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Peptic Ulcer |
Erosions of stomach or duodenum lining *Food is not the causative agent |
Peptic Ulcer Causative agent |
Helicobacter pylori -Gram negative; Vibrio - Multiple Polar knobbed flagella |
Peptic Ulcer Signs and Symptoms |
- Abdominal Pain -Nausea, vomiting (with or without blood), weight loss, bloody stool - May lead to internal bleeding and shock (due to perforations of stomach or intestines) - Signs and symptoms may worsen after you have eaten but again peptic ulcers are not caused by food
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Helicobacter pylori Virulence factors |
•Adhesions – surface proteins that help in attachment •Urease enzyme neutralizes stomach acid •Protein to inhibit acid production •Enzyme to inhibit digestion by WBCs
–Inflammatory response and bacterial toxins causes decrease in mucus production –Stomach lining not protected from acidic environment can lead to a Chronic infection
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Peptic Ulcer Epidemiology |
-Fecal/oral route (ingest something contaminated) -flies -20% of humans are asymptomatic carriers |
Peptic Ulcers Diagnose through |
-By assessing the damage done to the stomach lining - by isolating a urease + Gram - vibrio |
Peptic Ulcer Prevention |
- change lifestyle to prevent risk factors -stop drinking and eating spicy foods - good hygiene to avoid fecal/oral contamination |
Peptic Ulcer Treatment |
- combined antibiotic treatment -Medication to inhibit production of stomach acid - surgery may be required if ulceration is extensive or perforation is occurs
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Mumps |
Acute viral illness - Attacks parotid salivary glands; massive swelling of glands (looks like neck is swollen) - Virus reproduces in the URT and spreads to salivary glands where it destroys epithelium and then releases the virus causing inflammation
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Mumps Causative Agent |
Enveloped ssRNA Rubulavirus
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Mumps Signs and symptoms |
- Fever, loss of appetite, headache, parotitis (inflammation of the parotid glands), sore throat - symptoms are self limiting and usually disappear in about a week - symptoms are more severe past puberty and may cause orchitis (inflammation of the testes; increases the risk of testicular cancer) or meningitis -Pregnant women often miscarriage - Not so worried about the actual virus but the secondary risks |
Mumps Epidemiology |
Humans are the only host - spread through contact transmission, like droplets or fomites - Peak infection time is from 1-2 days before swelling until swelling subsides
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Mumps Prevention |
Immunization -MMR vaccine -Lifelong immunity |
Mumps Treatment |
- alleviating symptoms (not with aspirin because its a viral disease) - No effective antiviral treatment |
Gastroenteritis |
Inflammation of stomach or intestines - Inhibits nutrient absorption and excessive H2O and electrolyte loss |
Gastroenteritis Causative Agents |
-Bacterial -viral -Parasites - Poisening by microbial toxins (food borne intoxication) |
Gastroenteritis Signs and symptoms |
*** will always be true for any type of gastroenteritis - diarrhea, loss of appetite, abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting and possible fever - typically self-limiting |
Dysentery |
-severe form of gasteroenteritis - Profuse diarrhea with mucus and blood (means damage is being done) |
Enteric fevers
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systemic with severe headaches, high fever, abscesses, intestinal rupture, shock and death - Begins as gasteroenteritis, only turns into this if bacteria is successful at getting into the blood |
Dysentery Epidemiology |
Oral/fecal transmission -occurs worldwide - water is a common reservoir -overcrowding and poor sanitation are risk factors - animals may be a source of infection |
dysentery prevention |
-hand washing - proper food handling and complete cooking - Pasteurization of milk and juices - Adequate sanitation - safe water supplies and water treatment |
Dysentery treatment |
