Stapylococcus – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question

 

 

 

Staphylococci

answer
-Gram positive; thick peptidoglycan cell wall typical of gram positive bacteria

 

Organisms can survive long periods on dry surfaces –good hand hygiene is important to prevent spread of the organism

 

Outbreaks occur in hospital as well as community 
question

 

 

 

Key Properties of Staphylococcus: Metabolism

answer

  Metabolic

 

Facultative    

 

Organism can grow under high salt concentration
Important in staphylococcal food poisoning

 

Distinguishable from Streptococcus by the

  presence of catalase activity (H2O2    O2 +H2O):

  Staph is CATALASE POSITIVE

question

 

 

 

Key Properties of Staphylococcus: Coagulase

answer

Key properties

 

  Forms pigmented (yellow-golden) colonies under some growth conditions (solid media; aerobic)

  COAGULASE positive, as opposed to other staphylococcal species (S. epidermidis), Staphylococci are grouped into coagulase-positive and negative.

 

  Coagulase: enzyme that converts prothrombin to thrombin, causing fibrinogen to clot in plasma or blood.

question

 

 

 

Where is S. aureus found?

answer
Carrier state: asymptomatic colonization

    as many as 40% of human beings colonized.

Anterior nares
15% of normal healthy individuals
Increased incidence in patients, medical personnel -up to 90%!
All persons: transient colonization
Moist skin folds
Umbilical stump, skin, perineal  area of neonates
Most persons with atopic dermatitis colonized

    with S. aureus

question

 

 

 

S. aureus diseases

answer
  Basic lesion caused by S. aureus:  ABSCESS

   or PYOGENIC EXUDATE

 

PYOGENIC EXUDATE: Dead phagocytic cells & bacteria (pus)

 

ABSCESS: “standoff”
Advantage for bacterium
Containment by host
S. aureus can escape abscess: staphylokinase

similar to streptokinase: allows bacterium to   dissolve fibrin

Dissemination of bacterium may follow
  Important aspect of treatment: drainage of abscess
question

 

 

 

S. aureus diseases of the skin

answer
IMPETIGO : superficial

 infection; primarily focused on

 face and limbs


Folliculitis:  infection of hair follicle; base of follicle raised,

and small collection of pus beneath the epidermal surface

  Stye: at base of eyelid
 

 

Furuncles (boils): extension of folliculitis; large, painful, raised

nodules with an underlying collection of dead/necrotic tissue

 

Carbuncles: occur when furuncles coalesce and extend to

deeper tissue; patients have chills/fever indicating systemic

spread via bacteremia.

 

 

Cellulitis: fever, severe pain, sometimes

bacteremia

 

question

 

 

 

S. aureus Pneumonia

answer

PNEUMONIA

 

  Aspiration pneumonia
Develops after the aspiration of oral secretion
Primarily observed in the very young & cystic fibrosis

patients, influenza, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Abscesses within lung.
  Hematogenous pneumonia
  Common for patients with bacteremia
  Necrotizing pneumonia: community-acquired, can lead

  to septic shock; high mortality rate. 

question

 

 

 

S. aureus Bacteremia

answer
BACTEREMIA can lead to: ENDOCARDITIS  mortality ~ 50%!
  Influenza-like symptoms
  Disruption of cardiac output and  
  Can affect otherwise healthy heart   valves.
  Visible sign: SEPTIC EMBOLISM

question

 

 

 

Superantigens

answer
S. aureusproduces a number of virulence factors that are superantigens
Force an association between MHC on antigen-presenting cells

  and T cell receptor that would not normally occur (nonspecific stimulation)

Induce cytokine release by both cell types
question

 

 

 

Toxin Mediated Diseases: Scalded Skin Syndrome

answer

Toxin-mediated diseases

 

Scalded skin syndrome (Ritter’s disease; SSSS)

 

  Primarily a disease of neonates and young children

 

  Onset: redness and inflammation around mouth, followed by

cutaneous blisters, and finally desquamation of the epithelium

 

  Blisters contain clear fluid but no organisms or leukocytes
 
 
Rarely fatal; fatalities usually due to secondary infection of the denuded skin areas.
Disease manifestations produced by dissemination of S. aureusexfoliative toxins A or B (ETA/ETB).

