E.Coli, Enterobacteriacae, Shigella and Salmonella – Flashcards
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What are the characteristics of Enterobacteriaceae? |
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Gram (-), facultative anaerobic rod Ferments glucose Oxidase negative Reduce nitrates to nitrites Motile by pertrichous flagella |
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What characteristics of enterobacteriaceae are used to distinguish from Pseudomonas? |
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Ferments glucose Oxidase negative |
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What characteristic of Enterobacteriaceae can be used as a diagnostic in a urine dip stick test? |
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Reduce Nitrates to Nitrites |
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What Enterobacteriaceae are non-motile? |
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Klebsiella and Shigella |
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What type of media is used to isolate Enterobacteriaceae? Why? |
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MacConkey agar contains: bile salts and crystal violet that inhibit gram + pH indicator and lactose - E. coli ferment lactose, Shigella and Salmonella do not |
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What color does E.Coli change the MacConkey agar? |
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yellow -> Red Because E.Coli ferments lactose to acid decreasing pH (lactose negative bacteria like Shigella and Salmonella grow white colonies) |
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What antigens are used in classification/typing of Enterobacteriaceae? |
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K antigens (capsular polysaccharide) H antigens (flagellar proteins) O antigens (somatic - on LPS) |
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What color do Lac- organisms appear on MacConkey agar? |
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White |
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What are the characteristics of Non-inflammatory diarrhea? |
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(ETEC, Vibrio cholera) Watery, high volume usually due to enterotoxin Low Grade Fever or No Fever Non-invasive No Fecal Leukocytes |
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What are the Characteristics of Inflammatory Diarrhea? |
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( Less Volume Invasion of epithelium, Cytotoxins Fecal Leukocytes - methylene blue positive Fever Dysentery Blood and mucus in feces Tenesmus Lower quadrant cramping |
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If diarrhea persist for >2 wks what should be considered? |
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Parasites Cryptosporidium and Giardia |
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What should be considered in a patient with Chronic Diarrhea? |
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HIV-AIDS |
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What should be done for patients with non-inflammatory diarreah suffering from dehydration? |
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Oral Replacement Therapy of water/glucose/salts Anti-motility drugs Antibiotics in some cases |
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What should be done for patients suffering from inflammatory diarrhea? |
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Rehydration Antibiotics Anti-motility drugs CONTRAINDICATED |
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What organism are antibiotics contraindicated for? |
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EHEC enterohemorrhagic E. coli |
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What is Clostridium difficile enterocolitis treated with? |
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Metronidazole |
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What are 4 complications seen in inflammatory bacterial diarrheas? |
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Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome - EHEC Disseminated infection - Susceptible populations Guillain-Barre syndrome - campylobacter Postinfectious arthritis - Shigella, Camphlobacter, Yersinia, Salmonella |
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E. Coli Culture characteristics |
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Lac + Ferments glucose with gas (H2) Does not produce H2S Motile KIA Slant - All Yellow, raised in tube |
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Salmonella cultural characteristics |
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H2S+ Gas + (except S. typhi) KIA Slant - Yellow Butt, Raised in tube |
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Shigella cultrue characteristics |
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H2S (-) No Gas KIA Slant - Yellow Butt, not raised(no gas) |
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What is EHEC caused by? |
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O157:H7 |
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What are the symptoms of EHEC? |
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Mild watery diarrhea -> hemorrhagic colitis Severe cramping Bloody diarrhea Low or No Fever No fecal Leukocytes |
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What complications can occur in children <5 or elderly with EHEC? |
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Hemolytic uremic Syndrome |
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Symptoms of Hemolytic uremic syndrome? |
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Anemia Low Platelet count acute kidney failure Can develop seizures or strokes |
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What is the major reservoir of EHEC? |
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Cattle |
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What is the infectious dose of EHEC for humans? |
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~100 organisms |
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What type of cytotoxins does EHEC produce? |
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Shiga-like toxins, inhibits protein synthesis dissemination to kidney causes HUS |
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What is responsible for the diarrhea caused by EHEC? |
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LEE - Locus of enterocyte effacement |
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How does LEE allow adhesion of the bacterium to the host cell? |
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secreted protein that incorpartes into enterocyte membrane to for a pedestal where bacterium can bind |
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Why is EHEC not treated with antibiotics? |
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Does not alter the severity of colitis and encourages development or HUS |
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How is EHEC cultured? |
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Sorbitol MacConkey agar O157:H7 is sorbitol negative so will show up white on agar |
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WHat is the most common cause of Traveler's Diarrhea? |
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ETEC - Enterotoxigenic E. Coli |
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What kind of virulence factors does ETEC produce? |
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Heat-labile toxin Heat-Stable toxin Fimbriae adhesion species specific |
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What E. coli has a toxin that's mechanism of action is identical to cholera toxin? |
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ETEC Heat Labile toxin |
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What is the mechanism of action of ETECs heat labile toxin? |
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Activates adenylate cyclase-> increase cAMP-> activates Protein Kinase A-> Phosphorylates CFTR-> Cl flows out, NA and water follow |
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What is the mechanism of the Heat Stable toxin of ETEC? |
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Activates guanylyl cyclase-> increases cGMP-> activates protein kinase A-> phosphorylates CFTR |
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What E. coli closely resembles Shigella? |
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EIEC - Enteroinvasive E. Coli |
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How is EIEC unlike other E. coli? |
