1 / 38

NEISSERIA GONORRHOEAE

NEISSERIA GONORRHOEAE. Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser. Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser was a German physician who specialized in dermatology and venereal diseases. He  discovered gonococcus (1879), the small bacterium that causes gonorrhoea. Gonorrhea.

jonest
Download Presentation

NEISSERIA GONORRHOEAE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NEISSERIA GONORRHOEAE

  2. Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser • Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser was a German physician who specialized in dermatology and venereal diseases. • He  discovered gonococcus (1879), the small bacterium that causes gonorrhoea.

  3. Gonorrhea • The name Gonorrhea is derived from Greek words- Gonos ( seed ) rhoia ( flow ) • Describes a condition in which semen flowed from the male organ without erection,

  4. Gonorrhea – Venereal Disease • Gonorrhea is a classical venereal disease, being spread almost exclusively by sexaul contact having a short incubation period and being relatively easy to diagnose and treat.

  5. Neisseria gonorrhea • Neisseria gonorrhea are gram negative oval cocci with opposing surfaces slightly concave ( Bean shaped )

  6. Neisseria gonorrhea • Neisseria species are Gram-negative cocci, 0.6 to 1.0 µm in diameter. • The organisms are usually seen in pairs with the adjacent sides flattened. • Pili, hairlike filamentous appendages extend several micrometers from the cell surface. • The outer membrane is composed of proteins, phospholipids, and Lipopolysacchride (LPS)

  7. N.gonnorhea infects mucous membrane • Gram-negative intracellular diplococci of the species Neisseria gonorrhoea, the cause of gonorrhoea; • a nonmotile aerobic microorganism of the species N. gonorrhoea. • It is a parasite of the mucous membrane.

  8. Pathogenesis • N.gonnorhea is Human pathogen. • Chimpanges can be infected artificially • Women may remain Asymptomatic • Gonorrhea infection is generally limited to superficial mucosal surfaces lined by columnar epithelium.

  9. PATHOGENESIS

  10. The Organs and Tissues involved • Cervix • Urethra • Rectum • Pharynx • Conjunctiva • Vaginal epithelium – covered with Squamous epithelium not infected • However prepubertal vaginal epithelium is infected in young girls present with vulvovaginitis

  11. CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS

  12. Pathogenesis ( contd ) • Gonorrhea is Venereal disease • The disease is acquired by sexaul contact. • In general incubation is 2 -8 days • In men the disease starts as purulent discharge containing gonococci in large numbers. • The disease spreads to prostate, seminal vesicle, and epididymis • In men chronic urethritis may lead to stricture formation

  13. Clinical Presentation in Males • Majority of males present with acute Urethritis with purulent discharge • 5% of patients carry bacteria without distress • Rectal and Pharyngeal infections are less often symptomatic

  14. Clinical Presentation in Females • Endocervix infection is the most common presentation in women • Present with vaginal discharge and Dysuria • Infection and abscess of Bartholin and Skene’s glands

  15. Complications of GC Infections in Women • Infertility • Ectopic Pregnancy • Chronic Pelvic Pain • Psychosocial Upper Tract Infection Local Invasion Systemic Infection Genital Infection Congenital Infection HIV Infection

  16. Other Manifestations • Rectal infection (Proctitis) with N.gonnorhea occurs one third of women with cervical infection. • Rarely symptomatic. • Acute salphingits • Pelvic inflammatory disease • Sterility

  17. Other Manifestations • Peritonitis can spread • Fitz Hugh Curtis Syndrome. • Disseminated gonococcus infection • Painful Joints may lead to Arthritis • Fever, Few septic lesions on the extremities • Meingitis and Endocarditis

  18. Gonococcal Opthalmia • Babies born to infected women suffer, can lead to a serious condition of Opthalmia neonatroum • Manifest with sever purulent discharge with periorbital edema within a few days of birth • Topical application of 1% silver nitrate has drastically reduced the incidence. • In present contest Topical erythromycin is used.

