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Food Borne Illness

Food Borne Illness. Infections that require large infective dosage. Infections that require large infective dosage.

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Food Borne Illness

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  1. Food Borne Illness Infections that require large infective dosage

  2. Infections that require large infective dosage BacteriaSalmonella spp.Yersinia enterocolitica and Yersinia pseudotuberculosisVibrio parahaemolyticus and other vibrios Escherichia coli - Enterotoxigenic (ETEC) EnterohemorrhagicHUS Campylobacter jejuni Listeria

  3. Enterobacteriaceae • Classification – more than15 different genera

  4. Enterobacteriaceae • Morphology and General Characteristics • Gram-negative, non-sporing, rod shaped bacteria • Oxidase – • Ferment glucose and may or may not produce gas in the process (aerogenic vs anaerogenic) • Reduce nitrate to nitrite (there are a few exceptions)

  5. Enterobacteriaceae • Are facultative anaerobes • If motile, motility is by peritrichous flagella • Many are normal inhabitants of the intestinal tract of man and other animals • Some are enteric pathogens and others are urinary or respiratory tract pathogens • Differentiation is based on biochemical reactions and and differences in antigenic structure

  6. Enterobacteriaceae • Most grow well on a variety of lab media including a lot of selective and differential media originally developed for the the selective isolation of enteric pathogens. • Most of this media is selective by incorporation of dyes and bile salts that inhibit G+ organisms and may suppress the growth of nonpathogenic species of Enterobacteriaceae. • Many are differential on the basis of whether or not the organisms ferment lactose and/or produce H2S.

  7. Antigenic Structure of Enterobacteriaceae

  8. Escherichia coli • Normal inhabitant of the G.I. tract. • Some strains cause various forms of gastroenteritis. • Is a major cause of urinary tract infection and neonatal meningitis and septicemia.

  9. E. coli • May be hemolytic on CBA – more common in pathogenic strains • KEY tests for the normal strain: • TSI is A/A + gas • LIA K/K • Urea – • Indole + • Citrate – • Motility + • There is an inactive biotype that is anaerogenic, lactose – , and nonmotile.

  10. Escherichia coli • Virulence factors • Toxins • Enterotoxins and Shigella like Toxins • Enterotoxins causes a movement of water and ions from the tissues to the bowel resulting in watery diarrhea. • There are two types of enterotoxin: LT and ST

  11. E. Coli Enterotoxins • LT – is heat labile and LT – is heat labile and alters the activity of sodium and chloride transporters producing an ion imbalance that results in fluid transport into the bowel. • ST – is heat stable and binds to specific receptors with the same results as with LT.

  12. Shiga-type toxins • Shiga-type toxin – also called the verotoxin -produced by enterohemorrhagic strains of E. coli (EHEC) • – is cytotoxic, enterotoxic, neurotoxic, and may cause diarrhea and ulceration of the G.I. tract.

  13. E. coli infections • Gastroenteritis – there are several distinct types of E. coli that are involved in different types of gastroenteritis: • enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC), • enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC), • enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) , • enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC), and • enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC).

  14. Shigella • Shigella • Contains four species that differ antigenically and, to a lesser extent, biochemically.

  15. Shigella species • S. dysenteriae (Group A) • S. flexneri (Group B) • S. boydii (Group C) • S. sonnei (Group D) • Biochemistry • TSI K/A with NO gas • LIA K/A • Urea – • Motility - • All ferment mannitol except S. dysenteriae • S. sonnei may show delayed lactose fermentation

  16. Shigella species • Virulence factors • Shiga toxin – is produced by S. dysenteriae and in smaller amounts by S. flexneri and S. sonnei. • Acts to inhibit protein synthesis This plays a role in the ulceration of the intestinal mucosa.

