Gram Negative Bacteria of Medical Importance - PPTX, MONDAY
Gram Negative Bacteria of Medical Importance - PPTX, MONDAY
Gram Negative Bacteria of Medical Importance - PPTX, MONDAY
of Medical Importance
Dr G. KASONDA
Learning Objectives
By the end of this session, students are expected
to be able to:
Define Gram negative bacteria
Describe characteristics of Gram negative cocci bacteria
Classify Gram negative bacilli of medical importance
List laboratory diagnosis, diseases caused and drug of
choice for Gram negative cocci bacteria
Describe individual characteristics of Gram negative
bacilli of medical importance
Describe individual characteristics of Yersinia and
Brucella
Characteristics of Gram
Negative Cocci
Bean shaped cocci
The pathogenics are intracellular (they live
inside the host cell normally
polymorphonuclear cells like macrophages)
Oxidase positive
Have pilli
Non motile
Non sporing
GRAM NEGATIVE
DIPLOCOCCI
GENUS: NEISSERIA
Characteristics:
They are non-motile, gram-negative intacellular diplococci
Rapidly killed by drying, sunlight, heat, and disinfectants
Ferment carbohydrate produucing acid but not gas
Each cocci is kidney-shaped with adjacent concave sides
Grow best on complex media under aerobic conditions
containing 5%co2
Oxidase positive.
The main species of medical importance are:
N. meningitidis
N.gonorrhoea.
N. gonorrhoea
Characteristics:
.An obligate parasite of the human urogenital tract.
Antigenic structure: antigenically heterogeneous and
capable of changing its surface structures.
1. Pili: Hair-like appendages extending from bacterial
surface and enhance attachment to host cells and
evade human defense.
. The pilus of almost all strains of N. gonorrhoea
are antigenically different, and a single strain can make
many antigenically distinct forms of pilin.
2. Por (Protein I)
. Pores on the surface of bacteria through which
nutrients enter the cell.
3. Opa (Protein II)
. Important for attachement of bacteria to host cells.
4. RMP (Protein III): Reduction-modifiable protein
. It is associated with por in the formation of pores in the
cell.
5. Lipooligosaccharide(LOS): Responsible to damage
epithelial cells.
Toxicity in gonococcal infection is largely due to the
endotoxic effects of LOS
6. LiP(H8): Gonococcal surface exposed Heat-Modifiable like
OPa.
Infertility
. Gonococcal suppurative arthritis
Female:
. Gonococcal cervicitis
. Gonococcal salpingitis
If complicated: Gonococcal tuboovarian abscess.
Infertility.
Pelvic peritonitis.
Neisseria meningitidis
Characteristics:
Gram-negative intra cellular
diplococci.
Present in the nasopharynx in 5-10%
of healthy people.
Neisseria
meningitidis
Antigenic structure:
Capsular carbohydrate
It is important for serogrouping of
meningococci
and there are 13 serogroups. The
most important
serogroups associated with disease
in humans are A, B, C, Y and W135.
Clinical manifestation:
Meningococcal meningitis
Meningococcemia: Meningococcal
septicemia
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Cerebrospinal fluid, blood
Smear: Gram-negative intracellular diplococci
Culture: Transparent or grey, shiny, mucoid
colonies in chocolate agar after incubation at
35-37Oc in a CO2 enriched atmosphere.
Treatment: Penicillin
Penicillin-allergic patients are treated with
third generation cephalosporins or
chloramphenicol
Prevention and control
Chemoprophylaxis( Rifampin or minocycline)
for house
holds or close contacts
Avoidance of over crowding
Vaccination with polyvalent conjugate
vaccine to high risk groups.
GENUS: HAEMOPHILUS
Characteristics:
This is a group of small gram-negative, non-spore
forming, non-motile, pleomorphic bacteria that require
enriched
media for growth.
Growth is enhanced in CO2 enriched atmosphere.
Present in upper respiratory tract as a normal
microbial flora in health people.
The group is fastidious requiring growth factors for
isolation.
Haemophilus influenzae.
Characteristics:
Gram-negative cocobacilli.
Fastidious bacteria requiring growth factors
for isolation.
