Spirochates

    Cards (45)

    • What is a common characteristic of Treponema?
      GNB, long, slender, helically coiled
    • What is the genus of Treponema?
      Treponema
    • What species of Treponema causes syphilis?
      Treponema pallidum
    • What subspecies of Treponema causes yaws?
      Treponema pertenue
    • What subspecies of Treponema causes pinta?
      Treponema parateum
    • What subspecies of Treponema is known as endemic syphilis?
      Treponema endemicum
    • What is the genus of Borrelia?
      Borrelia
    • What species of Borrelia causes relapsing fever?
      Borrelia recurrentis
    • What species of Borrelia causes Lyme's disease?
      Borrelia burgdorferi
    • What is the genus of Leptospira?
      Leptospira
    • What species of Leptospira causes leptospirosis?
      Leptospira interrogans
    • What are the diseases associated with Treponema, Borrelia, and Leptospira?
      • Treponema: Syphilis
      • Borrelia: Lyme's Disease
      • Leptospira: Leptospirosis
    • What is the mode of transmission for syphilis?
      STD, congenital, parenteral (blood donation)
    • How does Treponema enter the body?
      Through mucous membranes and skin cuts
    • What is the incubation period for syphilis?
      2 to 6 weeks
    • During which stages is syphilis infectious?
      1Ëš, 2Ëš, early latent (3-5 yrs)
    • What happens to untreated persons with syphilis?
      30% cure spontaneously, 30% latent, 40% progress
    • What is the vector for Lyme's disease?
      Small ticks (Ixodes species)
    • What are the reservoir hosts for Borrelia?
      Mice, deer, rodents, birds
    • How does Leptospira enter the human body?
      Through breaks in skin and mucous membranes
    • What are the clinical manifestations of primary syphilis?
      Skin lesion - syphilitic chancre
    • What are the clinical manifestations of secondary syphilis?
      Maculopapular rash and condylomas
    • What are the clinical manifestations of tertiary syphilis?
      Granulomatous lesions (gummas)
    • What is the primary skin lesion in Lyme's disease?
      Erythema migrans
    • What are the clinical manifestations of leptospirosis?
      Flu-like illness, renal and liver involvement
    • What is the laboratory diagnosis method for syphilis using microscopy?
      Dark-field microscopy of serous fluid
    • What is the sensitivity of dark-field microscopy for syphilis?
      50-80% sensitive for 1Ëš & 2Ëš lesions
    • What types of antibodies are produced in syphilitic infection?
      Specific and non-specific (cardiolipin antibodies)
    • What is the purpose of the VDRL test in syphilis diagnosis?
      Presumptive diagnosis and treatment monitoring
    • What does a positive result in the non-specific cardiolipin test indicate?
      Presence of reagin antibodies in blood
    • What is the gold standard for leptospirosis diagnosis?
      Microscopic agglutination test (MAT)
    • What is the treatment for syphilis?
      Benzathine Penicillin G
    • What is the treatment for Lyme's disease?
      Doxycycline, amoxicillin, cefuroxime
    • What is the treatment for leptospirosis?
      Oral doxycycline or amoxicillin
    • What preventive measures can be taken against Lyme's disease?
      Avoid areas with ticks and use insecticides
    • What preventive measures can be taken against leptospirosis?
      Avoid contaminated water and rodent control
    • What are the stages of syphilis and their clinical manifestations?
      1. Primary Syphilis:
      • Syphilitic chancre
      1. Secondary Syphilis:
      • Maculopapular rash
      • Condylomas
      1. Tertiary Syphilis:
      • Granulomatous lesions (gummas)
    • What are the laboratory diagnosis methods for syphilis?
      • Dark-field microscopy
      • Serological testing (VDRL, RPR, TPHA)
      • CSF analysis for neurosyphilis
    • What are the laboratory diagnosis methods for Lyme's disease?
      • Serology (antibody detection)
      • PCR (antigen detection)
    • What are the laboratory diagnosis methods for leptospirosis?
      • Blood, CSF, tissue, urine specimens
      • Darkfield microscopy
      • Culture on selective media
      • Serology (MAT, enzyme immunoassay)