1-30 Mycobacteria Flashcards
What is the bacteriology of M. tuberculosis?
- Very successful pathogen: 1/3 of Earth’s pop. is infected
- Multidrug resistance is becoming a global health emergency
- Resistance is chromosomal; no known plasmids
- Grows in vitro, but very slowly, and requires special nutrients
- Obligate aerobe: colonization is restricted to oxygen-rich parts of the body (CNS, kidney, lung, lymph nodes, ends of long bones)
- Produce no toxins
- Gram stain very poorly, but are almost uniquely acid-fast
What is the pathogenesis of M. tuberculosis?
- Transmission is almost always to lung by inhalation, to lymph nodes, kidney, bones, CNS by hematogenous spread, to GI by swallowing infected sputum
- Immunocompetent host raises strong CMI response, can hold infection latent for decades; immunosenescence or -suppression reactivates
- Hematogenous spread by intracellular infection of naive macrophages (Trojan Horse); activated ones clear it, CD8 cells kill infected macrophages and establish caseating granulomas in which infection is contained
- Extrapulmonary manifestations are usually reactivations: scrofula in neck, genitourinary, CNS (meningitis or abscess), skeletal (long bone or spine), GI (very rare for now)
- Pediatric: must have been recently acquired (trace source), watch for miliary and meningitis (lethal primary infections)
What are the classic symptoms of M. tuberculosis, and what is the basic diagnostic procedure?
The classic symptoms of Tb can be seen in ~75% of patients:
- Cough
- Weight loss (“consumption”)
- Fever
- Night sweats
- Hemoptysis
- Chest pain
Check sputum and chest x-ray.
What are some risk factors for M. tuberculosis?
- Crowded at-risk environments (prisons, hospitals, homeless shelters)
- HIV
Additionally, a risk factor for poor outcomes is any immunosuppressive factor:
- Uncontrolled HIV (inadequate HAART)
- Steroids
- IFNɣ deficiency
- TNF-alpha antagonists (Remicade)
- Age <5yrs, >65yrs
What is the procedure for microscopic acid-fast differential staining?
Acid-fastness is an uncommon characteristic shared by Mycobacteria and Nocardia, which makes this stain extremely helpful in identification of these bacteria. Since their cell walls are very impermeable, a special stain is needed; carbolfuchsin is lipid-soluble and contains phenol, and can penetrate the cell wall with heat. Non-acid-fast cells are then decolorized and counterstained.
What are atypical mycobacteria?
Atypical mycobacteria are environmentally-acquired infections that cause neither TB nor leprosy.
- Infection in an immunocompetent adult is usu. cutaneous; scrofula in children; immunosuppressed hosts may have systemic symptoms that mimic TB, particularly from M. kansasii or MAI/C
- Infections may be difficult to treat once established; require multiple antibiotics
What is the bacteriology and pathogenesis of M. leprae?
- NO IN VITRO CULTURE SYSTEM
- Extremely long incubation period
- Transmits through nasal secretions and skin lesions, but not easily (only 5-10% of humans believed susceptible to disease)
- Hansen’s Disease (leprosy) presents on a range from Tuberculoid (paucibacillary, vigorous CMI both contains infection and damages nerves, PPD+) to Lepromatous (multibacillary, weak CMI, extensive cutaneous symptoms, PPD-)