Found in upper respiratory tract as normal
flora in healthy people
Antigenic structure
Capsular polysaccharide
There are six serotypes of H. influenzae, A-F.
Capsular antigen type b is composed of
polyribose ribitol phosphate.
H. influenzae type b is the most common
cause
of disease in humans.
It is the main virulence factor which
provides
anti-phagocytic property.
Outer membrane protein
Lipo-oligosaccharide
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Cerebrospinal fluid, sputum, blood, pus
Smear: Gram-negative short rods.
Culture: Chocolate agar contain both X and V factor;
blood agar contain only X factor.
Satellitism test is used to identify H. influenzae in
blood agar.
Methods:
Mix a loopful of haemophilus growth in 2ml of sterile
saline.
Inoculate the bacteria suspension on a plate of blood
agar using a sterile swab.
Streak a pure culture of S. aureus across the
inoculated plate which provides V-factor for H.
influenzae.
Treatment:
Ampicillin
Chloramphenicol
Cotrimoxazole
Third generation cephalosporins
H. ducreyii
Slender, gram-negative, ovoid bacilli, slightly larger
than H. influenza.
Bacteria have configuration of shoals of fish.
It causes chancroid (tender genital ulcer).
Cultured in special enriched media (20-30% rabbit
blood agar) with colonic morphology of small grey
glistening
colonies surrounded by zone of hemolysis.
It is treated by erythromycin, cotrimoxazole and third
generation cephalosporins.
H. aegyptius
It causes contagious conjunctivitis.
GENUS: BORDETELLA
Characteristics:
Minute strictly aerobic non-motile
gram-negative rods.
Bordetella species of medical
importance:
B. pertussis
Clinical features:
Incubation period: 2 weeks
Route of transmission is respiratory
from early cases and possibly
carriers.
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Saline nasal wash (Preferred
specimen)
Nasopharyngeal swab or cough droplets on
cough plate
Smear: Small, non-motile, capsulated, gramnegative cocobacilli singly or in pair, and may
show bipolar staining.
Culture: Inoculate the primary specimen on
Bordet-Gengue agar medium and incubate for 26 days at 37 oc in a moist aerobic atmosphere
which produces small, raised, shiny, mucoid
colonies.
Treatment: Erythromycin
Adminstration of erythromycin during
the catarrrhal stage of disease
promotes elimination of the organism
and limits rate of transmission
Treatment after the onset of
paroxysmal stage does not alter the
clinical course of the disease.
GENUS BRUCELLA
General characteristics:
Gram-negative, non-motile, non-sporulating,
zoonotic, obligate intracellular aerobic
coccobacilli
2 stages of illness
1. Acute stage: Fever, malaise, sweating,
hepatosplenomegally, lymphadenopathy
Associated with 80% spontaneous recovery
Chronic stage: Generally associated with
hypersensitivity manifestations like fever,
chest pain, and arthritis
Lab. Diagnosis:
Specimen: Blood, Biopsy material
(Bone marrow, Lymphnodes),
serum Culture: Grow in blood agar,
chocolate agar, or brucella agar
incubated in 10% CO2 at 35-37 0C
for 3 wks
Biochemical reaction:
Non-hemolytic
Catalase positive
Oxidase positive
Urease test positive
Dye inhibition test positive
Serology: Agglutination test
IgG agglutination titer >1:80 indicate
active infection.
Treatment:
Doxycycline + rifampin
Tetracycline + streptomycin
GENUS FRANCISELLA
Francisella tularensis
General characteristics:
Small, facutative intracellular, gram negative,
nonmotile pleomorphic rods.
Tularemia: 4 types
1. Ulceroglandular tularemia: Ulceration of arms and
hands
with lymphadenitis after tick bite or direct contact of
broken
2. Oculoglandular tularemia: Accidental contamination
of the
conjunctiva with infected droplets/aerosols
4. Pneumonic tularemia: Contracted through
contaminated
aerosols
5. Typhoidal tularemia: Following ingestion of
inadequately
cooked food
Lab. Diagnosis:
Specimen: Skin lesion, lymphnodes, sputum,
conjunctiva scrapings.
