1 / 48

VIBRIONACEAE

VIBRIONACEAE. Vibrio Aeromonas Plesiomonas. An estimated 3-5 million cases and over 100,000 deaths occur each year around the world. Since October 2010, over 470,000 Haitians have been sickened and nearly 7,000 have died.

minervao
Download Presentation

VIBRIONACEAE

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. VIBRIONACEAE Vibrio Aeromonas Plesiomonas

  2. An estimated 3-5 million cases and over 100,000 deaths occur each year around the world. • Since October 2010, over 470,000 Haitians have been sickened and nearly 7,000 have died.

  3. In 2011-2012-cholera outbreak in multiple African nations in all regions except north African regions-Ghana –due to intense hand washing campaign 30 May 2014-cholera outbreak –in sudan

  4. CURRENT SITUATION • From October 2010 - Jan 2014,the govt. of Haiti has reported 698,304 suspected cholera cases and 8562 cholera related deaths • Of these,58,505 cases and 610 fatalities were recorded from Jan- december 2013 • Only 1396 cases and 16 fatalities have so far been registered in jan 2014 - reflecting significant reduction in number of cases

  5. Situation in India

  6. CHOLERA

  7. VIBRIO Family: Vibrionaceae Genus: Vibrio

  8. V.Cholerae - cholera • Name vibrio from latin as these bacteria possess single polar flagellum and appear to vibrate • Italian doctor Fillippo Pacini first discovered cholera bacillus in 1854 • Robert Koch first isolated in pure culture in 1883 • Causes cholera, acute watery diarrhea due to a potent Enterotoxin, disease of poor water sanitation

  9. Epidemiology • Worldwide with epidemic, sporadic and pandemic nature • Poor sanitation, unsafe drinking water, natural calamities, overcrowding predispose. • 7 pandemics thus far • 6 originated in India - V.cholerae biotype classical, confined to Asia (1817 – 1923)

  10. Epidemiology contd….) • 7th and current pandemic started outside India, 1961, in Indonesia by El Tor biotype • Humans are only sources of infection • Between periods of epidemics, bacteria survive in marine and estuarine water, zooplanktons

  11. Genus Vibrio • Comprised of many species inhabiting fresh or marine water • Sensitive to acid pH but tolerate alkaline pH ( 8-9.6) very well • Curved Gram negative bacilli • Most important members are V.cholerae, V.parahemolyticus and V.vulnificus

  12. Bacteriology • Curved Gram negative bacilli • Motile with single polar flagellum – DARTING MOTILITY • Facultative anaerobe and fermenter • Oxidase positive • Sensitive to acid pH but grows better at alkaline pH. • Humans are the natural hosts • Also found in marine and estuarine water

  13. V.cholerae

  14. Antigens and classification • Possess somatic O antigen, flagellar H antigen and fimbrial antigen • O antigen and biochemical reactions are the basis of classification • 139 serovars ( O1 – O139), 2 biotypes( Classical and El Tor), 3 serotypes( Ogawa, Inaba, Hikojima) • V.cholerae O1 biotype ElTor is the common isolate now. • O139 isolation is also increasing

  15. Classification- Gardner & Venkatraman V. cholerae O1 non O1 (O 2-139) Classical El Tor ogawa inaba hikojima

  16. Virulence factors • Eneterotoxin – choleragen, an exotoxin 84kD protein with 2 domains. Resembles toxin of ETEC A domain is active, B domain for binding to intestinal epithelial cells(GM1 receptors) • Adhesins – fimbriae • Flagella • Mucinase & other proteolytic enzymes

  17. Pathogenesis • Source: Patients and carriers • Vehicle of transmission: contaminated water and food, flies, fingers… • Mode of transmission: feco oral, ingestion • Incubation period : 1 – 5 days • Gastric acidity offers protection

  18. Pathogenesis contd…) • Ingestion ( >106 bacilli) • Escape gastric acidity • Reach small intestine • Adhesion, colonisation, production of enterotoxin • Activation of adenyl cyclase • Overproduction of cAMP. • Outpouring of water & electrolytes into lumen • Watery diarrhea • Can secrete > 20L/Day • Dehydration

  19. Pathogenesis cont.. • Addition ,multiplication, entrotoxin production (choleragen) • Choleragen (consists –A (active subunit) & B(binding subunit) • B subunit binds to ganglioside receptors-on surface of entrocytes • A subunit is inserted into cytosol

  20. Catalyzes the addition of ADP-ribose to Gs protien (stimulatory G –protien) Locks the Gs protein in “ON” position Causes persistent stimulation of Adenylate cyclase Overproduction of CAMP stimulation-secretion of chlorine ion and water Leading-massive watery diarrhea- dehydration & electrolyte imbalance-death

  21. Genes for cholera toxin and other virulence factor-carried on single stranded DNA bacteriophage –CTX • Lysogenic conversion of non toxic producing strains to toxin producing one can occur-when CTX transduces these genes

  22. 1 2 Mechanism of Action of Cholera Toxin 3 4 NOTE: In step #4, uptake of Na+ and Cl- from the lumen is also blocked. HCO3- = bicarbonate which provides buffering capacity.

