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MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY [BMS2085]
Enterobacteriaceae and Campylobacteraceae
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What is the order that includes the family Enterobacteriaceae?
Enterobacterales
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What are the characteristics of the
Enterobacteriaceae
family?
29 genera including type genus *
Escherichia
*
Optimum temperature:
37°C
Gram-negative
, non-spore forming rods
Facultative anaerobes
Catalase positive
Oxidase negative
Nitrate reductase positive
Motile via
peritrichous flagella
DNA genome characteristics:
G+C content
38%-60%;
genome size
~5M bases
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Where are
Enterobacteriaceae
commonly found?
In the
gastrointestinal
tract of hosts including humans, animals, and
insects
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What are common routes of infection for
Enterobacteriaceae
?
Oral
, via wounds,
urinary tract
, and respiratory tract
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What diseases are associated with
Enterobacteriaceae
?
Diarrhoea, sepsis, urinary tract infections,
CNS
and brain infections
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Why are
Enterobacteriaceae
considered among the most
pathogenic
organisms?
They are often encountered and can cause severe diseases
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What are the characteristics of the
genus
Salmonella
?
2
species
; 7
subspecies
; >2600
serovars
Some serovars are host-restricted
Most serovars infect a wide range of hosts
Non-lactose fermenter
Indole test
negative
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How can
Salmonella
be distinguished from
E. coli
/
Shigella
?
By $H_2S$ production and acid production during carbohydrate fermentation
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What is the annual incidence of typhoid fever caused by *
S. Typhi
*?
~
15 million
new cases each year
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What are the phases of
typhoid fever
caused by *
S. Typhi
*?
1st phase: Slow fever, rose spots, mild bacteraemia; 2nd phase: Organism reaches gallbladder, formation of ulcers, haemorrhage, death (
20%
)
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What is the impact of
non-typhoid
*
Salmonella
* (
NTS
) globally?
~
94 million
cases and
155,000
deaths each year
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What are the predominant serovars of
NTS
in the
UK
?
*
Salmonella
* Enteritidis, *Salmonella* Typhimurium, *Salmonella* Heidelberg, *Salmonella* Newport
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What is the typical disease caused by
NTS
in healthy individuals?
Self-limiting enteritis
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How does *
Salmonella
* invade the host?
By crossing the
epithelial
barrier via
phagocytic
cells or direct uptake
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What are the main virulence factors of *
Salmonella
*?
Type 3 secretion systems
(T3SS) and
Salmonella pathogenicity islands
(SPI)
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What is the route of transmission for
NTS
*
Salmonella
* infections?
Faecal-oral
transmission
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What are the characteristics of the genus
Escherichia
?
First isolated in
1919
by
Theodor Escherich
Five species: *E. albertii,
E. coli
, E. fergusonii, E. hermanii, E. vulneris*
*
E. coli
* colonizes mammalian
GI tract
shortly after birth
Over
700
different serotypes (O, H, K), most are harmless
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What are the pathotypes of
pathogenic
*
E. coli
*?
InPEC
(intestinal infections) and
ExPEC
(extra-intestinal infections)
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What are the types of intestinal infections caused by *
E. coli
*?
Enteroaggregative
*E. coli* (EAEC)
Enteroinvasive
*E. coli* (EIEC)
Enterotoxigenic
*E. coli* (
ETEC
)
Shiga
toxin-producing *E. coli* (
STEC
)
Enterohaemorrhagic
*E. coli* (
EHEC
)
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What is the prevalence of UTIs caused by uropathogenic *E. coli* (
UPEC
) in women?
75%
of UTIs are caused by UPEC
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What types of
UTIs
exist?
Asymptomatic bacteriuria
,
cystitis
,
pyelonephritis
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How does
UPEC
infection occur?
Periurethral
contamination with UPEC can occur after bowel movement or during sexual intercourse
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What is the major
virulence factor
of
meningitis-associated
*E. coli* (
MNEC
)?
1
capsular antigens
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What is the impact of *
Shigella
* species globally?
Over
190 million
cases of shigellosis annually worldwide
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What is the primary route of transmission for *
Shigella
*?
Faecal-oral
route and person-to-person spread
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What are the symptoms of
shigellosis
?
Aggressive watery or mucoid/bloody
diarrhoea
, fever, and stomach cramps
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What is the
infectious dose
of *
Shigella
*?
Low infectious dose (
10-100
organisms)
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How does *
Shigella
* invade the host's large intestine?
By crossing the
epithelium
via
M cells
and inducing uptake by
macrophages
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What is the role of the
type 3 secretion system
(
T3SS
) in *
Shigella
* pathogenesis?
T3SS allows the bacterium to inject proteins directly into the host cell
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What are the four species of *
Shigella
* based on
serological
typing?
*S. dysenteriae* - most severe
*S. flexneri* - most frequent
*S. boydii* - confined to
Indian
sub-continent
*S.
sonnei
* - mildest infection
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What is the recommended first-line treatment for
shigellosis
?
Fluoroquinolones
, such as
ciprofloxacin
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What is the mechanism of *
Shigella
* pathogenesis?
*Shigella* kills
macrophages
and escapes to reach the epithelium’s
basolateral
surface
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What is the clinical presentation of *
Shigella
* infection?
Aggressive watery or mucoid/bloody
diarrhoea
, fever, and stomach cramps
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What is the role of
plasmid-borne
factors in *
Shigella
* pathogenesis?
They code for type 3 secretion system (
T3SS
) which is pivotal to infection
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What are the symptoms of intestinal pathogenic *
E. coli
* (InPEC)?
Mild watery diarrhoea (
ETEC
)
Dysentery (
EIEC
)
Severe bloody diarrhoea (
EHEC
)
Vomiting, abdominal pain, fever (all)
Haemolytic uraemic syndrome (
HUS
) (EHEC)
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What are the types of urinary tract infections (UTIs)?
Asymptomatic bacteriuria
Cystitis
(Bladder infection)
Pyelonephritis
(Upper ureter infection, kidney infection)
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What are the types of intestinal pathogenic *E. coli* (InPEC) and their characteristics?
| Pathotype | Symptoms | Infectious Dose | Site of Damage | Toxins | Colonisation Factor | Treatment |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
|
ETEC
| Watery diarrhoea | High (10^6) | Small intestine |
LT
and
ST
| - | Self-limiting; oral rehydration; antibiotic |
|
EIEC
| Dysentery, bloody diarrhoea | High (10^6 - 10^10) | Colon | None | pINV (
T3SS
) | Oral rehydration; antibiotics |
|
EAggEC
| High infectious dose: 10^10 organisms | Colon |
SPATEs
(protease), enterotoxins | - | Self-limiting; oral hydration; antibiotics |
|
EPEC
| Diarrhoea | High (10^6-10^10) | Colon | Proteases | - | Self-limiting, oral rehydration; antibiotics (rarely) |
|
EHEC/STEC
| Bloody diarrhoea, kidney disease | - | Colon | Shiga toxin (
Stx
) | A/E lesions (
LEE
pathogenicity island) | None at present |
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What is the clinical presentation of
Shigellosis
?
Aggressive watery or mucoid/bloody
diarrhoea
, fever, and stomach cramps
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How long does it take for symptoms of
Shigellosis
to begin after ingestion?
2
days
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What is the typical duration of
Shigellosis
in immunocompetent individuals?
7
days
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See all 76 cards
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