Culture: grow in blood-cysteine-gextrose agar
incubated at 37 0c under aerobic condition.
Serology: Agglutination test
Single titer of 1:160 is highly suggestive of
tularemia
Paired serum samples collected two weeks
apart can show a rise in agglutination titer.
Treatment:
Streptomycin or gentamicin
Tetracycline
Prevention and control:
Immunization of high risk persons
(eg. Lab.personel handling the
specimen) with live attenuated
vaccine.
GENUS PASTEURELLA
General characteristics:
Gram-negative, non-motile, aerobic
or facultative anaerobic coccobacilli
with bipolar staining
Grow in ordinary media at 37 0c
Catalase positive
Oxidase positive
Pasteurella multocida
Occur in gasrointestinal and
respiratory tract of many domestic
and wild animals.
Most common organism in human
wounds inflicted by bites from cats
and dogs
Treatment: Penicillin
Tetracycline + flouroquinolones
b. Non-lactose fermenters
Salmonella spp.
Shigella spp.
Proteus spp.
2. Oxidase Positive
Pseudomoas
Vibrio
Campylobacter
Helicobacter.
ENTEROBACTERIACEAE
Characteristics
Named, as well coliforms or enterobacilli:
Found as normal flora in intestinal tract of humans and
animal.
Gram-negative, non-spore forming, aerobic and
facultativeanaerobic bacteria.
Most are motile.
Grow over a wide range of temperature in ordinary
media. All ferment glucose with acid production.
Oxidase negative.
Release endotoxin from their cell wall.
Some release exotoxin.
Most of them have possessed three types
of antigenes.
These are :
H antigen-. Flagellar protein
Found in the flagella.
Possessed by motile
enterobacteriaceae.
Heat labile and sensitive to alcohol
May interfere with agglutination by O
antisera
GENUS:ESCHERICHIA
Main species of medical importance
is Escherichia coli.
Characteristics:
Normal flora in human and animal
gastrointestinal tract.
Found in soil, water and vegetation.
Most are motile; some are
capsulated.
Clinical features:
Urinary tract infection- cystitis, pyelonephritis
Wound infection- appendicitis, peritonitis
Neonatal septicemia and meningitis
E.coli-associated diarrheal disease
1. Enteropathogenic E.coli(EPEC)
- causes outbreaks of self-limiting infantile
diarrhea
- they also cause severe diarrhea in adults
- antibiotic tretment shorten the duratin of
illness and cure diarrhea.
2. Enteroinvasive E.coli(EIEC)
Non-motile, non-lactose fermenting
E.coli invade the mucosa of the ileum
and colon, and causes shigellosis-like
dysentery in children in developing
countries and travellers to these
countries.
3. Enterotoxigenic E.coli(ETEC)
Colonization factor of the organism promote
adherence to epithelial cells of small intestine
followed by release of enterotoxin which
causes
toxin-mediated watery diarrhea in infants and
young adults.
It is an important cause of travellers diarrhea
Antibiotic prophylaxis can be effective but may
increase drug resistance (Should not be
uniformly
recommended).
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Urine, pus, blood, stool, body fluid
Smear: Gram-negative rods
Culture: Lactose-fermenting mucoid colonies on
mac conkey agar and some strains are hemolytic
on blood agar .
Genus: Klebsiella
Characteristics
Non-motile, lactose-fermenting,
capsulated, gram-negative rods.
Main species of medical importancce:
-K. pneumoniae
-K. rhinoscleromatis
-K. ozenae.
K.pneumoniae
It is found as a commensal in the intestinal
tract, and also found in moist environment
in hospitals.
It is an important nosocomial pathogen.
It causes:
- Pneumonia
- Urinary tract infection
- Septicemia and meningitis (especially in
neonates)
- Wound infection and peritonitis
K. rhinoscleromatis
It causes rhinoscleroma of nose and pharynx to
extensive destruction of nasopharynx (hebra nose).
K.ozaenae
It causes ozena manifesting with foul smelling nasal
discharge leading to chronic atrophic rhinitis.
GENUS: ENTEROBACTER
It is gram-negative lactose fermenting motile rods, and found as a
commensal in the intestinal tract of humans and animals and
moist environments.
