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Fundamentals of Medicine (Pathology) Introduction to Microbiology

Fundamentals of Medicine (Pathology) Introduction to Microbiology. Peter Gayo Munthali Consultant Microbiologist UHCW. Aim. To introduce to you general principles in microbiology with an emphasis on bacteria and viruses. Objectives. By the end of the session you should be able to;

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Fundamentals of Medicine (Pathology) Introduction to Microbiology

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  1. Fundamentals of Medicine (Pathology)Introduction to Microbiology Peter Gayo Munthali Consultant Microbiologist UHCW

  2. Aim To introduce to you general principles in microbiology with an emphasis on bacteria and viruses

  3. Objectives • By the end of the session you should be able to; • Describe the role of a clinical microbiologist/virologist in patient care • Describe the difference between bacteria and viruses. • Distinguish between gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria • Describe bacteria by their shape as either cocci or rods • Describe the relationship between viruses and cells in viral multiplication • Name some common bacterial and viral diseases linked to their causative organisms • Describe in broad terms, how antibiotics work on bacteria • Describe the importance of infection control in health care

  4. What is Microbiology • The study of micro-organisms that cause disease • Bacteria (Bacteriology) • Viruses (Virology) • Parasites (Parasitology) • Fungi (Mycology)

  5. Size Matters 1nm 10nm 100nm 1 µm 10 µm 100µm 1mm Light microscope Electron Microscope Proteins Viruses Plant and animal cells Bacteria Small molecules

  6. 1. Bacteria

  7. Description • Unicellular • Prokaryotic • Primitive nucleus • No nucleus membrane • Genome • Single circular molecule double stranded DNA • Can harbour independent small circular DNA molecules called plasmids • Structure • Rigid wall which determines their shape

  8. Bacteria and Human body • Bacteria >10x than human cells in the body (10¹ versus 10¹³) • Skin surface and in deep layers • Saliva and oral mucosa • Gastrointestinal tracts • Normal microbiota or microflora • Beneficial to human health • Opportunistic infections • < 10% culturable • Others not part of normal microbiota • Pathogenic • Opportunistic pathogens

  9. Bacteria Classification • Cell wall classification by gram-stain • Gram positive-thicker cell wall • Gram negative-thinner cell wall • Classification by shape • Spherical-Cocci • Cylindrical-Rods/bacilli

  10. Bacteria Classification

  11. Gram Stain Gram-negatives Gram-Positives Gram-negative rods Gram-positive cocci in clusters (Staphylococci) Gram-positive rods Gram-positive Cocci in chains (Streptococci) Gram-negative cocci

  12. Sub classification-Streptococcus Short Chain Diplococci Beta (β) haemolysis Long Chain Gamma (γ) No Haemolysis Alpha (α) haemolysis

  13. Cell Division (binary fission )

  14. Bacterial Cell Division Super coiled DNA DNA relaxation and duplication Duplication of the DNA bacterial chromosome replicates leading to two identical chromosomes Enzymatic Cleavage Division Identical Daughter cells

  15. Bacterial Diseases

  16. Impetigo Staphylococcus aureus β haemolytic Streptococci

  17. Rash due to Septicaemia Meningitis, Post-mortem Neisseria meningitidis Streptococcus pneumoniae Gangrene Secondary to Septicaemia

  18. Pneumonia Community Acquired Pneumonia Streptococci pneumoniae Consolidation “Atypical Pneumonia” Legionella E.coli Hospital Acquired Pneumonia

  19. Beta Haemolytic Streptococci Group A Necrotising Fascitis

  20. Antibiotics • Actions • Bactericidal • Kills bacteria, reduces bacterial load • Bacteriostatic • Inhibit growth and reproduction of bacteria

  21. Antibiotics Against Bacterial Cell Wall Cell wall Osmotic Pressure Cell Membrane Antibiotic against cell wall Osmotic Pressure Cell membrane Rapture

  22. Antibiotics Against Protein Synthesis • Interferes with bacterial protein synthesis • Limits bacterial growth • Limits DNA replication • Limits bacterial cellular metabolism • Bacterial growth and reproduction inhibited

  23. Antibiotic Susceptibility Testing By Disc Diffusion method Antibiotic Disc Zone of Inhibition Diameter of Zone of Inhibition Sensitive/Resistant Quick Convenient

  24. Viruses

  25. Description • Small infectious agents that can replicate only inside the living cells of organisms • Do not possess enough of their own machinery to replicate independently • Bacteria replicate independently

  26. Viral Classification • More complex than bacteria • Nucleic acid • DNA • RNA • Morphology • Enveloped • Naked

  27. DNA viruses And Associated Diseases

  28. Viruses by Electron Microscopy

  29. Chicken Pox Shingles Varicella Zoster Virus

  30. Small Pox

  31. RNA Viruses And Associated Disease

  32. Global status Polio 2003

  33. Noro Virus

  34. Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Viral Fungal Opportunistic Infections Opportunistic Infections Opportunistic Infections Parasites Bacterial Opportunistic Infections

  35. Viral Replication

  36. Viral Genome • DNA or RNA • Double-stranded • Single-stranded • RNA viruses • Intact or segmented

  37. Viral Replication-Key Points • Need to be in a live cell to replicate • Uses cell machinery for replication • Some individual differences according to viral genome and particular virus

  38. Fungi • Structure • Classification

  39. Fungi Classification Yeast Moulds Unicellullar,reproduce by budding Filamentous ,produce by spores

  40. Yeast-Candida Candida, Gram-stain Streptococci

  41. Candidiasis

  42. Moulds-Aspergillus Aspergillus flavus Top Bottom Aspergillus fumigatus

  43. Aspergillus , Microscopic appearance Scanning Electron Microscopy

  44. Mould sinus infection Mould Infections Aspergilloma

  45. The Role of Microbiologist in healthcare • Management of diagnostic laboratories • Management of infections • Antibiotics advice, choice and duration • Choice of appropriate investigations • Infection prevention and control in hospital and the community • Investigation, management and control of outbreaks of infections • MRSA, Clostridium difficile, Noro virus • Commissioning of theatres, decontamination of facilities and wards

  46. Never Forget Infection Control! Noro Virus

  47. Summary • Microbiology is a very interesting discipline • Spans across all medical specialties

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