the destruction pains î Chemoprophylaxis
species Infected RBC with 1-2
(Anopheles of RBCs. î Hemolytic anemia, jaundice, î Insecticide-treated nets
splenomegaly î Insect repellants with small chromatin dots
î ASEXUAL life cycle consists minimus DIAGNOSTIC TESTS FOR MALARIA - enlarged spleen characteristic
î Parasitic pneumonitis DEET à P. falciparum
of schizogony and flavirostris) î Thick and thin smears with Giemsa stain of malaria is due to congestion of
gametogony sinusoids with erythrocytes, î Cerebral malaria î Biological modification
- Thick smear: to screen for the presence of
coupled with hyperplasia of - Malarial or Durck granulomas à cultivation of snails infected RBC
transmission organism
lymphocytes and macrophages î Acute Renal Failure (Blackwater fever) that eat up mosquito with presence of ring
î SEXUAL life cycle involves across the - Thin smear: for species identification
placenta, in blood î Septic shock (algid malaria) larvae form stage only à P.
sporogony - HIGHEST YIELD WHEN BLOOD SAMPLES
transfusions, and î People with RBC defects (G6PD falciparum
TAKEN DURING FEVER OR 2-3 HOURS AFTER
by intravenous PEAK deficiency, sickle cell) are SPECIAL CLINCAL OUTCOMES
Areas of High Areas of Chloroquine î RECRUDESCENCE infected RBC
drug use also protected against the severe effects
Endemicity Resistance occurs - Recurrence of symptoms after a with presence of
of falciparum malaria
î Palawan î Palawan temporary abatement (2-4 weeks) band form stages à
î Kalinga- Apayao î Davao del Norte - Seen in P. falciparum and P. P. malariae
î Partial immunity based on humoral
î Ifugao î Campostela Valley malariae
antibodies that block merozoites
î Agusan del Sur from invading the red cells occurs in
infected individuals (premunition) î RELAPSE
- Results to low level of - Return of disease after its apparent
COMPARISON OF SPECIES
parasitemia and low-grade cessation (1-6 months) due to
P. falciparum P. malariae P. vivax P. ovale
symptoms reactivation of hypnozoites
Asexual cycle 48 hours 72 hours 48 hours 48 hours
- Seen in P. ovale and P. vivax
Periodicity Malignant Benign Benign Benign
tertian quartan tertian tertian
RBC preference All ages Old RBC Young RBC Young RBC
Parasitemia Highest Lowest Low Low Clinical Setting Drug Therapy Alternative Drug
Merozoites 0 6-12 12-24 8 Chloroquine-sensitive P.
Gametocytes Banana- Large Small falciparum and P. Chloroquine
Compact malariae infections PROPHYLAXIS
shaped round round Drug Prophylactic Use
P. vivax and P. ovale
Cerebral Chloroquine + Primaquine
Yes No No No infections Chloroquine Areas WITHOUT resistant P. falciparum
Malaria
Recrudescence Yes Yes No No Malarone (Atovaquone- Malarone
Uncomplicated Areas WITH chloroquine-resistant P. falciparum
Relapse No No Yes Yes Proguanil)
Infections with Quinine + Doxycycline/ Mefloquine
Drug Resistance Many Few Few Few OR Mefloquine
chloroquine-resistant P. Clindamycin
Malarial Dots Maurer Ziemann Schuffner Schuffner OR Co-Artemether + Doxycycline Areas with MULTIDRUG-resistant P. falciparum
falciparum
Lumefrantine
Terminal prophylaxis of P. vivax and P. ovale
MALARIAL DOTS PRESENT IN INFECTED RBCs: Primaquine
Artesunate + Doxycycline/ infection; alternative for primary prevention
SCHUFFNER MAURER ZIEMANN Severe or complicated Clindamycin Artemether +
Punctate Coarse
infections with P. OR Mefloquine/Malarone Doxycycline/Clindamycin
Fine dots falciparum OR Mefloquine/Malarone
granulations granulations OR Quinidine gluconate
P. vivax SPECIAL SITUATIONS
P. falciparum P. malariae
P. ovale Chloroquine-resistance Mefloquine + Doxycycline
Eradication of hypnozoites Primaquine
Severe cases or pregnant Quinidine or Quinine
Action of chloroquine on the formation of hemozoin by Plasmodium species.