-Rapid replacement of fluid and electrolytes (salt, chlorine, potassium, bicarbonate ions: all important for body to properly function) - Fluid loss --> drop in blood pressure --> fatalities - anti-nausea medication to help keep food down - antimicrobial medications may be used in severe cases - antidiarrheal medications are bad! Your body is trying to get rid of what is causing the problem - normal pH is 7.4 - 7.6 |
Bacterial Gasteroenteritis
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3 groups of gram negative bacteria account for most bacterial intestinal infections 1. Vibro cholerae (cholera) 2. Enterics (Salmonella, shigella, e.coli) gram negative bacilli 3. campylobacter jejuni: leading cause in the US |
Cholera causative agent |
Vibro cholerae, gram - - most common organism in surface water. Can survive in salt or fresh water but become mobile in fresh water - High infectious dose - Bacteria sensitive to stomach acid: most bacteria usually die in the stomach so have to be exposed to a lot - Adheres to small intestine and multiplies: produces an A toxin - Bacteris doesn't enter cells; toxin does
**Are more virulent in human host but normally survive in an alkaline pH
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Cholera virulence toxin |
AB TOXIN - potent exotoxin - B toxin binds to cell then A toxin enters cell - A toxin causes intestinal cells to rapidly pump out electrolytes - Passive osmotic H2O loss folows: water chases the electrolytes - Metabolic acidosis - Shock occurs because of dehydration
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Metabolic acidosis |
when body systems are too acidic because they loss their buffer systems/ bicarbonate ions |
Cholera Signs and symptoms + general signs and symptoms of gasteroenteritis |
-Heavy loss of fluids - "rice-water" stools: profuse, colorless, odorless stools flecked with mucus, looks like little peices of rice - up to 20L of fluid lost per day - May discharge 1 million bacteria per ml of feces lost |
Cholera treatment |
- untreated cases are potential fatal up to 24 hours - fluid/electrolyte replacement - tetracycline reduces toxin production |
Shigellosis Causative Agent |
aka: bacilliary dysentery
- Shigella sp.: S. dysenteriae (most severe), S. flexneri, S. Boydii, S. sonnei - Low infecting dose: 10 cells - Bacteria, unlike cholera, is not sensitive to stomach acid |
Shigellosis Signs and symptoms |
-fever and dysentery - Infects cells of large intestine and initiates an intense inflammatory response - Dead cells slough off and produces areas convered with pus and blood |
Shigella sp. Virulence factors |
All species produce enterotoxin - Affects cells in intestines and type III secretion systems - have a complex of about 20 proteins that embed themselves in channels of the intestines and facilitates movement of toxin into cell - S. Dysenteriae produces powerful endotoxin -Shiga- toxin: if toxin binds to neutrafils (white blood cells) it can enter blood and stop protein synthesis - bacteria alone cannot survive in blood |
Shigellosis Treatment |
Ciprofloxacin, rifampin or azithromycin may reduce duration and infectivity - primary treatment is fluid and electrolyte replacement |
Travelers diarrhea Causative agent |
Escherichia coli (gram - bacilli, facultative anaerobes) - have Multiple antigenic strains (O,H,K) - Virulent strains have fimbriae, adhensions and multiple toxins |
Enterotoxigenic E. coli |
fecal coliform - produce enterotoxins - type III secretion systems - typically are self limiting - Test for them using MPN |
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli |
More severe - O157:H7: associated with contaminated food; food poisoning -Produce potent Shiga-like toxins and type III secretion systems **Antimicrobials cause an increase in toxin production because it's gram - which is an endotoxin |
Salmonellosis and Typhoid Fever Causative Agent |
Salmonella enterica -2000 strains (serotypes) or genetic variations - Typhimurium and Entertidis commonly cause Shigellosis - Typhi and Paratyphi commonly cause Typhoid Fever, get into mucus membranes and sometimes in blood |
Salmonellosis and Typhoid Fever Epidemiology |
-bacteria is a common intestinal flora of many animals - contaminated animal products are reservoir - Reptiles, eggs, and undercooked poultry - 1/3 of all chicken carriers are contaminated with salmonella |