GENUS: CITROBACTER
It is gram-negative lactose fermenting
motile rods, and opprtunistic pathogen.
Medical important species is Citrobacter
freundii.
Citrobacter freundii is associated with
urinary tract infection, wound infection
and septicaemia in immunocompromised
and chronically deblitated patients.
.
GENUS: SALMONELLA
Clinical features:
1. Enteric fever
It is caused by S.typhi and S.paratyphi, and
transmitted by fecal-oral route via
contaminated
food and drinks
Incubation period: 10-14 days
Predisposing factors:
Reduced gastric acidity
Disrupted intestinal microbial flora
Compromised local intestinal immmunity
Complications:
Intestinal perforation
Lower gastrointestinal bleeding
Dissenmination to different body organs
including meninges and brain
Mortality rate
Untreated cases: 10-15%
Treated cases: < 1%
3. Gastroenteritis
It is caused by S. enteritidis
S. typhimurium
IP= 8-48 hrs
It manifests with initial watery diarrhea,
and later
bloody mucoid diarrhea associated with
crampy
abdominal pain and tenesmus.
Bacteremia is rare (2-3 % of cases)
It usually resolves in 2-3 days
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: 1. Blood, Bone marrow, stool, urine
and serum for enteric fever.
Interpretation of result
High or rising titer to O antigen (
1:160) suggests active infection.
High or rising titer to H antigen (
1:160) suggests past infection or
immunization
High titer to the Vi antigen occurs in
some cases
Treatment:
1. For cases
Chloramphenicol
Fluoroquinolones
3rd generation cephalosporins
2. For carriers
Ampicillin followed by cholecystectomy
NB: salmonellae persist in gall bladder in
chronic
carriers
GENUS: SHIGELLA
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Stool ,serum
Gram reaction: Gram-negative nonmotile rods.
Treatment: Ciprofloxacin
Cotrimaxazole
Suppress acute clinical attacks of dysentry
Shorten the duration of symptoms
GENUS: PROTEUS
Proteus species are found in the
intestinal tract of humans and animals,
soil, sewage and water.
They are gram-negative, motile, noncapsulated , pleomorphic rods.
Species of medical importance:
-P. mirabilis
-P. vulgaris
Clinical features:
P. mirabilis
Urinary tract infection
Septicemia
Abdominal and wound infection
Secondary invader of ulcer, burn, pressure
sores
and chronic discharging ear.
P. vulgaris
Important nosocomial pathogen.
Isolated in wound infection and urinary
tract infection.
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Urine, pus, blood, ear
discharge
Smear: Gram-negative rods
Culture: Produce characteristic swarming
growth over the characteristic swarming
growth over the
surface of blood agar.
Treatment: Based on sensitivity testing.
GENUS YERSINIA
General characteristics:
Animals are natural hosts of yersinia, and
humans are accidental hosts of yersinia infection
Short, pleomorphic microaerophilic or
facultatively anaerobic gram negative rods
exhibiting bipolar staining with special stains.
Important human pathogens
Y. pestis
Y. pseudotuberculosis
Y. enterocolitica
Yersinia pestis
Plague bacillus with gram negative, non-motile,
facutatively anaerobe possessing bipolar granules.
Pathogenesis and clinical features:
Rat flea (Xenopsylla cheopis) gets infected by biting an
infected rodent infected rat flea bites human
(accidental
host) organism migrate to regional lymphnodes from
the
site of bite (bubonic plaque) and gets into the blood via
lymphatics (septicemic plaque), or Primary pneumonic
plaque results from inhalation of infective droplets,
usually
from an infected coughing person
IP=2-6 days
Lab. Diagnosis:
Specimen: Lymphnode aspirate, CSF, blood
Smears: Wrights stain, immunofluorescence stain,
Serology: Fluorescent antibody technique using Y. pestis
antisera
Treatment:
Streptomycin
Tetracycline
Streptomycin + tetracycline or chloramphenicol
Prevention and control:
. Chemoprophylaxis for contacts of patients
Arthritis
skin rash/nodules
Complication: Sepsis/ Meningitis
Lab. Diagnosis:
Specimen: Stool, blood, rectal swab
Culture: Grow in routine enteric media
Biochemical tests for species identification
Treatment:
Fluid replacement for enterocolitis (Antibiotics not
required)
Cephalosporin (3rd generation) + Aminoglycosides
for
sepsis/ meningitis
Prevention and control:
Conventional sanitary precautions
GENUS: PSEUDOMONAS
General characteristics:
. Gram-negative motile aerobic rods
having very simple growth requirement.