PROTOZOA PARASITE BIOLOGY TRANSMISSION INFECTIVE STAGE DIAGNOSTIC STAGE PATHOGENESIS/VIRULENCE FACTORS SPECTRUM OF DISEASE TREATMENT NOTES
BLOOD AND TISSUE PROTOZOA (continued)
Toxoplasma î Tissue protozoan Ingestion of cysts Fecal oocysts Trophozoites (Bradyzoites) Two Types of Trophozoites: î IMMUNOCOMPETENT: Treatment of Choice: MONONUCLEOSIS
in raw meat, TACHYZOITES - Usually asymptomatic Sulfadiazine + Heterophil-Positive:
gondii
î Domestic cat is the contaminated - rapidly multiplying - some resemble infectious Pyrimethamine î Epstein-Barr Virus
definitive host food - cell-mediated immunity usually mononucleosis, except that the
limits the spread of tachyzoites heterophil antibody test is negative For patients who cannot Heterophil-Negative:
î Humans and other Transplacentally î Cytomegalovirus
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS: - seen in body fluids in early, receive sulfa drugs,
mammals are î For the diagnosis of acute acute infections î IMMUNOCOMPROMISED: clindamycin can be î Toxopasma
intermediate hosts and congenital infections, - encephalitis
added to
BRADYZOITES - brain abscesses usually seen as
an immunofluorescence pyrimethamine.
- slowly multiplying multiple ring-enhancing lesions on CALCIFICATIONS in
assay for IgM antibody is - contained in cysts in muscle and MRI TORCH INFECTIONS
used.
brain tissue and in the eye Intracranial:
î Microscopic examination of
Giemsa-stained î CONGENITAL TOXOPLASMOSIS î Toxoplasmosis
preparations shows - Can result in abortion, stillbirth or
Periventricular:
neonatal disease with
crescent-shaped î Cytomegalovirus
trophozoites during acute hydrocephalus, encephalitis,
infections. chorioretinitis, and
î Cysts may be seen in the hepatosplenomegaly
tissue. - Fever, jaundice, and intracranial
calcifications are also seen
Leishmania î Flagellate protozoa Bite of the female Promastigotes Amastigote LEISHMANIASIS Conventional Therapy:
species sandfly of the CUTANEOUS MUCOCUTANEOUS VISCERAL Sodium
genus Causative L. tropica stibogluconate
Phlebotomus or Agent L. braziliensis L. donovani (Pentavalent antimonial)
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS
L. mexicana
Lutzomyia Local Name Oriental Sore Espundia Kala-azar
Examination of Giemsa- Second-line agents:
Presentation ulcerating single or parasite attacks infects macrophages
stained tissue and fluid Amphotericin B
multiple skin sores tissue at the à migrate to the
samples for the Pentamidine
mucosal-dermal spleen, liver, and
nonflagellated form junctions of the bone marrow à
(amastigote), which is the nose and mouth à parasite rapidly
Macrophages containing only form that occurs in multiple lesions multiplies à
L. donovani amastigotes humans and other mammals. hepatosplenomegaly
Babesia microti î Sporozoan Bite Ixodes tick Giemsa-stained blood smears î Babesia infects RBCs, causing them BABESIOSIS Mild to moderate
(same as Borrelia reveal intraerythrocytic to lyse, but unlike plasmodia, it has î Influenza-like symptoms begin gradually disease:
burgdorferi of ring-shaped trophozoites no exoerythrocytic phase. and may last for several weeks Atovaquone +
Lyme disease) are often in tetrads in the î Hepatosplenomegaly and anemia occur Azithromycin
î Asplenic patients are affected
form of a Maltese cross
more severely. Severe disease:
Quinidine +
Clindamycin “Maltese cross”
Cyclospora î Coccidial sporozoa Fecal–oral Spherical oocysts in a causes watery diarrhea in both Trimethoprim-
(contaminated modified acid-fast stain of a immunocompetent and Sulfamethoxazole
cayetanensis
water supplies) stool sample immunocompromised individuals
Isospora belli î Coccidial sporozoa Fecal–oral Oocyst typical oocysts in fecal The oocysts excyst in the upper small The disease in immunocompromised Trimethoprim-