Salmonella Virulence |
- virulent strains tolerate stomach acids and pass to intestines - toxin induces phagocytosis in intestinal cells - pathogen reproduces inside phagosome killing host cell - bacteria (typhi) may pass through intestinal cells into bloodstream |
salmonellosis and Typhoid fever symptoms |
typhoid fever is an enteric fever - Macrophages carry bacteria to liver, spleen, gallbladder and bone marrow |
salmonellosis and typhoid fever treatment |
treated with cyprofloxacin or ampicillin - surgical removal of gallbladder |
Campylobacteriosis Causative agent |
campylobacter jejuni |
Campylobacteriosis |
- leading cause of bacterial diarrhea in the United States - Estimated 1 million cases annually with about 100 deaths - Associated with poultry - low infecting dose
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campylobacteriosis virulence factors |
virulent strains posses adhesions, cytotoxins and endotoxins - Induce endocytosis in cells of intestines and initiate inflammation and bleeding lesions - non-motile strains are avirulent (make sure that really means avirulent) |
Campylobacteriosis treatment |
- usually mild and self-limiting - severe cases are treated with ciprofloxacin or azithromycin |
Guillain-barre syndrome |
complication of campylobacteriosis, 40% of cases get this. - immune system starts to attack body |
Guillain-barre syndrome signs and symptoms |
tingling of the feet leads to progressive paralysis of the legs, arms and rest of the body - may be associated with autoimmune response - 80% of people recover completely and 5% die with treatment |
Viral Gastroenteritis Causative agents |
– Rotaviruses and Noroviruses – Both naked RNA viruses – Both have glycoprotein spikes that help them attack to cells that line intestinal tract |
Viral Gasteroenteritis Epidemiology |
– Norovirus epidemics cause 90% of cases, norovirus effects infants especially and can be bad enough that they must be hospitalized
– Rotaviruses responsible for 50% infant cases of serious diarrhea - 600,000 worldwide annual fatalities |
Viral gasteroenteritis treatment |
- infect intestinal cells causing cell death - typically self limiting - oral vaccine - Electrolyte replacement
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Bacterial food intoxication causative agent
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Staphylococcus aureus - halotolerant; grows well in food at room temperature |
bacterial food intoxication epidemiology |
associated with cafeterias and social functions |
bacterial food intoxification signs and symptoms |
– Stimulate muscle contractions, nausea and intense vomiting, diarrhea and cramping – Acute and self limiting - symptoms begin 4-6 hrs after consumption and end within 24 hrs |
bacterial food intoxication treatment |
5 heat stable enterotoxins: not killed by heat – 1000 for up to 30 min will kill bacteria but toxin will persist
- do not treat with antibiotics because you are not treating bacterial infection, you are trying to get rid of a toxin - self limiting |
Botulism causative agent |
-clostridium botulinum - a very resistant endospore - obligate anaerobic, gram +, spore forming bacillus - produce 7 different neurotoxins, one being the most deadly toxins known |
Botulism signs and symptoms |
- 12 to 36 hours after interaction with toxin the symptoms will progress and be seen – Dizziness, dry mouth, blurred vision – Abdominal symptoms include pain, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea or constipation – Progressive paralysis Paralysis of respiratory muscles most common cause of death |
3 forms of botulism |
Food-born botulism - progressive paralysis of all voluntary muscles due to toxin production - wound botulism - similar symptoms, begins with colonization and then toxin is dumped into bloodstream - Infant botulism - bacteria grows in the intestines, producing non-specific symptoms, in the US this is more common, but globally the other two are more common
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floppy baby syndrome |
infant begins to flounder, won't nurse, may a part of SIDS |
Botulism Epidemiology |
food born, wound, infant |
Botulism Prevention |
