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Haemophilus and Other Fastidious Gram-negative Rods. The fastidious group of gram-negative bacilli include:HaemophilusHACEK( Haemophilus, Actinobacillus, Cardiobacteria, Eikenella
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1. Chapter 19Haemophilus and Other Fastidious Gram-Negative Rods MLAB 2434: Microbiology
3. Haemophilus Influenzae Misnamed – originally thought to cause the “flu”
Now know that flu is caused by viruses
In some cases of flu, H. influenzae is secondary infection
4. Haemophilus Influenzae: Virulence Factors Capsule
Antiphagocytic
IgA Protease
Cleaves IgA on mucosal surfaces
Lipid A
Found in cell wall
Effects ciliated respiratory epithelium
Pili
Attachment
5. Haemophilus Species Haemophilus = “blood loving”
Haemophilus is facultative and can grow anaerobically
Organism is sensitive to drying and extremes in temperature
Distinctive “mousy” or “bleach-like” odor Sheep blood agar contains NADase that destroys NADSheep blood agar contains NADase that destroys NAD
6. Haemophilus Influenzae: Clinical Infections Infections caused by encapsulated typable strains (H. influenzae type b most common – Hib vaccination)
Acute epiglottis or laryngotracheal infection in small children – can cause airway obstruction needing immediate tracheostomy
Cellulitis/arthritis (cheek and upper extremities)
Meningitis children under 6 years, contagious, vaccine has decreased incidence
Pneumonia/septicemia (in children)
Conjunctivitis “pink eye” very contagious
7. Haemophilus Influenzae: Clinical Infections Infections caused by nontypable strains
Otitis media: children 6 months- 2 years
Sinusitis
Pneumonia, bronchitis (in adults)
These sites are all in proximity to respiratory tract
8. Haemophilus Species Haemophilus species require hemoglobin for growth:
X-factor ( hemin)
Heat-stable substance
Present in RBC and released with degradation of hemoglobin
V-factor (NAD: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide)
Heat- labile, coenzyme I, found in blood or secreted by certain organisms
9. Haemophilus Species Staph aureus provides NAD for Haem. To growStaph aureus provides NAD for Haem. To grow
10. Haemophilus Species Gram Stain Morphology
Usually very small pleomorphic gram negative cb or rod
Gram stain can be enhanced by extending time for safranin to 2 minutes OR substitute carbolfuschin for safranin
11. Haemophilus Species
12. Haemophilus Species Colony Morphology
No growth on BAP or MAC
On CA:
semi-opaque, gray-white, convex, mucoid.
13. Haemophilus species
14. Haemophilus Species: Identification Catalase +
Oxidase +
X and V factors
15. Haemophilus Species: Identification
16. Haemophilus Species: Identification
17. Haemophilus Species: Identification Although BAP contains both X and V factors, only X is directly available
V is not available on BAP because sheep blood contains NADase that hydrolyzes V
Quad plates
contain X and V
factors & sheep blood
agar
18. Haemophilus ducreyi Causative agent of chancroid or soft chancre (STD), highly contagious
Specimens should be collected from base of lesion, inoculated directly to enriched media and held for 5 days
Gram stain appears as groups of coccbacilli that resemble a ‘school of fish” or “railroad tracks”
Requires only X factor to grow
19. Haemophilus Species: Identification
20. Haemophilus Antibiotic therapy
Historically ampicillin was the drug of choice. However, resistance has developed due to production of beta-lactamase or altered penicillin binding proteins and cell wall permeability
Susceptibility testing can be performed by disk diffusion, broth dilution or E-test
Primary antibiotics include cefotaxime or ceftriaxone
21. Case Study A 2-year-old unvaccinated child was seen in the emergency room because of complaints of headache and fever
A cerebrospinal fluid(CSF) sample was obtained and sent to the laboratory for culture
The Gram stain showed many white blood cells and many gram-negative, small bacilli
22. Points to Consider What clinical findings led the physician to request a CSF culture?
Based on the patient’s age, which organism would be suspected?
What growth requirements must be met to recover the suspected agent?
Which other fastidious organisms would be considered?
Other points to consider?
23. HACEK Group and Capnocytophaga HACEK is an acronym of the first initial of each genus that belong in the group:
Haemophilus aphrophilus (not a true Haemophilus because does not need X nor V)
Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans
Cardiobacterium hominis
Eikenella corrodens (often associated with human bite infection)
Kingella species
Capnocytophaga sp.
Has similar requirements as the HACEK group
24. HACEK Group Clinical Significance
Infective endocarditis
Diagnosis from blood culture
Must hold blood cultures for extended periods, making blind subcultures to enriched media
25. HACEK Group and Capnocytophaga: General Characteristics Gram-negative bacilli
Require an increased CO2 (5%-10%) environment
Slow/poor growers
Usual flora of the oralpharyngeal cavity
Opportunists in immunocompromised hosts
26. HACEK Group
27. HACEK Group
28. HACEK Group
29. HACEK Group
30. HACEK Group and Capnocytophaga
31. HACEK group
32. Pasteurella species General characteristics
Colonizes mucous membranes of the upper respiratory tract and gastrointestinal tracts of mammals and birds
Human infections occur from bites and scratches inflicted by animals, primarily felines
Most common isolated species is Pasteurella multocida
33. Pasteurella species P. multocida: Clinical manifestations
Localized infection after a bite or scratch, usually purulent
Life-threatening systemic diseases (e.g., meningitis, bacteremia)
34. Pasteurella multocida
35. Pasteurella multocida Culture characteristics
Growth on 5% blood or chocolate shows small, smooth, grayish,convex colonies
Non-hemolytic
“Musty” or mushroom odor
No growth on MacConkey agar
36. Pasteurella multocida Microscopic examination
Very small gram-negative rods
Bipolar staining with Giemsa or methylene blue
“Safety-pin” appearance
37. Pasteurella multocida: Identification oxidase positive
indole positive
Nonmotile
Catalase positive
Glucose fermenter
38. Pasteurella multocida Treatment
Sensitive to penicillin
39. Brucella species Causes infection in cattle (zoonosis)
B. abortus causes abortions in cattle (Brucellosis)
Acquired through aerosol, percutaneous and oral routes of exposure
Primarily seen with animal handlers and those who handle animal products
Type 3 biohazard – can be transmitted through unbroken skin
Category B Biological agent- easy to disseminate and cause moderate morbidity, but low mortality.
