1-19 Spirochetes and Vibrios Flashcards
1
Q
What are some exapmles of spirochetes?
A
- Treponema: Syphilis, yaws, pinta
- Leptospira: Leptospirosis
- Borrelia: Lyme Disease, relapsing fever
2
Q
What are some recurring themes for spirochete infections?
A
- Wide variety of transmission methods
- Cross easily into bloodstream; some also cross blood-brain barrier
- Primary virulence factors are for immune evasion, which can decrease the host’s immune response, meaning . . .
- . . . no vaccines
3
Q
What is the pathogenesis of T. pallidum?
A
- Congenital syphilis: Treponemes readily cross placenta and infect fetus, resulting in a 40-50% chance of miscarriage/stillbirth/neonatal death
- T. pallidum penetrates mucous membranes/small abrasions, grows in blood vessel endothelium, and enters the lymphatics and bloodstream
- The CNS is invaded relatively early, though symptoms take years to develop
- Though the host raises specific anti-treponemal antibodies, immunity is incomplete; the surface of spirochetes is nonimmunogenic, and spirochetes down-regulate TH1 cells
4
Q
How are spirochete infections diagnosed?
A
- Diagnosis is challenging because of a wide variety of symptoms and several “phases” as spirochetes invade new organs
- T. pallidum (syphilis) is too small for standard microscopy; B. burgdorfi (Lyme Disease) has no reliable laboratory diagnostic
- Eye exam can be very useful (Argyll-Robertson pupil = hallmark of neurosyphilis, conjunctival suffusion and uveitis in leptospirosis)
5
Q
How are spirochete infections treated?
A
- If caught early, curable by standard antibiotics: little resistance
- If caught late, infection can still be cured easily, but recovery of nerves and immune system can take months to years, if ever
- Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction to treatment: flu-like symptoms occur 24h after antibiotic treatment, last 24-48h
6
Q
What are the stages of syphilis?
A
- Primary syphilis: painless chancre at site of transmission 3-6wks later, heals 3-12 wks; highly infectious
- Secondary syphilis: 4-10wks, systemic symptoms, mucocutaneous lesions of variable types, condylomata lata, patchy alopecia
- Tertiary syphilis: 1/3 untreated, fatalities possible; gummatous syphilis; cardiovascular syphilis (>10yrs); neurosyphilis
7
Q
What is Lyme disease? What is its mode of transmission, pathogenesis, process, and treatment?
A
- Tick-borne infection common in the Northeast US in the summer; reservoirs are small rodents and deer
- Lyme requires 24h to transmit; prompt removal of ticks can prevent disease
- 3 phases: skin infection (rash common) → immune/neurological issues → Chronic Lyme with more severe immune/neuro issues, fibromyalgia
- Antibiotic treatment: doxycycline for up to a month (contraindicated w/ pregnancy), Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction may help confirm diagnosis
8
Q
What are vibrios?
A
- Curved, Gram(-) rods
- Most vibrio pathogens are ocean-dwelling; several are halophiles
- Primarily cause fecal-oral gastroenteritis
- May also infect wounds contaminated by seawater or ocean debris
- H. pylori causes peptic ulcers
9
Q
How are vibrios transmitted?
A
- Fecal-oral route. Ugh
- Can also infect wounds contaminated by seawater or ocean debris
- Peptic ulcers
10
Q
What is V. cholerae?
A
- Curved, comma-shaped, motile Gram(-) rod
- Epidemic in London in 1854: John Snow and the Broad Street pump
- Transmitted by fecal-oral route; travels to untreated water or undercooked shellfish
- High infectious dose, usu. killed by stomach acid
- Surviving bacteria reach the small intestine, secrete mucinase to clear the path to the brush border, attach, and colonize
- After colonizing, bacteria secrete choleragen (A-B subunit enterotoxin that interferes with signal transduction), causing massive watery diarrhea
- Dehydration and electrolyte imbalance
- Infection is self-limited in a previously-healthy host