Proper sterilization and sealing of canned food Prompt wound care No honey or unpasteurized juices for infants, any child under 1. |
Botulism Treatment |
Antitoxins: only going to neutralize circulating toxins - Gastric washing and surgical removal or tissues which will dislodge bacteria - Artificial respiration may be required - anti-microbials given to kill bacteria in infant and wound botulism - A mouse bioassay |
Mouse bioassay |
take what they think is contaminated and inject a mouse to see if it dies, second mouse they inject a contaminated substance and botulism antitoxin to see if mouse doesn't die |
Hepatitis |
Autoimmune disease - alcohol/drug abuse, genetic disorders, viral infection - 5 different types - Hep A (HAV); HBV; HCV; HDV; HEV |
HAV |
infectious type of herpes |
HBV |
- serum hepatitis, associated with pancreatic cancer |
HCV |
chronic hepatitis, major source of damage to the liver so badly that people need a liver transplant, spread through contaminated needles and spread of body fluids |
HDV |
Requires co-infection with HBV, does not have genetic material to make protective protein covering so on its own it cannot cause disease so it steals protein coverings from hepatitis B virus. Only problem when accompanied with hepatitis B is that people that have both are at a much greater risk for liver cancer
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HEV |
Enteric hepatitis signs and symptoms |
- Jaudice; yellowing of the skin and the whites of eye due to the buildup of beliruvin -nausea -vomiting -fatigue -fever -weight loss |
Complications can occur from chronic infection like hep b or c |
-Cirrhosis: liver replaced with fibrous nonfunctional tissue, liver failure, liver cancer (linked to hep B), and death - most damages is caused by host defenses - from your own immune response trying to kill infected cells |
Enteric Hepatitis Transmission |
contaminated food and water, fomites and sexual contact |
Enteric hepatitis Treatment |
-supportive care for symptoms -anti-virals or interferon may help against HBV or HCV - Passive immunotherapy |
Enteric Hepatitis Prevention |
– Avoiding exposure by practicing good hygiene and protected sex or abstinence – Vaccines are available against HAV and HBV – Avoid fecal contamination – Go over chart, know how its transmitted, if it will develop, what they are associated with |
Protozoal Diseases of the GI Tract |
• Most significant human pathogens worldwide • Few are intestinal pathogens • Transmitted by fecal to oral route – Fecal contaminated water – May be zoonotic |
Giardiasis Causative agent |
- Giardia intestinalis Flagellated, pear shaped -Two nuclei - Exists in two forms A. Feeding trophozoite B. Dormant cyst (Tough chitin shell) |
Giardiasis Cyst and Trophozoitis |
– Cyst infective stage: giant suction cup that allows it to attach to the digestive tract • Resists stomach acid • Two trophozoits per cyst – Trophozoits attach to epithelium of small intestine with adhesive disk – In severe cases, may cover entire intestinal surface |
Giardiasis epidemiology |
– Transmission usually fecal-oral route – May be zoonotic • Beavers, raccoons, muskrats, dogs, cats • Sometimes called “Beaver Fever” because beavers are such a prominent reservoir – Single stool can carry 300 million cysts • Cysts can survive in cold water up to 2 months • Chlorination often ineffective against cysts, normally the primary means of cleaning water but these are resistant, only way to remove them is filtration
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Gardiasis Prevention |
– Filtration or boiling of water, boiling water for 10 minutes – Good hygiene practices – Sanitary disposal of feces: humans and animals – Safe sex |
Gardiasis Treatment |
Diagnosed by cysts of trophozoites in stool
– Fluid and electrolyte replacement – Metronidazole or quinocrine , both are eukaryotic pathogens and antiprotozoal drugs |
Cryptosporidosis Causative agent |
– Cryptosporidium parvum • Multiplies cells of small intestine • Apicomplexan : nonmotile but do have an apical complex that helps this cell penetrating into host cells • Exists in two forms • Acid fast oocyst: tough protective stage • Sporozoite: active feeding stage |
Criptospoidosis Virulence factors |