transmission of specimens intestine and invade the mucosa, patients presents as a chronic, profuse, Sulfamethoxazole
oocysts causing destruction of the brush watery diarrhea
border
PROTOZOA PARASITE BIOLOGY TRANSMISSION INFECTIVE STAGE DIAGNOSTIC STAGE PATHOGENESIS/VIRULENCE FACTORS SPECTRUM OF DISEASE TREATMENT NOTES
BLOOD AND TISSUE PROTOZOA (continued)
Trypanosoma î Blood and tissue protozoan Feces of Reduviid Metacyclic Trypomastigote in blood î Many cells can be affected, but CHAGAS’ DISEASE / AMERICAN Drug of choice for the
î All four forms: bug (“kissing trypomastigote smear myocardial, glial, and TRYPANOSOMIASIS acute phase:
cruzii
- Amastigote bug,” triatoma, reticuloendothelial cells are the î ACUTE PHASE: Nifurtimox
- Promastigote most frequent sites. - facial edema
or cone-nose)
- Epimastigote deposited in a - nodule (chagoma) near the bite Alternative Drug:
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS: î Cardiac muscle is the most - fever, lymphadenopathy,
- Trypomastigote painless bite Benznidazole
î a stained preparation of a frequently and severely affected hepatosplenomegaly
(Kiss is supposedly
bone marrow aspirate tissue - unilateral palpebral swelling
painless)
or muscle biopsy î neuronal damage leads to cardiac (Romaña’s sign) There is no effective
specimen (which may arrhythmias and loss of tone in the - resolves in about 2 months drug against the
reveal amastigotes) colon (megacolon) and esophagus chronic form.
(megaesophagus) î CHRONIC FORM:
î culture of the organism on
- myocarditis, dilated cardiomyopathy
Trypomastigote in special medium
with apical atrophy
blood smear î Xenodiagnosis: allowing - megacolon, megaesophagus
an uninfected, laboratory- (secondary achalasia)
raised reduviid bug to feed - Death is usually due to cardiac
on the patient and, after arrhythmias or congestive heart
several weeks, examining failure
the intestinal contents of
- leading cause of CHF in Latin
the bug for the organism
America
Trypanosoma î Blood and tissue protozoan Tsetse fly Metacyclic Trypomastigote in blood î Trypomastigotes spread from the skin à blood à lymph nodes à brain Suramin for
î Only two forms: (Glossina), a trypomastigote î The typical somnolence (sleeping sickness) progresses to coma as a result of a bloodborne disease
brucei
- Epimastigote painful bite demyelinating encephalitis (ARAS, brainstem)
- Trypomastigote î In the acute form, a cyclical fever spike (approx. every 2 weeks) occurs that is Melarsoprol for
î exhibit remarkable related to antigenic variation. CNS penetration
antigenic variation of
their surface glycoproteins AFRICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS / AFRICAN SLEEPING SICKNESS Morula cells of Mott
î initial lesion: indurated skin ulcer (“trypanosomal chancre”) at the site of the
Trypanosoma brucei gambiense Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense fly bite
î causes the disease along water courses î found in the arid regions of east Africa î intermittent weekly fever and lymphadenopathy
in west Africa î enlargement of the posterior cervical lymph nodes (Winterbottom’s sign) MELlow music will
Trypomastigote in î deep hyperaesthesia (Kerandel's sign) SURely put you to
î runs a low-grade chronic course î causes a more acute, rapidly SLEEP.
blood smear î Encephalitis à excessive somnolence
over a few years progressive disease that, if untreated, is
• Morula cells of Mott: plasma cells with cytoplasmic immunoglobulin
usually fatal within several months MELarsoprol and
globules
î Transmitted by Glossina î Transmitted by Glossina SURamin for African
î Untreated disease is usually fatal as a result of pneumonia.