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non-motile Do not decarboxylate lysine Do not fement lactose |
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What E. coli is responsible for 90% of UTIs? |
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Uropathogenic E. Coli (UPEC) |
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What are the symptoms of a UTI? |
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frequency dysuria pyuria suprapubic pain cloudy urine Cramping Low Grade Fever or Afebrile |
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What are the virulence factors of UPEC? |
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P fimbriae (PAP pili) hemolysin sideropore capsule (K-antigen) |
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What is the major determinant of virulence amoung strains of E. coli that cuase neonatal meningitis? |
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K-1 antigen |
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What is the agent of typhoid fever? |
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Salmonella Typhi |
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What are the characteristics of Salmonella? |
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Lac- ferment glucose with gas (except typhi) Produce H2S |
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What is of major importance in identificaiton of Salmonella? |
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H serotyping |
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What salmonellae is incapsulated? |
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S. Typhi |
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What species of Salmonella is medically important? |
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S. enterica |
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What are the 2 most frequent serotypes of Salmonella that cause disease in the US? |
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S. enteritidis S. Typhimurium |
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What are the sources of Salmonella? |
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contaminated meat, dairy products, poultry, eggs, pet reptiles, turtles |
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What are the symptoms of Salmonella gastroenteritis? |
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Appears 20-72 hrs after infection Inflammatory Diarrhea Nausea, vomiting, followed by or concomitant with abdominal cramps and diarrhea. Fever in 1/2 May be blood in stools |
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How does salmonella infect the gut? |
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enters through M cells in distal small intestine, proximal large bowel. establishment a localized infection within the lamina propria |
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Who is bacteremia and disseminated infection of Salmonella a problem for? |
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Anyone with T cell deficiencies: AIDS, Hodgkins, skeletal prosthesis, atherosclerotic plaque, elderly and the very young, sickle cell children |
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What does S. Typhi infect? |
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exclusively a parasite of humans |
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What are the symptoms of Typhoid Fever? |
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High Fever, Slow Pulse, headache, mental confusion Maybe a skin rash May be constipated Disseminated to RES organs |
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what are the virulence mechanisms of S. Typhi? |
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Type III secretion systmes: -injects proteins into M cells to induce entry -injects proteins in macrophages, allowing survival and disseminated disease. |
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How is Typohid fever diagnosed? |
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Culture of blood and feces Serotyping for Vi capsule antigen (feces may not be positive until late in infection) |
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What species of Shigella produces ~1000x more shiga toxin than other shigellae? |
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S. dysenteriae |
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Where are S. dysenteriae epidemics found? |
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South and Central America |
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What species of Shigella is associated with disease in the Indian Subcontinient? |
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S. boydii |
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What is the cause of 70% of all shigellosis in the US? |
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S. sonnei |
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What is the Second most common Shigella found in the US, most common in gay men? |
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S. flexneri |
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What is the sole source of Shigella infection and what is the route of infection? |
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Humans are sole source fecal-oral route |
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Who and where is Shigella most common? |
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Children Day care centers mental instiutions and jails |
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What is the pathogenesis of Shigella? |
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1. Entry into microfold cells in gut 2. Escape from phagocytic vesicle 3. Extension to neighboring enterocytes |
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What are the symptoms of Shigellosis? |
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Watery diarrhea with abdominal pain-> 1-2 days colon is involved-> Scant, bloody diarrhea with pus/mucus-> severe cramps, tenesmus, high fever (Like EIEC) |
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What is prominent in the feces from Shigellosis? |
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Fecal leukocytes, often in sheets |
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What can Shigella dysenteriae cause? |
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HUS (like EHEC) |
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What are the characteristics of Shigellae? |
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Lac(-) No gas from glucose Nonmotile H2S(-) |
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What Shigellae produces high amounts of cytotoxins? |
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S. dysenteriae (and EHEC) |
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What is the reservoir of Yersinia enterocolitica? |
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Animals Pigs, Pets |
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What are large outbreaks of Yersinia enterocolitica associated with? |
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contaminated milk |
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What is the main source of Yersinia enterocolitica in the US? |
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Pigs |
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What are the symptoms of Yersinia enterocolitica, what can it mimic? |
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fever, diarrhea, abdominal pain Mimic appendicitis |
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What is a complication of Yersinia enterocolitica? |
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Reiter's Syndrome |
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What Enterobacteriaceae is associated with "Current jelly" pneumonia, Alcoholics, and Nosocomial infections? |
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Klebsiella pneumoniae |
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What oppertunistic organism contaminates wounds and cause bacteremia and UTI in hospital patients? |
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Enterobacter |
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What Enterobacteriaceae have Brick-rd colonies? |
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Serratia marcescens |
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How does Urease produced by Proteus and Morganella promote UTIs? |
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raising pH of urine and potentiating formation of stones within which the organism may remain viable after apparently effective antibiotic therapy |