– Oocyst releases 4 bannana shaped sporozoites into small intestine – Sporozoites invade epithelium • Cause deformity in cells and villi (fingerlike projections that increase surface area for nutrient absorption) • Initiates inflammatory response – Water secretion increases & nutrient absorption decreases |
Cryptosporidosis Signs and symptoms |
– Fever, headache, loss of appetite, nausea, abdominal cramps and profuse watery diarrhea – Can last for months – Usually self limiting and only life threatening in immunosuppressed people – May be life threatening in immunocompromised individuals • Hepatatis, pancreatitis |
criptosporidosis epidemiology |
• Individuals can expel organisms for up to 2 weeks after diarrhea ceases – Person-to-person spread occurs – Cysts can survive long periods in food and water • Resistant to chlorination but too small for most filters – Zoonotic with a wide host range – Diagnosed by oocysts in stool |
Cryptosporidiosis Prevention |
– Careful monitoring of municipal water supplies – Pasteurization of drinks – Sanitary disposal of feces – Immunodeficient should avoid contact with animals and recreational water activities |
cryptidosporidiosis Treatment |
- replacement of water and electrolytes |
amebiasis causative agent |
• Entamoeba histolytica – Exists in two forms • Feeding trophozoite • Dormant cyst |
3 forms of amebiasis |
– Luminal –asymptomatic: what happens when you’re exposed to an averialent form, cannot attach because they do not have attachment – Amebic dysentery – more severe; dysentery, colitis and ulceration of mucosal lining
– Invasive extra-intestinal –necrotic lesions form in liver, lungs, spleen, kidneys and brain, when pathogens get in blood stream causing infection to become systemic |
amebiasis epidemiology |
– Transmission usually fecal-oral route • Cysts survive 1-2 weeks in environment – No animal reservoir, humans are the only carriers • 10% of global population are carriers – 3rd leading cause of parasitic death • 50 million cases and 100,00 deaths annually |
amebiasis Prevention |
– Disinfection, filtration and boiling of water – Sanitary disposal of feces, only human feces – Good hygiene practices – Safe sex |
amebiasis treatment |
– Oral rehydration – Metronidazole or iodoquinol – Diagnosed by cysts or trophozoites in stool |
Helminthic Infestations |
-Macroscopic, multi-cellular parasitic worms -cestods and nematodes |
cestodes |
– Flat, segmented, monoecious: have both male and female reproductive parts, they can impregnate themselves – Intestinal parasites that lack complete digestive system |
nematodes |
– Round, un-segmented, diecious, sexually dimorphic – Complete digestive system and protective cuticle |
Tapeworm infestations |
– Cestodes: flat segmented worm • Taenia saginata – beef tapeworm • Taenia solium – pork tapeworm, its intermediate host of the pig |
Tapeworm signs and symptoms |
• Usually asymptomatic • nausea, abdominal pain, weight loss, and diarrhea may occur • Worm may cause intestinal blockage • Individuals are sexually dimorphic |
tapeworm epidemiology |
• Highest incidence poor rural areaes • Inadequate sewage treatment • Humans live in close contact with livestock – Diagnosed by presence of proglottids in feces |
Tapeworm prevention |
relies on thorough cooking of meats and sewage treatments |
Tapeworm treatment |
– Niclosamide or praziquantel: antihelminth drugs – May require surgical removal of worm of they get long enough, some can get meters long |
Pinworm infestation causative agent |
• diascious – Nematode • Enterobius vermicularis • Sexually dimorphic |
Pinworm Infestation signs and symptoms |
• perianal itching - irritability -decreased appetite all due to male and females worms in intestines where they steal nutrients -they mate in intestines -at night female will travel out of the body lay eggs around the anus and go back in causing the irritation |
Pinworm infestation epidemiology |
- Infections commonly occur in children - most common parasitic worm in the US - diagnosed based on microscopic id of eggs or presence of adult pinworms
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Pinworm Prevention |
strict personal hygiene |
pinworm treatment |
– Pyrantel pamoate or mebendazole : both antihelminth drugs, two rounds of treatment at least two weeks apart, treat everyone in household |