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The Spirochetes. Gram-negative human pathogens Free living saprobes, or commensals of animals, not primary pathogens Treponema Leptospira Borrelia. Typical spirochete. Genus Treponema. Thin, regular, coiled cells
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The Spirochetes • Gram-negative human pathogens • Free living saprobes, or commensals of animals, not primary pathogens • Treponema • Leptospira • Borrelia
Genus Treponema • Thin, regular, coiled cells • Live in the oral cavity, intestinal tract, and perigenital regions of humans and animals • Pathogens are strict parasites with complex growth requirements • Require live cells for cultivation
Treponema Pallidum: The Spirochete of Syphilis • Humans are the natural host • Extremely fastidious and sensitive; cannot survive long outside of the host • Sexually transmitted and transplacental
Pathogenesis and Host Response • Spirochete binds to epithelium (mucous membrane or abraded skin), multiplies, and penetrates capillaries • Moves into circulation and multiplies • Untreated syphilis marked by 3 clinical stages: • Primary, secondary, tertiary • Spirochete appears in lesions and blood during first 2 stages – communicable
Primary syphilis – appearance of hard chancre at site of inoculation; chancre heals spontaneously • Secondary syphilis – fever, headache, sore throat, red or brown rash on skin, palms, and soles; rash disappears spontaneously • Tertiary syphilis – about 30% of infections enter in tertiary stage; can last for 20 years or longer; numerous pathologic complications occur in susceptible tissues and organs • Neural, cardiovascular symptoms, gummas develop • Congenital syphilis – nasal discharge, skin eruptions, bone deformation, nervous system abnormalities
Diagnosis and Treatment • Stages of syphilis mimic other diseases • Consider symptoms, history, microscopic, and serological testing • RPR, VDRL, FTA-ABS • Treatment: penicillin G
Nonsyphilitic Treponematoses • Resemble syphilis; rarely transmitted sexually or congenitally; cutaneous and bone diseases endemic to specific regions • Bejel – T. pallidum subspecies endemicum; deforming childhood infection of the mouth, nasal cavity, body, and hands • Yaws – T. pallidum subspecies pertenue; invasion of skin cut, causing a primary ulcer that seeds a second crop of lesions • Pinta – T. carateum; superficial skin lesion that depigments and scars the skin
Leptospira and Leptospirosis • Tight, regular individual coils with a bend or hook at one or both ends • L. biflexa – harmless, free-living saprobe • L. interrogans – causes leptospirosis, a zoonosis • Bacteria shed in urine; infection occurs by contact with contaminated urine; targets kidneys, liver, brain, eyes • Sudden high fever, chills, headache, muscle aches, conjunctivitis, and vomiting • Long-term infections may affect kidneys and liver • 50-60 cases a year in U.S.
Borrelia: Arthropod-Borne Spirochetes • Large, 3-10 coils irregularly spaced • Borrelioses transmitted by arthropod vector • B. hermsii – relapsing fever • B. burgdorferi – Lyme disease
B. Hermsii – Relapsing Fever • Mammalian reservoirs – squirrels, chipmunks, wild rodents • Tick-borne • After 2-15-day incubation, patients have high fever, shaking, chills, headache, and fatigue • Nausea, vomiting, muscle aches, abdominal pain; extensive damage to liver, spleen, heart, kidneys, and cranial nerves • Parasite changes and immune system tries to control it – Recurrent relapses • Tetracycline
B. Burgdorferi – Lyme Disease • Carried by white-footed mouse, transmitted by Ixodes ticks • Complex 2-year cycle involving mice and deer • Nonfatal, slowly progressive syndrome that mimics neuromuscular and rheumatoid conditions • 50-70% get bull’s eye rash • Fever, headache, stiff neck, and dizziness • If untreated can progress to cardiac and neurological symptoms, polyarthritis • Tetracycline, amoxicillin • Vaccine for dogs, human vaccine discontinued • Insect repellant containing DEET
Curviform Gram-Negative Bacteria and Enteric Diseases Three genera: • Vibrio – comma-shaped rods, single polar flagellum • Campylobacter – short spirals or curved rods; one flagellum • Helicobacter – spirochete with tight spirals and several polar flagella
Vibrio Cholera • Comma-shaped, possess unique O and H Ags • El Tor biotype: survives longer, more infectious • Infectious dose 108 • Infects mucous barrier of small intestine, noninvasive • Cholera toxin causes electrolyte and water loss through secretory diarrhea, “rice water stool”; resulting dehydration leads to muscle, circulatory, and neurological symptoms • Treatment: oral rehydration, tetracycline • Vaccine available