  19. Gonococcal infection in Prepubertal Girls • Vulvo-vaginitis in prepubertal girls occur in conditions of poor hygiene or by sexual abuse • All cases to be investigated with care and caution.

  20. Disseminated Infections • Seen more commonly in women who may present with painful joints, fever, and few septic lesions or the extremities • Rarely disseminated infections may present as Endocarditis or meningitis.

  21. Laboratory Diagnosis • Specimens are collected with care and caution. • Specimens are collected from sites with scanty commensals eg Endocervix

  22. Transportation of Specimens • It is preferred in culture, specimens should be inoculated in prewarmed plates, immediately on collection • If not possible specimen should be collected on charcoal impregnated swabs and sent to laboratory in Stuart’s transport medium.

  23. GC Diagnostic Methods • Gram stain smear • Culture • Antigen Detection Tests: EIA & DFA • Nucleic Acid Detection Tests • Probe Hybridization • Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests (NAATs) • Hybrid Capture

  24. Gram stain (male urethra exudate) DNA probe Culture NAATs * Sensitivity 90-95% 85-90% 80-95% 90-95% Gonorrhea Diagnostic Tests Specificity >95% >95% >99%  98% * Able to use URINE specimens

  25. Gram Staining • Gram’s method of staining is sensitive in 95% of infections. • The demonstration of intracellular Gram negative intracellular diplococci in stained smears provides a presumptive evidence of gonorrhea in men. • Specimens are inoculated onto culture plates freshly prepared. • Delay in inoculation of specimens on culture media reduces the rate of isolation.

  26. GC Culture Candle Jar

  27. Culturing Gonococci • Gonococci are aerobic and may grow aerobically • It is essential to provide 5 – 10% CO2 • They grow well on Chocolate agar and Mueller – Hinton agar • The colonies are small, convex, translucent, and slightly umbonate, with finely granular surface and lobate margins.

  28. Selective Culture Medium • The selective medium is Thayer – Martin medium containing Vancomycin, colistin, and Nystatin, effectively inhibits most contaminants including non pathogenic Neisseria

  29. Culturing is possible in specialized diagnostic laboratories only. • The combination of Oxidase positivecolonies andGram negative diplococci provides a presumptive diagnosis.

  30. Fluorescent Methods • Florescent methods will help in prompt detection in infected patients • Various discharges can be examined.

  31. Other Methods in Diagnosis • Co agglutination methods • Biochemical tests to differentiate from other commensals resembling Neisseria spp

  32. Treatment • Penicillin was a popularly used antibiotic. However resistance has reduced it utility. • For a long time the drug resistance has overcome with increased dosage • Complete resistance to penicillin has made the drug obsolete in several parts of the world.

  33. Genes Code resistance • The penicillin resistant strains possess the gene coding for TEM-type ß-lactamase commonly found Escherichia coli

  34. Other Drugs in current use • Ceftriaxone • Cefixime • Fluoroquinolones • Ciprofloxacin • Tetracycline • Co- Amoxiclav • Spectinomycin In Disseminated Gonococcal disease and any complicated infection treatment for 7-10 days is necessary

  35. Controlling Gonorrhea • The key control measures in gonorrhea are 1 Rapid diagnosis 2 Use of effective antibiotics 3 Tracing, examination and treatment of contacts. 4 Inappropriate self medication has contributed to widespread antimicrobial resistance.

  36. NON-GONOCOCCAL URETHRITIS • Chronic urethritis where gonococci cannot be demonstrated. • Can be considered as non-specific urethritis. • Urethritis forms part of the syndrome consisting of conjunctivitis and arthritis (Reiter's syndrome). • May be also due to Gonococcal infection, the cocci persisting as l-forms and hence undetectable by routine tests.

  37. CAUSATIVE AGENTS: • Chlamydia trachomatis • Ureaplasma urelyticum. • Mycoplasma hominis. • Herpes virus • Cytomegalo virus. • Trichomonas vaginalis. • Candida albicans. • Can also be due to mechanical or chemical irritation. • Management: difficult.

More Related