1 / 69

Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2 nd ed.

Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2 nd ed. Chapter 19: Infectious Diseases Affecting the Nervous System. 19.1 The Nervous System and Its Defenses. Two component parts to the nervous system CNS PNS Three important functions Sensory Integrative Motor

Download Presentation

Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2 nd ed.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2nd ed. Chapter 19: Infectious Diseases Affecting the Nervous System

  2. 19.1 The Nervous System and Its Defenses • Two component parts to the nervous system • CNS • PNS • Three important functions • Sensory • Integrative • Motor • Brain and spinal cord: made up of neurons, both surrounded by bone, encased with meninges • PNS: cranial and spinal nerves

  3. Defenses of the Nervous System • Mainly structural • Bony casings • Cushion of CSF • Blood-brain barrier • Immunologically privileged site

  4. Figure 19.1

  5. Figure 19.2

  6. 19.2 Normal Biota of the Nervous System • No normal biota • Any microorganisms in the PNS or CNS is a deviation from the healthy state

  7. 19.3 Nervous System Diseases Caused by Microorganisms • Inflammation of the meninges • Many different microorganisms can cause an infection • More serious forms caused by bacteria • If it is suspected, lumbar puncture is performed to obtain CSF • Typical symptoms: headache, painful or stiff neck, fever, and usually an increased number of white blood cells in the CSF

  8. Neisseria meningitides • Gram-negative diplococcic lined up side by side • Commonly known as meningococcus • Often associated with epidemic forms of meningitis • Causes the most serious form of acute meningitis

  9. Figure 19.3

  10. Figure 19.4

  11. Figure 19.5

  12. Streptococcus pneumonia • Referred to as the pneumococcus • Most frequent cause of community-acquired meningitis • Very severe • Does not cause the petechiae associated with meningococcal meningitis- useful diagnostically • Small gram-positive flattened coccus that appears in end-to-end pairs

  13. Haemophilus influenza • Tiny gram-negative pleomorphic rods • Sensitive to drying, temperature extremes, and disinfectants • Causes severe meningitis • Symptoms: fever, stiff neck, vomiting, and neurological impairment

  14. Listeria monocytogenes • Gram-positive • Ranges in morphology from coccobacilli to long filaments in palisades formation • Resistant to cold, heat, salt, pH extremes, and bile • In normal adults- mild infection with nonspecific symptoms of fever, diarrhea, and sore throat • In elderly or immunocompromised patients, fetuses, or neonates- affects the brain and meninges and results in septicemia

  15. Figure 19.6

  16. Cryptococcus neoformans • Fungus • More chronic form of meningitis • More gradual onset of symptoms • Sometime classified as a meningoencephalitis • Headache- most common symptom; also nausea and stiff neck • Spherical to ovoid shape and a large capsule

  17. Figure 19.7

  18. Figure 19.8

  19. Coccidioides immitis • At 25°C forms a moist white to brown colony with abundant, branching, septate hyphae • Hyphae fragment into arthroconidia at maturity • Usually begins with pulmonary infection

  20. Figure 19.9

  21. Figure 19.10

  22. Viruses • Aseptic meningitis • Majority of cases occur in children • 90% caused by enteroviruses • Generally milder than bacterial or fungal meningitis

  23. Neonatal Meningitis • Almost always a result of infection transmitted by the mother, either in utero or during passage through the birth canal • Two most common causes • Streptococcus agalactiae • Group B strep • Escherichia coli

  24. Meningoencephalitis • Encephalitis: inflammation of the brain • Two microorganisms cause meningoencephalitis (both amoebas) • Naegleria fowleri • Acanthamoeba

  25. Naegleria fowleri • Small, flask-shaped amoeba • Forms a rounded, thick-walled, uninucleate cyst • Infection begins when amoebas are forced into human nasal passages as a result of swimming, diving, or other aquatic activities • Amoeba burrows in to the nasal mucosa, multiplies, and migrates into the brain and surrounding structure • Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM)

  26. Figure 19.11

  27. Acanthamoeba • Large, amoeboid trophozoite with spiny pseudopods and a double-walled cyst • Invades broken skin, the conjunctiva, and occasionally the lungs and urogenital epithelia • Granulomatous amoebic meningoencephalitis (GAM)

  28. Acute Encephalitis • Encephalitis can present as acute or subacute • Always a serious condition • Acute: almost always caused by viral infection • Signs and symptoms vary but may include behavior changes, confusion, decreased consciousness, seizures

  29. Arborviruses • Borne by insects; most feed on the blood of hosts • Common outcome: acute fever, often accompanied by rash

  30. Western Equine Encephalitis (WEE) • Appears first in horses then in humans • Carried by mosquito • Extremely dangerous to infants and small children

  31. Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE) • Eastern coast of North American and Canada • Usually appears first in horses and caged birds • Very high case fatality rate

  32. California Encephalitis • May be caused by two different viral strains: California strain and the LaCrosse strain • Children living in rural areas: primary target group

  33. St. Louis Encephalitis (SLE) • May be most common of all American viral encephalitides • Epidemics in the US occur most often in the Midwest and South

  34. West Nile Encephalitis • Increasing in numbers in the United States

  35. Herpes Simplex Virus • Can cause encephalitis in newborns born to HSV-positive mothers • Prognosis is poor

  36. JC Virus • Infection is common • In patients with immune dysfunction, cause progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML)- uncommon but generally fatal

  37. Subacute Encephalitis • Symptoms take longer to show up and are less striking • Most common cause: Toxoplasma

  38. Toxoplasma gondii • Flagellated parasite • Most cases go unnoticed • In the fetus and immunodeficient people, severe and often fatal • Asymptomatic or marked by mild symptoms such as sore throat, lymph node enlargement, and low-grade fever

  39. Figure 19.13

  40. Measles Virus: SubacuteSclerosingPanencephalitis (SSPE) • Occurs years after an initial measles episode • Seems to be caused by direct viral invasion of neural tissue

  41. Prions • Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs): neurodegenerative diseases with long incubation periods but rapid progression once they begin • Human TSEs • Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) • Gerstmann-Strussler-Scheinker disease • Fatal familial insomnia

  42. Figure 19.14

  43. Rabies • Slow, progressive zoonotic disease • Characterized by fatal encephalitis • Average incubation time: 1-2 months or more • Prodromal phase begins with fever, nausea, vomiting, headache, fatigue, and other nonspecific symptoms • Furious rabies • Periods of agitation, disorientation, seizures, and twitching • Spasms in the neck and pharyngeal muscles lead to hydrophobia • Dumb rabies • Patient is not hyperactive but is paralyzed, disoriented and stuporous • Both forms progress to the coma phase, resulting in death

  44. Figure 19.15

More Related