  17. Shigella • Clinical significance • Causes shigellosis or bacillary dysentery. • Transmission is via the fecal-oral route. • The infective dose required to cause infection is very low (10-200 organisms). • There is an incubation of 1-7 days followed by fever, cramping, abdominal pain, and watery diarrhea (due to the toxin)for 1-3 days. • This may be followed by frequent, scant stools with blood, mucous, and pus (due to invasion of intestinal mucosa). • It is rare for the organism to disseminate. • The severity of the disease depends upon the species one is infected with. • S. dysenteria is the most pathogenic followed by S. flexneri, S. sonnei and S. boydii.

  18. Salmonella • Salmonella • Classification has been changing in the last few years. • There is now 1 species: S. enteritica, and 7 subspecies: 1, 2 ,3a ,3b ,4 ,5, and 6. • Subgroup 1 causes most human infections • 2000 sub species

  19. Salmonella • Clinically Salmonella isolates are often still reported out as serogroups or serotypes based on the Kauffman-White scheme of classification. • Based on O and H (flagella) antigens • The H antigens occur in two phases; 1 and 2 and only 1 phase is expressed at a given time. • Polyvalent antisera is used followed by group specific antisera (A, B, C1, C2, D, and E) • Salmonella typhi also has a Vi antigen which is a capsular antigen.

  20. Salmonella • Biochemistry • TSI K/A + gas and H2S: S. typhi produces only a small amount of H2S and no gas , and S. paratyphi A produces no H2S • LIA K/K with H2S with S. paratyphi A giving K/A results • Urea – • Motility + • Citrate +/- • Indole - • Virulence factors • Endotoxin – may play a role in intracellular survival • Capsule (for S. typhi and some strains of S. paratyphi) • Adhesions – both fimbrial and non-fimbrial

  21. Salmonella • Clinical Significance – causes two different kinds of disease: enteric fevers and gastroenteritis. • Both types of disease begin in the same way, but with the gastroenteritis the bacteria remains restricted to the intestine and with the enteric fevers, the organism spreads • Transmission is via a fecal-oral route, i.e., via ingestion of contaminated food or water.

  22. Enterobacteriaceae • Proteus, Providencia, and Morganella • Are all part of the NF of the GI tract (except Providencia). • All motile, with Proteus swarming • PA + • Lysine deamination + (LIA R/A) • Urea + for most, strongly + for Proteus • TSI variable (know the reactions for each in the lab!) • Indole – only P. mirabilis is -

  23. Proteus, Providencia, and Morganella • Virulence factors • Urease – the ammonia produced may damage the epithelial cells of the UT • Clinical Significance • UT infections, as well as pneumonia, septicemia, and wound infections

  24. Enterobacter sakazakii • Enterobacter sakazakii • a Gram-negative rod-shaped pathogenic bacterium. • It is a rare cause of invasive infection with historically high case fatality rates (40–80%) in infants. • From contaminated infant formulas • E. sakazakii as a now classified into a new genus, Cronobacter, comprising five species • For survivors, severe lasting complications can result including neurological disorders.

  25. Three ways infant formula get contaminated with Cronobacter sp. ? • a) Through the raw material used for producing the formula; • b) through contamination of the formula or other dry ingredients after pasteurization; and • c) through contamination of the formula as it is being reconstituted by the caregiver just prior to feeding. Can other foods also be contaminated? • Cronobacter sp. has been detected in other types of food, but only powdered infant formula has been linked to outbreaks of disease.

