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Simon Flexner:

Shigella flexneri. Simon Flexner:. Discoverer of Shigella dysenteriae (1899). Compiled by: Else Marais, Marlene Kassel, Naseema Aithma, Angela Potgieter Rob Stewart, Branca Fernandes, and Janet Loakes. Gastro-intestinal infections. Acute inflammatory enteritis: Campylobacter Salmonella

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Simon Flexner:

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  1. Shigella flexneri Simon Flexner: Discoverer of Shigella dysenteriae (1899) Compiled by: Else Marais, Marlene Kassel, Naseema Aithma, Angela Potgieter Rob Stewart, Branca Fernandes, and Janet Loakes

  2. Gastro-intestinal infections • Acute inflammatory enteritis: • Campylobacter • Salmonella • Shigella • Certain parasites

  3. Acute dysentery • Frequent small bowel movements • Blood and mucous • Tenesmus • Pain on defecation • Inflammatory invasion of intestinal mucosa • Bacterial, cytotoxic or parasitic destruction

  4. Overview of Shigella species • Small, Gram-negative rods • Non-motile, non-encapsulated • Family: Enterobacteriaceae; Tribe: Escherichieae; Genus Shigella • 40 serotypes, 4 groups: • A - Shigella dysenteriae • B - Shigella flexneri • C - Shigella boydii • D - Shigella sonnei

  5. Overview of Shigella species • Sensitive to heat, kill in 55 c in 1 hr • S.sonnei survive in soil & room temprature for 9-12 days • Survive on fingers for sometime & transmit through hand contact • If suitable,survive in milk & other food(15 days in sea water)

  6. Overview • Shigella species • 140-200 million people infected annually • 650,000 deaths per year, • worldwide(esp. developing countries) • intracellular pathogens • Incubation: 6 hrs to 9 days(1-7 days) • AB resistance (multiple) • 2/3 of all cases and most of deaths in < 10 y/o • Developing countries: 1-4 y/o but in • epidemics of S. dysenteriae all age group equal

  7. Overview • In 5-15 % of diarrhea & 30-50 % of dysentry • S.flexeneri : the most important in endemic shigellosis • Africa: 15 country with outbreak (30% attack rate in general population & 50% in < 5 y/o • Developed countries: children, daycare centers, immigrant workers, travelers to developing • 2/3 of cases in < 10 y/o

  8. بروز در سال 1383: 11/8 در 100 هزار نفر سيستان و بلوچستان(63)

  9. Iran • Tehran: 52% S.flexeneri, 37 % S.sonnei • Resistance to ampi, co-trimoxazole, tetra, amoxi, chloramphenicole, cephalotin(more in S.flexeneri) • The most effective AB is ciprofloxacin & then ceftizoxime • Shiraz: 60% S.flexeneri, 28% S.sonnei, 12% S.boydii, 34% in preschool age • Resistance to ampi, co-trimoxazole • Sensitive to nalidixic acid, ceftriaxone, ceftazidime, ciprofloxacin(100%)

  10. Descriptive epidemiology • Time trend • More common in warm seasons • Equal in both sexes • In temperate climate: warm season • In tropics: rainy season • Preschool & early school age • 1-4 y/o (adult get disease from children) • Infants(1- 6 mo) are resistant due to nursing

  11. Predisposing factors • HIV +( chronic & relapsing and causing bateremia in spite of AB) • Septicemia in Malnutrition, early infancy & S.dysenteriae type 1 • EL-Nino phenomenon • a dry not rainy winter & rainy spring increase in dysentery in summer

  12. Sensitivity & resistance • 10-100 micro-organism ingestion in volunteers: diarrhea in 10-40 % • More virulent in children, malnutrition, debilitated old-mostly sub-clinical in adults • Oral vaccine: some success (short- term) • Attenuated oral vaccine prevent clinical dx • 2nd attack rate in household contact: 40 % • Epidemics in crowding, bad public health( day care center, long term care center…)