  23. Mechanism of Action of Cholera Toxin

  24. Pathology • Mucosa hyperemic, mild inflammation • NO INVASION, MUCOSA INTACT • Nature of stool: dilute , watery with mucus flakes – RICE WATER STOOL

  25. Clinical features • Profuse watery diarrhea • May be upto 20L/day • Vomiting • Dehydration • No fever

  26. Carrier state • Cholera is exclusively human disease • Infection mainly spreads from patient and carriers via contaminated water & food • There are’ NO’ known animal reservoirs and anthropod vectors • El Tor strain has got higher carriage state

  27. 3 types Incubator convalescent chronic Carrier Carrier Carrier Incubatorycarrier-shed vibrio only during brief period of incubation of cholera Convalescent carrier-in few cases bacilli may survive in gallbladder & excretion of vibrios may continue during convalescence -4-5 weeks

  28. Chronic carrier-short , asymptomatic infection of gall bladder • Found in endemic areas & vibrios are excreted in faeces intermittently from gall bladder • El Tor cholera –greater incidence of casual carrier • incidence rates- 7.3% in west bengal, 21.7% in philippines

  29. Complications • Dehydration • Electrolyte imbalance • Hypovolemic shock • Death • Mortality 60% if untreated • 1% if adequately treated

  30. LAB DIAGNOSIS • Specimen - Stool; Rectal swab. • Transport - VR medium; Cary Blair medium • Microscopy -For clinical purposes: darkfield or phase microscopic visualization of vibrios moving like‚ shooting stars‘, inhibited by serotype-specific antiserum • Gram stain- Comma shaped GNB • Culture - BA - small round moist colnies with heamodigestion • MA - late lactose fermenting • TCBS (selective ) - Yellow colored colonies ( Sucrose fermenter)

  31. TCBS (thiosulphate citrate bile sucrose agar

  32. Identification: • String test +ve • Oxidase +ve; Catalase +ve • Cholera red reaction • Fermentation - Glucose, Sucrose, Mannitol • Confirmation: isolation of V. cholerae (serogroup 01 or 0139) from faeces, in non-epidemic areas final confirmation by biochemical and serologic reactions and detection of cholera toxin

  33. Differences - Classical & El Tor

  34. Vibrio cholerae El Tor • 1st isolated in Celebes (Indonesia) in 1937-1938. • 7th Pandemic in 1960 – Honkong • 1963 – South west Pacific countries • 1970 – Africa • 1991 – South America

  35. Treatment • Rehydration is essential: in severe cases, intravenous electrolyte solutions with alkali is used for initial stage, followed by oral rehydration; oral rehydration only may be used for mild cases • Formulation of ORS- Sodium chloride - 3.5g Potassium chloride - 1.5g Sodium citrate - 2.9g Glucose - 20.0g To be dissolved in 1 liter of clean drinking water

  36. Appropriate antibiotics should be administered until the vibrio disappears from the stool • Tetracycline or doxycyclineis useful –in reducing stool output in cholera & shortens period of excretion of vibrios

  37. Preventive Measures Public Health Strategies Prevention comprises: • Basic sanitary and hygiene measures including • treated water supplies, improving water delivery and sewage control • adequate food hygiene • supplying handwashing facilities, latrines, boiled water • Prevention through immunization - considered as complementary to basic sanitary and hygiene measures

  38. Vaccines - Complementary to sanitary and hygiene measures • Parenteral killed cholera vaccine, providing only partial protection (50%) of short duration (3-6 months), is not longer recommended • 2 newly developed oral vaccines have shown to be safe, immunogenic and effective, are licensed in some countries and are currently under consideration for use in public health: • Killed vaccine consisting of whole-cell V. cholerae O1 with purified recombinant B-subunit of cholera toxoid (WC/rBS) • Attenuated live vaccine based on the genetically modified V.cholera O1 strain‚ CVD 103-HgR‘

  39. Cholera - Summary • Cholera no longer poses a threat to countries with minimum standards of healthy living but remains a threat for countries without access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation • Proper treatment (rehydration!), reduces CFR <2% • Prevention is mainly based on basic sanitary and hygiene measures; newly developed oral vaccines are under consideration for their use in public health

  40. NAG Vibrios • No agglutination with O 1 antisera • Can cause cholera like illness • O 139 Bengal - 1992 -1993; caused epidemic in Bangladesh & South east Asian countries

  41. HALOPHILIC VIBRIOS • V.parahaemolyticus, V.alginolyticus, V.vulnifucus – marine habitat • V.parahaemolyticus: • Food poisoning due to ingestion of sea food • Vomiting, diarrhea, fever • Wound, eye & ear infections. • Kanagawa phenomenon – hemolysis in blood agar containing 7% NaCl and rabbit blood

  42. V.alginolyticus: • grows in 10% NaCl • Otitis externa, marine wound infection • cellulitis • V.vulnifucus: • Ferments lactose, capsulated, invasive • Fatal wound infections & septicemia • Gastroenteritis due to consumption of raw oysters

  43. Aeromonas (Family Aeromonadaceae) • Gram-negative facultatively anaerobic bacillus resembling members of the Enterobacteriaceae • Motile species have single polar flagellum (nonmotile species apparently not associated with human disease) • 16 phenospecies: Most significant human pathogens A. hydrophila, A. caviae, A. veronii biovar sobria • Ubiquitous in fresh and brackish water • Acquired by ingestion of or exposure to contaminated water or food

  44. Clinical Syndromes of Aeromonas • Associated with gastrointestinal disease • Chronic diarrhea in adults • Self-limited acute, severe disease in children resembling shigellosis with blood and leukocytes in the stool • 3% carriage rate • Wound infections • Opportunistic systemic disease in immunocompromised • Putative virulence factors include: endotoxin; hemolysins; eneterotoxin; proteases; siderophores; adhesins REVIEW

  45. Plesiomonas • Formerly Plesiomonadaceae • Closely related to Proteus & now classified as Enterobacteriaceae despite differences: • Oxidase positive • Multiple polar flagella (lophotrichous) • Single species: Plesiomonas shigelloides • Isolated from aquatic environment (fresh or estuarine) • Acquired by ingestion of or exposure to contaminated water or seafood or by exposure to amphibians or reptiles • Self-limited gastroenteritis: secretory, colitis or chronic forms • Variety of uncommon extra-intestinal infections REVIEW

More Related