palpalis (or riverine tsetse) morsitans (or savannah tsetse) SLEEPing sickness
î Treatment: î Treatment:
Stage 1 Stage 2 • Suramin (to clear parasitemia)
Pentamidine Eflornithine followed by Melarsoprol
Suramin Melarsoprol
Acanthamoeba î free-living amebas carried into the Trophozoites Occur primarily in î KERATITIS: most common disease Pentamidine, î MC parasite that
î Most common protist in soil skin or eyes immunocompromised individuals associated with Acanthamoeba infection ketoconazole, or contaminates
castellani
during trauma î GRANULOMATOUS AMEBIC flucytosine contact lenses
ENCEPHALITIS
Naegleria fowleri î free-living amebas Swimming in Trophozoites occur in otherwise healthy persons î PRIMARY AMEBIC Amphotericin-B
freshwater Trophozoites can penetrate the nasal MENINGOENCEPHALITIS
lakes mucosa and cribriform plate
PROTOZOA PARASITE BIOLOGY TRANSMISSION INFECTIVE STAGE DIAGNOSTIC STAGE PATHOGENESIS/VIRULENCE FACTORS SPECTRUM OF DISEASE TREATMENT NOTES
DINOFLAGELLATES
Dinoflagellates î Flagellated marine protists Eating bivalve î Filter feeders accumulate toxins produced by dinoflagellates î Gastric lavage with
î Algal blooms cause red mollusks activated charcoal
SHELLFISH POISONING SYNDROMES
tide (mussels, clams, î Supportive fluid
Syndrome Toxin Incubation Clinical presentation
î Most common in the oysters, and resuscitation
Philippines is Pyrodinium scallops) and fish Facial paresthesia, total
Paralytic Saxitoxin
obtained from red paralysis, respiratory failure î Endotracheal
bahamense var. 15 mins
compressum tide Facial paresthesia, slurred intubation for
Neurotoxic Brevetoxin
speech, ataxia, diarrhea respiratory failure
Diarrhea, nausea and vomiting,
Diarrhetic Okadaic acid î Neostigmine and
abdominal pain
30 mins edrophonium to
Diarrhea, short-term memory improve muscle
Amnesic Domoic acid
loss, seizures weakness
PLATYHELMINTHES
Species Transmission Intermediate Host Site Affected Treatment
CESTODES / TAPEWORMS
Eggs/larvae in undercooked
Taenia solium Pigs Intestine Praziquantel
pork
Taenia saginata larvae in undercooked beef Cattle Intestine Praziquantel
Diphyllobothrium latum larvae in undercooked fish Fish Intestine Praziquantel
Eggs in food contaminated
Echinococcus granulosus Swine Liver Albendazole
with dog feces
TREMATODES / FLUKES
Schistosoma japonicum Penetrate skin Snail Blood Praziquantel
Pargonimus westermani Ingested with raw crab Snail and crab Lung Praziquantel
Clonorchis sinensis Ingested with raw fish Snail and fish Liver Praziquantel
ASCHELMINTHES / NEMATODES
Location Species Disease Transmission Treatment
Ascaris lumbricoides Ascariasis Ingestion of eggs Albendazole
Ancylostoma duodenale
Hookworm Larval penetration of skin Albendazole
Necator americanus
Intestines Trichuris trichiura Whipworm Ingestion of eggs Mebendazole
Enterobius vermicularis Pinworm Ingestion of eggs Pyrantel pamoate
Strongyloides stercoralis Strongyloidiasis Larval penetration of skin Ivermectin
Capillaria phiippinensis Capillariasis Eggs in undercooked fish Albendazole
Wuchereria bancrofti Diethylcarbamazine
Filariasis Mosquito bite
Tissue Brugia malayi (DEC)
Trichinella spiralis Trichinosis Eggs in undercooked meat Thiabendazole
CESTODES / FLATWORMS Taenia solium Taenia saginata Diphyllobothrium latum Echinococcus granulosus
Parasite Biology / Scolex: has four suckers and circle of hooks arranged around a rostellum Scolex: has four suckers but, longest of the tapeworms composed of a scolex and only three
Characteristics Gravid proglottids: have 5 -10 primary uterine branches no hooklets (no rostellum) Scolex: has two elongated sucking proglottids à one of the smallest
