1-30 Mycobacteria Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the bacteriology of M. tuberculosis?

A
  • 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
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2
Q

What is the pathogenesis of M. tuberculosis?

A
  • 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)
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3
Q

What are the classic symptoms of M. tuberculosis, and what is the basic diagnostic procedure?

A

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.

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4
Q

What are some risk factors for M. tuberculosis?

A
  • 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
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5
Q

What is the procedure for microscopic acid-fast differential staining?

A

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.

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6
Q

What are atypical mycobacteria?

A

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
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7
Q

What is the bacteriology and pathogenesis of M. leprae?

A
  • 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-)
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