40. Brucella species: Clinical Infections In humans, causes “undulant fever”
Named because fever fluctuates regularly
Can become chronic, presenting 1 year post exposure
41. Brucella species: Identification Smooth, raised, translucent colonies
Browns with age
42. Brucella species: Identification Gram Stain Morphology
Small gram-negative coccobaccilli
Nonmotile
Aerobic
Oxidase positive
Catalase positive
Lab diagnosis is difficult
Hold cultures at least 21 days
Serologic tests
Patient history
Disease status
43. Francisella tularensis Highly infectious Type 3 biohazard – can be transmitted through unbroken skin, bite from an insect, direct contact with infected animals or inhalation of aerosols
Category A Biological agent-it can be spread from person to person or disseminated, high mortality rates
Infection in rabbits, sheep, squirrels and ticks
Zoonotic infection in humans
Requires special media (BCYE or MTM)
Treatment: Streptomycin is drug of choice
44. Francisella tularensis: Clinical Infections Ulceroglandular
Ulcer forms at site of inoculation and lymph node enlargement follows
45. Francisella tularensis: Identification Colony Morphology
BAP = No growth
MAC = No growth
Choc = Small, smooth, gray gncb at 2-5 days
Oxidase: negative
Catalase: negative- weak positive
Ferments glucose
X and V negative
NOTE: Usually identified by DFA or direct agglutination tests due to risk of lab acquired infection
46. Legionella Species General characteristics
Habitat
Aquatic sources
Cooling towers, condensers
Ubiquitous gram-negative rods
Acquired by humans primarily through inhalation of aerosols
47. Legionella Species: Clinical Infections Legionnaire’s disease
disease with pneumonia and extrapulmonary involvement
Malaise, rapid onset of dry cough and fever
Illness is fatal in 15-30% of cases not treated
Pontiac fever
without pulmonary involvement
Fever, headache,malaise
Not fatal- short lived (2-5 days)
Asymptomatic infection
48. Legionella Species Specimen Handling & Processing
BAL, bronchial washings, lung biopsy and pleural fluid are appropriate specimens
Avoid aerosolization & transport ambient temperature
Organism requires cysteine & iron salts for growth
Buffered Charcoal Yeast Extract (BCYE) most widely used
Incubate at 35o C in 5-10% CO2 with increased humidity for 10 days
Organisms usually take 2-4 days to grow
49. Legionella Species: Identification Oxidase positive
Catalase Positive
Motile by polar flagella
Short, thin GNR, may be faint staining
BAP & MAC= no growth
CHOC= may grow very slowly
50. Legionella pneumophila
51. Legionella pneumophila
52. Legionella pneumophila Misc. Identification methods
Conventional
Gram stain, DFA, L-cysteine
Urine Antigen test
DNA Detection
Serological tests (IFA)
53. Legionella sp. Treatment
Susceptibility testing not routinely performed
Erythromycin alone or Rifampin used to treat
54. Case Study Ten members of a group of 2 dozen retirees from the tobacco industry became acutely ill with pneumonia during a 2-week cruise
The group was staying in a block of rooms together and spent time socializing over drinks and cigarettes in the cabins and saunas and at the poolside
55. Case Study On the fifth day of the cruise, several members went to see the ship’s doctor because of a worsening cough
Chest x-rays revealed patchy lobar pneumonia in all affected individuals
The condition improved with erythromycin therapy
56. Bordetella sp. B. pertussis and B. parapertussis
Cause pertussis
“Whooping cough”
Highly communicable disease of children
Strict human pathogen, spread by airborne droplets
Lives in ciliated epithelium of URT
Required vaccination (DPT)
Produces an exotoxin (pertussis toxin) and has a cell wall endotoxin
57. Bordetella sp Specimen collection, transport and procesing
Nasopharyngeal swab or aspirate is the specimen of choice.
Specimen should be plated at the bedside and a smear made OR placed in casamino acid for transport
Regan-Lowe is recommended for transport
58. Bordetella sp: Identification Requires Bordet-Gengou agar
Cough plate
Appears slightly beta hemolytic smooth, shiny, resembling a mercury droplet
Regan-Lowe agar
Domed and shiny with a white mother of pearl opalescence
BAP & MAC: no growth
Organism is a fastidious obligate aerobe
Gram stain: small faint staining GN coccobacilli
Can increase counterstain of safranin to 2 minutes for improved visibility
Oxidase positive
Nonmotile
59. Bordetella sp Serologic Identification
Identified by direct fluorescent antibody, nucleic acid probe, or sero-conversion
Treatment
Erythromycin is the drug of choice for treatment
Vaccination is the best protection
61. Points to Remember Clinical manifestations presented by the patient
The types of infections these organisms produce
The risk factors that predispose susceptible individuals
62. Points to Remember What special growth supplements are required for isolation
Where these groups of organisms are usually found
Characteristic features of the organisms for identification and differentiation among closely-related species