 

Superantigens
question

 

 

 

S. aureus Toxic Shock Syndrome

answer
Acute disease that affects multiple systems, is mediated by toxins, and can result in multiorgan failure and death.
Forms of disease
Menstrual
Nonmenstrual
 
Growth of toxin-producing strains of S. aureus in vagina (menstrual) or other location (nonmenstrual)
Release and dissemination of toxin(s) (superantigen).
Nonmenstrual TSS can also occur in the absence of a wound or obvious portal of entry.
Toxins responsible:
Menstrual : TSST1 (Toxic shock syndrome toxin 1) most (~95%) of cases
Nonmenstrual: can be TSST1 (~50%), or staphylococcal enterotoxin A, B, or C (SEA, SEB, SEC)

 

 

question

 

 

 

Clinical Features of Toxic Shock Syndrome

answer

Clinical features

 

Superantigens induce cytokine storm.

 

Fever, rash, GI symptoms, confusion, lethargy, severe myalgia

lethargy, agitation, hypotension and multisystem

involvement.

 

  Late feature: desquamation of skin.

  Blood cultures: <5% positive (consistent with toxin)

  Clinical features of menstrual and nonmenstrual TSS similar

    except:

  Nonmenstrual TSS: more likely acquired nosocomially

  Nonmenstrual TSS: more often associated with CNS

  manifestations (action of enterotoxin?)

question

 

 

 

Staphylococcal Food Poisoning

answer
  Disease symptoms caused by a toxin (staphylococcal entero-

   toxin A and other enterotoxins)

 

  These toxins aresuperantigens.

 

  Does not require live bacteria in contaminated food

  S. auruesintroduced into food by individuals

    colonized/infected with S. aureus.  S. aureus subsequently

    replicates in food and releases toxin.

 

  Most common foods: salted pork, custard-filled pastries

    potato salad, and ice cream

  Symptoms: severe vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain/

   nausea.  Sweating and headache may occur but no fever

   is seen.

 

  Treatment: for relief of abdominal cramping, diarrhea, and

replacement of fluids

question

 

 

 

Penicillinase

answer

 

  Penicillinase-resistant penicillins (methicillin) were

    then used to treat S. aureus infections; now many

    strains of S. aureus are resistant to methicillin(MRSA)

question

 

 

 

Virulence Factors of S. aureus

answer
1.Capsular polysaccharide – inhibits neutrophilphagocytosis

    and chemotaxis.  Present on cell surface.

 

2.Protein A – binds Fc (cell receptor) portion of some forms of

    IgG, neutralizing the ability of phagocytic cells to recognize it.

  Antibody is bound to cell “in reverse.”

   3.  Exfoliative toxins: ETA and ETB – responsible for SSSS.

Superantigens.

 

4.  Enterotoxins: eight distinct toxins; responsible for S. aureus

food poisoning.  Some can take the place of

TSST-1 in nonmenstrual TSS.

 

Stable to heat, gastric and jejunal enzymes.

stimulate inflammatory mediators; stimulate vagus nerve

endings, producing severe vomiting.  

Superantigens.

 

5.  Toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST-1): triggers massive

release of cytokines that cause shock and death.

Superantigens.

 

6.  MSCRAMMs/Adhesins:  (Microbial Surface Components Recognizing Adhesive Matrix Molecules)

   

     Bind to extracellular matrix/host cells – many  different factors are synthesized by S. aureus and allow the bacterium to adhere to a variety of host molecules. 

 

7.  Yellow pigment.  Caratenoid.  Protects organism from reactive oxygen species (released by neutrophils)

 

 

 

 

Cytoxins

8.  Alpha, beta, gamma, delta toxins: can

     lysea variety of cell types (including red blood

     cells). 

 

  Alpha toxin: does not lyseneutrophils efficiently

 

9.   Panton-Valentine leukocidin: Does not lyse red

      blood cells as efficiently as other S. aureuscytotoxins.

      Role in pathogenesis unclear. 

  Encoded on the genome of most strains of CA S.aureus.

10.  Peptidoglycan: component of cell wall; has endotoxin-  like activity; stimulates production of endogenous pyrogens activation of complement, production of IL-1 from monocytes aggregation of neutrophils (part of abscess formation)


11.  PBP2A  - penicillin binding protein.  Involved in cell   wall biosynthesis.  Mediates methicillin resistance. 

    Encoded by mecA gene.


 

Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New