Can be found in water, soil, sewage,
vegetation, human and animal intestine.
Species of medical importance:
P. aeruginosa
P. pseudomallei
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Found in human and animal intestine, water, soil and
moist environment in hospitals
. Primarily a nosocomial pathogen.
Invasive and toxigenic, produces infections in
patients with abnormal host defenses.
Clinical features:
Pathogenic only when introduced into areas devoid of
normal defenses eg. Breached mucus membrane or
skin, use of IV line or urinary catheterization,
neutropenia of any cause
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: pus, urine, sputum, blood, eye
swabs, surface
swabs
Smear: Gram-negative rods
Culture:
Obligate aerobe, grows readily on all routine
media over
wide range of temperature(5-42 OC).
Bluish-green pigmented large colonies with
characteristic fruity odor on culture
media.
Aztreonam
Imipenem
Ceftazidime
Cefoperazone
Flouroquinolones
Prevention and control:
Special attention to sinks, water baths,
showers and hot tubs
Polyvalent vaccine to high risk groups.
GENUS: VIBRIOS
Actively motile, gram-negative curved rods.
Species of medical importance: Vibrio
cholerae-01
Vibrio cholerae
Characteristics:
Found in fresh water, shellfish and other sea
food.
Man is the major reservoir of V. cholerae-01,
which causes epidemic cholera.
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Stool flecks
Smear: Gram-negative motile curved rods
Motility of vibrios is best seen using dark-field
microscopy.
Presumptive diagnosis: Inactivation of vibrios in
a wet preparation after adding vibrio antiserum.
Culture:
TCBS (thiosulphate citrate bile salt sucrose
agar)
media Selectivemedia for primary isolation of V.
cholerae.
GENUS:
CAMPYLOBACTER
Characteristics:
Campylobacter jejuni
Campylobacter coli.
Clinical features:
Inoculum dose: 104 organisms
Source of infection is contaminated food,
drinks,and unpasteurized milk.
The organism multiply in small intestine, invade
the epithellium and produce inflammation
Campylobacter enteritis manifests with fever,
headache, malaise, crampy abdominal pain and
bloody mucoid diarrhea, and usually self-limited
enteritis in a week period
Laboratory diagnosis:
Specimen: Stool
Microscopy: Typical gull-wing shaped gramnegative rods.
Biochemica;l reaction:
C jejuni .. hydrolyzes hippurate.
C. coli does not hydrolyze
hippurate.
Treatment: Erythromycin
Shorten the duration of fecal shedding of
bacteria
Helicobacter pylori
General characteristics:
Spiral-shaped gram negative,
microaerophilic,
motile rods with polar flagella
Antigenic structure:
Pili
Protease
Urease
Gastric carcinoma
Gastric lymphoma
Lab. Diadnosis:
Specimen: Gatric biopsy, serum
Smear: Giemsa or silver stain
Culture: Skirrows media
Tanslucent colonies after 7 days of
incubation
Biochemical reaction:
. Catalase positive
. Oxidase positive
. Urease positive
Serology:
Detection of antibodies in the serum specific for H. pylori
Detection of H. pylori antigen in stool specimen
Special tests:
. Urea breath test
Treatment:
Triple or quadruple therapy:
. Amoxicillin + clarithromycin/ metronidazole +
Proton pump inhibitors (PPI (Omeprazole or
lansoprazole))
or
GENUS: LEGIONELLA
L. pneumophila
General characteristics:
Fastidious, aerobic, gram negative intracellular rods
Ubiquitous in warm moist environment.
Treatment:
Erythromycin
Rifampin
Prevention and control
Hyperchlorination
Super heating of water