  26. Campylobacter Campylobacteriosis Most frequent notified enteric disease • The organism – G-ve, motile, spiral rod • C. jejuni & C. coli • Thermophile (25 to 43 deg. C)

  27. Campylobacter Exponential Slender, curved shaped growth morphology

  28. Campylobacter • Characteristics - thermophile, survives > 1 hour on hands & moist surfaces - survives refrigeration - can revert to VBNC

  29. Campylobacter • The illness - incubation – 2 to 5 days - febrile prodrome - watery/bloody diarrhoea, abdominal pain & nausea

  30. Campylobacter • The illness, continued - infective dose – 1 000 to 10 000 cells - any age group; infants < 1 year & young adults; males up to 45 years - Rx – fluids, ? erythromycin (resistance)

  31. Campylobacter • Sources - human –faecal-oral person-to-person - animal –ruminants, cats, dogs, flies, birds

  32. Campylobacter jejuni

  33. Campylobacter • Sources - food –raw poultry, raw milk, offal, red meat - environment –faeces from infected animals contaminate soil & water

  34. Yersinia enterocolitica Yersiniosis • The organism – small G-ve rods of family Enterobacteriaceae • Geographical variation in pathogenic serotypes • Serotype O:3 in NZ

  35. Yersinia enterocolitica • Characteristics - grows at wide range of temperatures (0 to 44 0 C), aerobically & anaerobically - withstands freezing & survives in damp soil

  36. Yersinia enterocolitica • The illness - incubation – 7 days - abdominal pain (confused with appendicitis) - headache, fever, diarrhoea, nausea & vomiting (children – watery, mucoid diarrhoea)

  37. Yersinia enterocolitica • The illness, continued - infective dose – unknown - children < 4 years & adults 20-34 years - Rx – antibiotics when serious

  38. Yersinia enterocolitica • Sources - human –person-to-person, hospitals - animal –primary source is pigs (tongue & tonsils), companion animals, rats & insects - food –pork & pork products - environment –drinking & surface water, sewage sludge

  39. Yersinia enterocolitica

  40. Listeria monocytogenes Listeriosis (invasive disease & non-invasive enteritis) • The organism –G+ve ovoid to rod-shaped bacterium • Widespread in environment

  41. Listeria monocytogenes • Characteristics - grows in wide range of temperatures (1 to 45o C) - survives freezing - aerobic & anaerobic conditions

  42. Listeria monocytogenes • The illness –invasive form - incubation – 30 days - flu’-like symptoms, diarrhoea, vomiting, meningitis, septicaemia, spontaneous abortion

  43. Listeria monocytogenes • The illness –invasive form, continued - infective dose – 100 to 1 000 cells - pregnant women, newborn babies, the elderly & AIDS patients - Rx – penicillin, ampicillin +/- gentamicin

  44. Listeria monocytogenes • The illness –non-invasive - incubation – 18 hours - diarrhoea, fever, muscle pain, headache, abdominal cramps & vomiting

  45. Listeria monocytogenes • The illness –non-invasive - infective dose – > 100 thou. cells/gm - all individuals susceptible - Rx - penicillin, ampicillin +/- gentamicin

  46. Listeria monocytogenes • Sources - human –person-to-person rare - animal –diseased animals shed in faeces, contamination of red meat; silage - food –ready-to-eat cooked food with long shelf-life -raw foods - environment –widespread in soil, water & sewage (Hospitals & occupational exposure)

  47. Listeria monocytogenes

  48. Vibrio, Aeromonas & Plesiomonas

  49. General Characteristics of Vibrio, Aeromonas and Plesiomonas • Similarities to Enterobacteriaceae • Gram-negative • Facultative anaerobes • Fermentative bacilli • Differences from Enterobacteriaceae • Polar flagella • Oxidase positive • Formerly classified together as Vibrionaceae • Primarily found in water sources • Cause gastrointestinal disease • Shown not closely related by molecular methods

  50. Morphology & Physiology of Vibrio • Comma-shaped (vibrioid) bacilli • V. cholerae, V. parahaemolyticus, V. vulnificusare most significant human pathogens • Broad temperature & pH range for growth on media • 18-37C • pH 7.0 - 9.0 (useful for enrichment) • Grow on variety of simple media including: • MacConkey’s agar • TCBS (Thiosulfate Citrate Bile salts Sucrose) agar • V. cholerae grow without salt • Most other vibrios are halophilic

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