Pathogens Carried by Seafood • Salt-tolerant inhabitants of coastal waters, associate with marine invertebrates • Vibrio parahaemolyticus – gastroenteritis from raw seafood; symptoms similar to cholera • Vibrio vulnificus – gastroenteritis from raw oysters; serious complications in persons with diabetes or liver disease • Treatment – fluid and electrolyte replacement; occasionally antimicrobials
Diseases of the Campylobacter Vibrios • Campylobacters – slender, curved, or spiral bacilli, often S-shaped or gull-winged pairs • Polar flagella • Common residents of the intestinal tract, genitourinary tract, the oral cavity of birds and mammals • Most important: • Campylobacter jejuni • C. fetus
Campylobacter Jejuni Enteritis • Important cause of bacterial gastroenteritis • Transmitted by beverages and food • Reach mucosa at the last segment of small intestine near colon; adhere, burrow through mucus and multiply • Heat-labile enterotoxin CJT stimulates a secretory diarrhea like that of cholera • Symptoms of headache, fever, abdominal pain, bloody or watery diarrhea • Treatment with rehydration and electrolyte balance therapy
Campylobacter fetus – opportunistic pathogen that infects debilitated persons or women late in pregnancy • Meningitis, pneumonia, arthritis, septicemia in the newborn
Helicobacter Pylori: Gastric Pathogen • Curved cells discovered in 1979 in stomach biopsied specimens • Causes 90% of stomach and duodenal ulcers; apparent cofactor in stomach cancer • People with type O blood have a 1.5-2X higher rate of ulcers • Produces urease which converts urea into ammonium and bicarbonate
Medically Important Bacteria of Unique Morphology and Biology
Family Rickettsiaceae • Contains about 23 species of pathogens, mainly in the genus Rickettsia • Cause diseases called rickettsioses • All are intracellular parasites requiring live cells for cultivation • Spend part of their life cycle in arthropod vectors • Rickettsioses are important emerging diseases
Rickettsia • Obligate intracellular parasites • Gram-negative cell wall • Among the smallest bacteria • Nonmotile pleomorphic rods or coccobacilli • Ticks, fleas, and lice are involved in their life cycle • Bacteria enter endothelial cells and cause necrosis of the vascular lining – vasculitis, vascular leakage, and thrombosis
Specific Rickettsioses • Epidemic typhus – R. prowazekii carried by lice; starts with a high fever, chills, headache, rash; Brill-Zinsser is a chronic, recurrent form • Endemic typhus – R. typhi, harbored by mice and rats; occurs sporadically in areas of high flea infestation; milder symptoms • Rocky Mountain spotted fever – R. rickettsii zoonosis carried by dog and wood ticks; most cases in Southeast and on eastern seaboard; distinct spotted rash; may damage heart and CNS • Ehrlichia genus contains 2 species of rickettsias; tick-borne bacteria cause human monocytic and granulocytic ehrlichiosis
Related to the Rickettsioses • Coxiella burnetti • Bartonella sp.
Coxiella Burnetti • Causes Q fever • Intracellular parasite • Produces an unusual resistant spore • Harbored by a wide assortment of vertebrates and arthropods • Infectious material includes urine, feces, milk, and airborne particles • Usually inhaled causing pneumonitis, fever, hepatitis • Tetracycline treatment • Vaccine available
Bartonella Species • Small gram-negative, fastidious, cultured on blood agar • Cause: • Trench fever, spread by lice • Cat-scratch disease, a lymphatic infection associated with a clawing injury by cats • Bacillary angiomatosus in AIDS patients • Tetracycline, erythromycin, and rifampin
TheChlamydiaceae • Obligate intracellular parasites • Small, gram-negative cell wall • Alternate between 2 stages: • Elementary body – small metabolically inactive, extracellular, infectious form released by the infected host • Reticulate body – noninfectious, actively dividing form, grows within host cell vacuoles
Chlamydia Trachomatis • Human reservoir • 2 strains • Trachoma – attacks the mucous membranes of the eyes, genitourinary tract, and lungs • Ocular trachoma – severe infection, deforms eyelid and cornea, may cause blindness • Inclusion conjunctivitis – occurs as baby passes through birth canal; prevented by prophylaxis • STD – second most prevalent STD; urethritis, cervicitis, salpingitis (PID), infertility, scarring • Lymphogranuloma venereum – disfiguring disease of the external genitalia and pelvic lymphatics
Chlamydophila – A New Genus • Contains members that used to be members of genus Chlamydia • Chlamydophila pneumoniae – causes an atypical pneumonia that is serious in asthma patients • C. psittaci – causes ornithosis, a zoonosis transmitted to humans from bird vectors; highly communicable among all birds; pneumonia or flulike infection with fever, lung congestion