1 / 43

Microbiology – Chapter 13

Microbiology – Chapter 13. Pathology: Science of study of disease Etiology: Cause of disease; often microbial Flu – etiological agent, Influenza virus Tb – M. tuberculosis Pathogenesis: development of disease in the host - Norwalk virus; Fecal – oral, diarrhea

Download Presentation

Microbiology – Chapter 13

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. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Pathology: Science of study of disease Etiology: Cause of disease; often microbial Flu – etiological agent, Influenza virus Tb – M. tuberculosis Pathogenesis: development of disease in the host - Norwalk virus; Fecal – oral, diarrhea Disease: altered state of health, host body is changed, upset of homeostasis

  2. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Epidemiology: Science of the study of how diseases are acquired and spread in a population Outside assignment 3: Note that the last question has been changed to focus on MDR bacterial infections. Be sure to get a copy of the last page from instructor ** You may have to do some research ato answer all of the questions. Use other Micro. Books or other research tools. ***

  3. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Relationship between organisms: Normal flora: normal inhabitants of the host ex. S.epidermidis on skin, E.coli in intestine Commensalism – One organism benefits; the other unaffected; can be opportunistic infector Mutualism: both benefit; E. coli makes us Vit. K; We provide nice environment and food

  4. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Parasitism: One benefits at the other’s expense; tapeworm or leach Virulence: potency; how quickly they infect, spread, cause tissue damage or disease symptoms Influenza A H5N1, very virulent form of flu, or encapsulated pneumococci Virulence factors: factors that cause disease or aid in spread of disease quickly in host or to other hosts (more later)

  5. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Pathogen: actual agent of disease, MRSA – S. aureus BACTERIAL, VIRAL, FUNGAL, HELMINTH Carrier: Infected healthy individual, no symptoms (asymptomatic), or very mild form of disease, yet they both can spread disease to others – many bacterial and viral pathogens Classic case was typhoid Mary (look it up)

  6. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Reservoir: Where pathogen is maintained , can be in an organism (animal), in the environment (stagnant water - Legionella), or even in soil (Clostridia) Vector: Agent that spreads pathogens from host to host 1. Arthropod: flea; mosquito, tick 2. Inanimate: things, toys, dirty hands, needles, (sometimes called “fomites”)

  7. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Nosocomial infections: hospital acquired infections – see table in text and know it Next slide****** MRSA both HA and CA Pseudomonas - respiratory impaired, burn patients E. coli and Proteus – UTI; long term catheter patients

  8. Fig. 13.13

  9. Review Koch’s postulates

  10. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Nine routes of infection **** Know this; be able to list and give an example of each**** 1. Respiratory droplets: cough sneeze, air born droplets Flu, colds, Strep throat even Staph infections of wounds

  11. Fig. 13.12

  12. Microbiology – Chapter 13 2. Fomites Inanimate objects that spread disease agents Shared drinking cups, baby toys in a nursery, contaminated sharps ** add pictures**

  13. Microbiology – Chapter 13 3. Direct body contact- Oh what fun!! Person to person: STD, Impetigo

  14. Microbiology – Chapter 13 4. Fecal – Oral Feces contamination of food water, even dirty hands (hands are a vector, or even a house fly or roach) Enteric diarrheal disease;Helminth Protozoans: Giardia, Balntidium

  15. Microbiology – Chapter 13 5. Arthropod Vectors Flies, fleas, mosquito, tick

  16. Fig. 13.11

  17. Microbiology – Chapter 13 6. Airborne Particles suspended in air (dry; dust), travel long distances; tb, anthrax spores (potential for WMD), Respiratory fungal infections (Histoplasma)

  18. Microbiology – Chapter 13 7. Parenteral Direct transmission via blood: universal precautions HIV, HVB, HVC

  19. Microbiology – Chapter 13 8. Deep Wound trauma Gas gangrene and tetanus, even wound botulism Beaman’s world infant tetanus

  20. Microbiology – Chapter 13 9. Horizontal: Mother to infant Prenatal: across the placenta; HIV Perinatal: at birth, STD like gonorrhea and syphilis, even Chlamydia blindness

  21. Microbiology – Chapter 13 • 9. Horizontal: Mother to infant • Perinatal: at birth, STD like gonorrhea and syphilis, even Chlamydia blindness