Gravid proglottids: have 15-25 grooves for attachment; no hooks tapeworms
T. solium T. saginata
Suckers 4 4 primary uterine branches Proglottids: wider than they are long; Scolex: circle of hooks and four
Rostellum (+) (-) gravid uterus is in the form of a rosette suckers (similar to T. solium)
Uterine Branches 5-10 15-25 Have oval and operculated eggs
Intermediate Host Pigs Cattle Copepods (first IH) and fish (second IH) Sheep / Humans (accidental IH)
Infective stage Larvae (cysticerci) Eggs Larvae (cysticerci) Plerocercoid / sparganum larvae Eggs
Mode of Transmission Ingestion of larvae (cysticerci) in Ingest eggs in food or water Ingestion of larvae (cysticerci) in Ingestion of plerocercoid larvae in Ingestion eggs in food contaminated with
undercooked pork contaminated with human feces undercooked beef undercooked fish dog feces (Dog is the definitive host)
Stage in Humans Adult tapeworm in intestine, Cysticercus, especially in brain; Adult tapeworm in intestine, Adult tapeworm in intestine can cause Larva causes unilocular hydatid cyst
Associated with Disease causing taeniasis causing cysticercosis causing taeniasis diphyllobothriasis disease, especially in liver and lung
Sites Affected Intestine Brain and eyes Intestine Intestine Liver, lungs, and brain (hydatid cysts)
Signs and symptoms Mild intestinal symptoms Brain (neurocysticercosis): Abdominal pain Abdominal pain Liver cysts à hepatic dysfunction
headache, vomiting, seizure Weight loss Diarrhea Pulmonary cysts à erode into a bronchus
Pruritus ani Vitamin B12 deficiency caused by à bloody sputum
Eyes: uveitis or retinitis, larvae in Intestinal obstruction preferential uptake of the vitamin by Cerebral cysts à headache and focal
viterous the worm à megaloblastic anemia neurologic signs.
Rupture of cyst à anaphylactic shock
Diagnosis/Diagnostic Stage Gravid Proglottids in stool Biopsy, CT scan Gravid Proglottids in stool Unembryonated operculated eggs in Biopsy, CT Scan, serology
stool
Treatment Praziquantel Praziquantel, Albendazole, or Praziquantel Praziquantel Albendazole, or surgical removal of cyst
surgical removal of cysticerci PAIR procedure: Puncture, Aspiration,
Injection, Reaspiration
Pathogenesis Ingested larvae (cysticerci) in small Ingestion of eggs in food or water Taeniasis similar with T. solium See diagram on the next page Worms in the dog’s intestine liberate
(see diagrams on the intestine attach to gut wall contaminated with human feces thousands of eggs
Ü Ü
Ü
next page) eggs hatch in the small intestine T. saginata does NOT cause Eggs ingested by sheep (or humans)
Grow into adult worms à taeniasis
Ü Ü cysticercosis in humans. Ü
Gravid proglottid containing eggs detach oncospheres burrow through the wall into Oncosphere embryos emerge in the small
daily a blood vessel intestine
Ü Ü Ü
Eggs are passed in the feces disseminate to many organs, especially the migrate primarily to the liver but also to
Ü
eyes and brain the lungs, bones, and brain
Eggs eaten by pigs (intermediate host) Ü Ü
Ü
Six-hooked embryo (oncosphere) encyst to form cysticerci Embryos develop into large fluid-filled hydatid
Ü
emerges from each egg in pig’s intestine cysts, the inner germinal layer of which
Ü
cysticercosis generates many protoscoleces within “brood
Embryos burrow into blood vessel and capsules.”
carried to skeletal muscle Living cysticerci do not cause
Ü
inflammation Cyst acts as a space-occupying lesion
Develop into cysticerci in muscle
Ü
Eaten by human (definitive host) Cysticerci can become space- Cyst fluid contains parasite antigens,
occupying lesions in the brain which can sensitize the host.
