Anaerobic Bacteria Flashcards
Types of anaerobic bacteria
- Obligate - harmed by presence of O2
- Facultative - can grow w/o 02 - can use O2 if present
- Microaerophiles - grow in low atmosphere of 02
Why do anaerobic bacteria grow slowly?
Slow process which isn’t as efficient (sulphate production) - anaerobic respects uses electron transport chain but final acceptor isn’t oxygen
Give example of where anaerobic bacteria may grow?
Sub-gingival plaque biofilm
What the major anaerobic spp in humans
Clostridium spp - large gram +ve
Virulence in clostridium spp
Produce endospores and exo-toxins
What is cl. Perfringes
Capsulated non-motile gram +ve rod
How detect cl. perfringes?
Nagles reaction - organism cultured on egg yolk media
One side contain anti-alpha toxin other side doesn’t not
Area turbidity form around side w/o toxic = uninhibited lecithinase activity
What disease are caused cl. perfringes?
- Gas gangrene - spore contamination of wounds –> oedema, gas formation, necrosis –> tx = surgery, ab
- Food poisoning - incubate 10-12hrs - cause abdominal cramp and diarrhoea (vomit unusual)
What disease caused cl. tetanus?
Acute spastic paralysis caused potent neuro-exotoxin - lockjaw (truisms) and rictus grin
How does cl. tetanus cause disease?
Enter body through wound/ splinter - spores in environment.
Grow in wound and toxin released into body
Track along CNS
How does tetanus toxin work?
A domain is active site, B domain has receptor binding
A = zinc endopeptidase which prevent release of inhibitor transmitter - no muscle relaxation
Tx tetanus?
Anti-toxin + penicillin and metronidazole
Prevent - immunisation
What is botulism?
Flaccid paralysis and neurological symptoms caused by ingestion of food w/ cl. botulism
Cause severe form of food poisoning
What toxin is associated w/ botulism?
7 types A-G (A,B, E most common)
Botox
What is c. difficile
Antibiotic associated diarrhoea - w/ broad spec ab inc. ampicillin and clindamycin