  22. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Virulence factors Virulence factors – factors that aid or enhances the microbes ability to invade and spread within the host (know for test) Ex. List the categories of “virulence” factors in microbes; explain each category, and give an example of a disease causing agent for each category. Adherence: In order for a microbe to cause disease it first must adhere to a host surface. Some microbes produce materials or structures that allow them to adhere (stick) to membranes or surfaces, and thus escape defenses Pili (fimbriae) – Neisseria gonorrhea, if a strain has no pili it is not pathogenic. The chemicals that allow such attachment are called “adhesins” – They are often glycoproteins or protein that bind to receptors on host cell surfaces. Glycocalyx – The capsule again is a tightly bound polyscaccharide material on the outside of certain bacterial cells (part of a bacterial envelope). Streptococcus pneumoniae is good example. Virulent strains are encapsulated; non-virulent strains are not. Recall the classic “Griffith experiment” from chapter 9? Transformation? Spikes – Viral envelopes of some viruses, Influenza a, H5N1

  23. Fig. 13.4

  24. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Other adhesions N. menigitidis (bacterial meningitis agent) produces protein a, a surface adhesion on the pili Mycoplasma pneumonia (atypical bacterial pneumonia) has a surface adhesion that binds to receptor on mucus membrane lining of the respiratory tract

  25. Virulence Factors Other Adhesions SEM of Pseudomonas, Gram (-)

  26. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Toxins – Poisonous microbial bypoducts that are produced by the microbe and diffuse into tissues causing damage/ enhance invasion/ avoid defenses Exotoxins – excreted outside of cell, both Gram+ and Gram – bacteria produce some of these highly destructive proteins. Staphylococcus aureus - Staph exotoxin that causes FBI Another causes “SSSS” Staph Scalded Skin Syndrome (exfoliate) C. botulinum – most powerful neurotoxin, - a taste can kill you Streptococcus pyogenes - has several tissue destroying toxins; Necrotoxin of flesh eating Strep would be a good example. Endotoxin – Released by many Gram (-) bacteria when cells lyse, Examples: Lipid A, lps in many pathogenic enteric bacteria like Shigella, can cause high fevers and even shock.

  27. Endotoxin - Lipid A – raises fever, and shock in Gram (-) pathogens

  28. Endotoxin - Lipid A – raises fever, and shock in Gram (-) pathogens

  29. Fig. 13.6

  30. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Enzymes that help invasion Collagenase – breaks down collagen, the protein holding cells together, thus allows spreading. Clostridia that invade tissue can produce these proteases to digest connective tissue elements (C. perfringens) Hyaluronidase – breaks down hyaluronic acid, the polysachharide that may hold some cells together, S. pyogenes produces such an enzyme Causes necrosis and blackening of tissue (inches of progression in hours) Coagulase – Affects the fibrin in blood causing it to clot, Staph aureus produces one and maybe prevents phagocytosis. Hemolysin – This exotoxin is an enzyme and lyses RBC. S. pyogenes Alpha and Beta Hemolysis of the Strep.

  31. Virulence Factors • Enzymes: Collagenase, Hyaluronidase

  32. Virulence Factors • Enzymes: Hemolysin – lyse RBC

  33. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Evading defenses – Once in tissue some organisms can “evade” the natural defense of a host. Capsule – Phagocytes can’t engulf the pathogen – S. pneumoniae Surface proteins – Proteins prevent phagocytosis (leukostatin, leukocydins of Staph and Strep) Survive inside phagocyte – Get a free ride and spread (Tubercle bacillus, Listeria bacillus, and others) Evade immune response - Genetic variability occurs and the result is that antibodies lose effectiveness quickly – genetic shift/drift of the antigenic nature of the Influenza A virus, (FDA today is meeting to SWAG for next years vaccine)

  34. Virulence Factors • Evade defenses: Capsule – resisting phagocytosis, Strep.

  35. Virulence Factors • Adherence: Glycocalyx (capsule)

  36. Virulence Factors • Surface proteins : Leukocydin, S. aureus • (MRSA) – Attacks WBC’S

  37. M. tuberculosis inside lung macrophage

  38. Virulence Factors • Survive inside phagocyte, tubercle bacillus

  39. Evading immune response • Influenza

  40. Virulence Factors • Evade immune response : Influenza A • H5N1 – “Bird Flu”

  41. Microbiology – Chapter 13 Iron binding – Iron is tightly bound in our bodies and microbes need it to grow, Those organisms that can acquire it have and advantage and can spread faster; more virulent – Cholera is an example, HIB (H. influenza B)

More Related