Praziquantel
Albendazole
Praziquantel
Praziquantel
Praziquantel
Schistosoma
Paragonimus
Clonorchis
Ascaris
Necator &
Ancylostoma
lemon-shaped or
barrel-shaped eggs
with bipolar plugs /
football-shaped eggs
Trichuris
NEMATODES Necator americanus Strongyloides
Ascaris lumbricoides Trichuris trichiura Enterobius vermicularis Capillaria philippinensis
Ancylostoma duodenale stercoralis
Common Name or Giant Roundworm / Ascariasis Hookworm Whipworm Pinworm / Seatworm / Strongyloidiasis Pudoc Worm / Capillariasis
Disease Miners’ anemia, “tunnel disease”, Wakana disease, Mystery Disease / Wasting Disease
Enterobiasis / Oxyuriasis
“brickmaker’s anemia” “Egyptian chlorosis”
Parasite Biology / î Most common and largest nematode î Soil-transmitted helminth (STH) î Soil-transmitted helminth î Soil-transmitted helminth î Soil-transmitted helminth î intestinal nematode
Characteristics î Soil-transmitted helminth (STH) î Blood-sucking nematodes î Life cycle is confined to humans î Facultative parasites î only nematode whose life cycle
î Differentiated based on character of buccal î MC STH in developed countries î only helminth that causes involves a migratory bird
spears of filariform larvae à a cosmopolitan worm greater pathology in AIDS
patients
Habitat Small intestine Small intestine Large intestine Large intestine Small intestine Small intestine
Transmission Ingestion of embryonated eggs Skin penetration by filariform larva (L3) Ingestion of embryonated eggs Ingestion of embryonated eggs Skin penetration by filariform ingestion of infected fish with
Inhalation of eggs larva (L3) L3 larvae
Infective Stage Embryonated egg L3 / Filariform larva Embryonated egg Embryonated egg L3 / Filariform larva L3 larvae
Diagnostic Stage Fertilized egg Eggs in feces Unembryonated egg Eggs on perianal folds Rhabtidiform (L1) Unembryonated egg
Diagnostic Test Direct fecal smear Direct fecal smear Direct fecal smear Graham’s scotch/cellulose Harada-Mori culture Direct fecal smear
Kato-katz technique Kato-katz technique Kato-katz technique tape test Kato-katz technique
Harada-Mori culture - lemon-shaped or barrel- (distinguished by their - Peanut-shaped eggs with
- D-shaped ovum with thin
shaped eggs with bipolar prominent genital primordium flattened bipolar plugs
colorless cell wall
plugs / football-shaped eggs and a pointed tail)
Pathogenesis î Major damage occurs during larval î The major damage is due to the loss of î Burrow their hairlike anterior î Female releases thousands of î Larvae penetrate intestinal î Embryonated eggs can cause
migration blood at the site of attachment in the ends into the intestinal mucosa fertilized eggs on perianal skin wall directly without leaving autoinfection and
î Principal site of tissue reaction is the small intestine (0.1-0.3 mL/worm/day) î Does NOT cause significant - Eggs develop into larvae, host and migrate to the lungs hyperinfection
lungs, where inflammation with an î Blood is consumed by the worm and oozes anemia causing anal pruritus (autoinfection) î ulcerative and compressive
eosinophilic exudate occurs from the site in response to an î Autoinfection can occur degeneration of enterocytes à
î Heavy worm burden à malnutrition anticoagulant made by the worm. severe malnutrition
Spectrum of LUNG PHASE: CUTANEOUS PHASE: î Diarrhea î Pruritus ani CUTANEOUS PHASE: ACUTE DISEASE:
Disease î L3àL5 î Penetration of L3 to the skin î Rectal prolapse (from î Eosinophilic enterocolitis î Penetration of L3 to the skin î Borborygmi