  13. Transmission • Fecal-Oral(direct or indirect) from patient or carrier • No handwashing after bowel movement( direct contact) • Contaminated food( not usual but can cause major epidemics) • Carriers:without treatment microorganism shedding for 1-4 wks( but the number is low, so communicability is lower than pts) • Nosocomial infection: from pts to healthworkers & to other pts. • Shigella can survive on lab equipments for some time • Homosexual: oral-anal, penile-oral

  14. Transmission • Contaminated water & milk • 4-6 wks survive in water( shorter in sun-exposed water) • Pasteurization eliminate the mo. • Insects • Fly: mechanical, biological • Communicable for 4 wks

  15. Humans and primates: only reservoirs • Crowded living conditions • Poor quality water supplies • Inadequate sewage disposal • Increase risk of infection

  16. Clinical features • From asymptomatic to severe (Mortality rates vary from 5-10 %) • Bacilli ingested by epithelial cells of the intestinal villi • Organisms multiply and spread laterally into lamina propria • Inflammatory reaction develops with capillary thrombosis • Necrotic epithelium sloughed leading to ulceration • Severe cases may become life threatening

  17. Clinical features & natural history • 7-12 bowel movement/day • Watery, green or yellow, containing mucous blood or undigested food • Convulsion, Acute bloody dysentery • Fever, malaise, headache, abdominal pain • Usually self limited and recovery after 4-7 days, sometimes persistent diarrhea • HUS • Mortality in hospital: 20%

  18. تعريف اپيدميولوژيك ندارد. • گزارش غير فوري • در صورت بروز همه گيري گزارش فوري

  19. Virulence • S.dysenteriae forms potent exotoxin • Fluid transuding action as well as • Lipo-polysaccharide endotoxin • Described as a neurotoxin • Toxin levels of S.dysenteriae, highest • S.sonnei causes mild illness(short symptomatic period & and very low mortality) • S. flexneri and S.boydii range in severity • S.flexneri bacteremia, predisposed by ulcers

  20. Virulence • Commonly a self-limited disease(mild or mod) • 4-7 days(several days to weeks) • S.dysenteriae cause more severe disease(20% mortality in admitted patients) • If untreated: + stool culture for 30 days or more

  21. Molecular methods of detection • Isolation difficult • Genetic probe to the virulence-plasmid developed and being tested • PCR not routinely done for detection

  22. Outbreaks • From contaminated water or food • contaminated potato salad • inadequate toilet facilities • Origin of infection- food handler • Secondary transmission may occur • Flies aid transmission • Infants resistant to shigellosis • More in formula fed)

  23. Patterns of outbreaks • Cyclic patterns of 20-30 years • From 1900-1925 S.dysenteriae predominated while from 1926-1938, S.flexneri was common • Currently S.sonnei predominates in Europe and USA • S.flexneri is predominant in developing countries( with boydii& dysenteriae)

  24. Controlprimary prevention • Chlorinated water, waterborne sewage • Rigorous hand washing • Institutional outbreaks: Isolation of the infected • Infected food handlers - 2 negative cultures • Insecticides • After P/E of the patient: hand washing, disinfection of exam. Equipments • Vaccination: under trial

  25. primary prevention • Enteric precaution, disinfection of contaminated equipment & stool( if there is not modern sewage) • Infected person withhold from children, other pts and food handling: 2 consecutive stool culture in 24 hr interval 48 hr after D/C of AB • AB treatment of carriers( without any sign or symptoms) : not recommended • Common writing equipment(pen,…) • nursing

  26. Secondary Prevention • Early treatment shorten acute phase of disease & mo. shedding

  27. Treatment • Fluid replacement • Antimicrobial therapy- reduces duration of symptoms • Reduces secretion of organisms • Adults- oral ciprofloxacin or ofloxacin • Children- cotrimoxazole, ampicillin,nalidixic acid, ceftriaxone, azithromycin • Agents decreasing intestinal motility should not be used • Untreated lasts 1 day - 1 month (average 7days) • Complications - dehydration, seizures, septicaemia, pneumonia, keratoconjunctivitis and arthritis

  28. Travellers: • Eat well cooked food • Bottled water • Peel all fruit and vegetables • Perhaps use prophylactic flouroquinolones

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