î Hypersensitivity pneumonitis î Ground itch increased peristalsis to expel the î Vulvovaginitis î Acute: Ground itch î Fever, abdominal pain,
(Loeffler’s Syndrome) î Cutaneous larva migrans (creeping worms) î Salpingitis î Chronic: serpiginous track eosinophilia
INTESTINAL PHASE: eruption) î Appendicitis (oxyuriasis) (larva currens)
î L5 à adult worms LUNG PHASE: LUNG PHASE: CHRONIC DISEASE:
î Acute intestinal obstruction î Lung migration of L3 (no development) î Lung migration of L3 î Chronic watery diarrhea
î Malabsorption syndrome î Simple lung eosinophilia (Loeffler’s î Acute: Loeffler’s syndrome î Edema, wasting
î Nutrient deficiencies syndrome) î Chronic: Paradoxical asthma î Protein-losing enteropathy
WANDERING WORMS: INTESTINAL PHASE: INTESTINAL PHASE: î hypogammaglobulinemia
î Due to erratic behavior of adult worms î L3 à L5 î Mild watery diarrhea
î Hepatobiliary ascariasis î Up to 200mL of blood may be lost per day î burrowing into the mucosa and
î Pancreatitis, appendicitis î Iron-deficiency (microcytic submucosa à ulceration and
hypochromic) anemia à weakness and sloughing à duodenitis
pallor DISSEMINATED
î Protein malnutrition (hypoalbuminemia) STRONGYLOIDIASIS:
î Hyperinfection syndrome
(in immunocompromised)
Treatment Albendazole (has greater larvicidal Albendazole Mebendazole Pyrantel Pamoate Ivermectin Albendazole
activity than mebendazole)
D-shaped ovum
Strongyloides
Enterobius
Wuchereria
Capillaria
Wuchereria bancrofti
NEMATODES Trichinella spiralis
Brugia malayi
Disease Filariasis Trichinosis
Trichinella
Parasite Biology / î blood and tissue nematode î Tissue nematode
Characteristics î most debilitating nematode infection î Intermediate host: pigs
î Usual scenario: farmer from abaca plantation
Characteristics Wuchereria Brugia
Appearance Smoothly curved Kinky
Terminal nuclei Absent Present
Prevalence Widespread SEA only
Mosquito vector Culex, Aedes, Anopheles Mansonia
Preference Scrotal lymphatics Limb lymphatics
Clinical picture Hydrocele Elephantiasis
Severity More severe Less severe
Transmission Mosquito bite Undercooked pork
Infective Stage Third-stage larva (L3) Encysted larvae
Diagnostic Stage Microfilariae (L1) Encysted larvae
Diagnostic Test î Thick blood smear: curved or kinky microfilariae î Muscle biopsy: most definitive; larvae within
î Specimen collection best done at night between 8PM and striated muscle
4AM à NOCTURNAL PERIODICITY î Elevated CPKs
î DEC Provocation Test î Xenodiagnosis
î Bentonite Flocculation test
Pathogenesis Adult worms in the lymph nodes à inflammation à INTESTINAL STAGE: liberated from pork by gastric juices
lymphatic obstruction à lymphedema MUSCLE STAGE: disseminated hematogenously to
striated skeletal muscle àencysted within a host-
derived cell (nurse cell)
Spectrum of ACUTE DISEASE: MILD DISEASE:
Disease î Acute adenolymphangitis î Fever, muscle pain (myalgia)
î Filarial fever î Periorbital edema
î Nocturnal wheezing (tropical pulmonary eosinophilia) î Eosinophilia
- Small epithelioid granulomas (Meyers-Kouwenaar î Hemorrhagic phenomena (subconjunctival
bodies) splinter)
î Expatriate syndrome
SEVERE DISEASE:
CHRONIC DISEASE: î Myocarditis
î Hydrocele î Encephalitis
î Elephantiasis î Pneumonia
î Milky urine (chyluria) î Respiratory myositis
Treatment Diethylcarbamazine Thiabendazole
Others LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
BANCROFTIAN FILARIASIS MALAYAN FILARIASIS
Sorsogon Albay Eastern Samar
Samar Mindoro Agusan del Sur
Leyte Marinduque Palawan
Palawan Rombon Sulu
Camarines All of Mindanao
NEMATODES OF MINOR IMPORTANCE
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