Bartonella, Chromobacterium, Riemerella, Ornithobacterium, Streptobacillus Flashcards

1
Q

Bartonella is an _____, _______, Gram- _____coccobacilli (_____ _____)

A

aerobic, fastidious, negative, short rods
This is the most important bacteria of this section.

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2
Q

Bartonella is _____ by ______ flagella

A

Motile, lophotrichous
At one or both ends

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3
Q

Bartonella is a facultative ______ bacteria

A

intracellular

Capable of living inside or outside the host cell. Difficult to control

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4
Q

Bartonella is found in ____ and ______ animals (particularly in ___)

A

wild, domestic, cats

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5
Q

Bartonella is an _____ pathogen –> (______)

A

opportunistic, Bartonellosis

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6
Q

Bartonella
 Prevalent in _____ and _____ regions

A

warmer, humid

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7
Q

Bartonella is transmitted by an ______ vector ( ___ fleas)

A

arthropod, cat

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8
Q

What is seen here?

A

Bartonella

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9
Q

What is seen here?

A
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10
Q

What is the vector of B. Henselae?

A

Cat fleas

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11
Q

What is the B. Henselae
Reservoir?

A

Cats

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12
Q

What are incidental hosts of B. Henselae?

A

Humans
Dogs
Cats

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13
Q

What are the clinical features of B. Henselae ?

A

Human: cat scratch disease,
endocarditis
Dog: endocarditis
Cat: subclinical or
bacteremia

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14
Q

What is the vector for B. bacilliformis?

A

Sand flies

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15
Q

What is the reservoir for B. bacilliformis?

A

Humans

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16
Q

What is the incidental host for B. bacilliformis?

A

Humans

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17
Q

What is the clinical features of B. baciliformis?

A

Carrion’s disease
- endemic in Andean valleys

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18
Q

What is the vector of B. quintana?

A

Body lice

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19
Q

What is the reservoir of B. quintana?

A

Humans

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20
Q

What are incidental hosts of B. quintana?

A

Humans
Dogs
Cats

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21
Q

What are the clinical features of B. quintana?

A

Trench fever

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22
Q

Cats are reservoirs for ?

A

Bartonella henselae

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23
Q

Which strains of Bartonella are most commonly encountered clinically?

A

B. Henselae, B. bacilliformis, B. quintana

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24
Q
A

Cats are reservoirs for Bartonella Hensilae.
Most are asymptomatic –> tranasmit bartonella to other cats thorugh fleas. While most subclinical, can develop feline bartonellosis (kittens, stressed, comorbidity).
B. Henselae can be transmitted ot dogs, which are more severely effected. Endocarditis is a common side effect in dogs.

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25
Bartonella are _______ bacteria
zoonotic
26
Describe the pathogenesis of Bartonella
Occurs after a cat scratch. Fleas on cats carry bartonella, feed on blood and excrete bartonella in feces. End up under cats claws during grooming. Cat scratches human --> swollen lymph nodes
27
Symptoms of cat scratch disease in Immunocompetent individuals
Local lymphadenopathy (swollen lymph nodes) 1 to 3 weeks after exposure --> Endocarditis
28
What are the symptoms of cat scratch disease in Immunocompromised individuals?
E.g HIV patients B. H , --> Bacillary angiomatosis (proliferation of new vessels ) --> every organ system Bacteria enter endothelial cells and trigger IL-8 production which promotes vascular lesion on skin. Lesions associated with nearly every organ system.
29
What are the general symptoms of cat scratch disease?
fever, fatigue, loss of appetite, weight loss, etc.
30
What is the path of development of bartonella in cats?
Fleas transmit Bartonella via excreteion. Bartonella colonize the skin where they enter into migratory cells and then travel to blood stream where they bind to and invade erythrocytes. Replicate and persist. Get out of host by blood sucking arthropod and infect another host.
31
Virulence factors of Bartonella - Attachment ─ Multiple ______ ─ Bartonella ______ ____ (BadA) ─ Filamentous ________ ─ ___ system
flagella = highly mobile, adhesin A aka BadA= outer membrane protein for optimal adhesion, agglutionation, biofilm formation and helps prevent phagocytosis, hemagglutinin & Trw = not yet characterized and seem to mediate adhesion to erthrocyte
32
Virulence factors of Bartonella - Secretion and Invasion ─ ____/____ ‐T4SS ─ ____ proteins* ─ ______
VirB/VirD4, IalAB, * = Invasion-associated locus A and B (ialAB), Hemolysin Type 4 = bind to host cell and secerete effector proteins iaIAB = involved in the invasion of erythrocytes Hemolysins = hemolyses RBCs. Intracellular pathogen of RBCs, which is important because protects from host Immune repsonse and AB treatment, but contributes to effective transmission.
33
Is this BadA+ or BadA-?
BadA+
34
Is this BadA+ or BadA-?
BadA-
35
36
What diagnostic tests would you run to determine if your patient was positive for Bartonella bacterium?
1. Identify if bacterium is present. 2. Serological testing 3. Histology 5. Radiographs
37
How would you identify if Bartonalla bacterium is present? What samples would you need to collect in order to perform these diagnostic tests?
--> Identification of bacteria 1. Specimens: blood and tissues 2. Blood-enriched media (3-4 weeks) 3. Warthin-Starry stain 4. PCR or sequencing
38
What serological tests would you run to determine if your patient was infected with Bartonalla bacterium? What samples would you need to collect in order to perform these diagnostic tests?
--> Serological tests 1. Specimens: blood 2. Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) 3. Immunofluorescence antibody (IFA) *** Not recommended for cats due to false positive results; dogs are usually blood culture negative PCR negative.
39
It is important to look at histological slides to look for?
Inflammation
40
Would taking radiographs be helpful in this case? Explain why or why not?
Yes because Radiographs (pulmonary edema and cardiac enlargement)
41
What can you see here?
Warthin-Starry stain Bartonella
42
What is seen here?
Bartonella
43
How would you treat a patient positive for Bortanella?
Treatment is usually not necessary (cats can develop fever for 2-3 days and then recover) 1. Antibiotic treatment takes a long time, 4-6 weeks - Doxycycline - Rifampin - Amoxicillin - Enrofloxacin (No use in cats)
44
How can you control the spread of Bortanella?
Control 1. No vaccine 2. Prevention of cat scratches and bites 3. Flea control 4. Wash with soap and water immediately after you are scratched.
45
Streptobacillus moniliformis is a highly ________, _______, Gram-_____, non-_____, facultative ______ bacilli
pleomorphic, filamentous, negative, motile, anaerobic
46
Streptobacillus moniliformis is a ________, _______ bacteria
fastidious, microaerophilic
47
Streptobacillus moniliformis has ___ variant types in morphology: 1. ______ form (pathogenic) 2. ___ form (non-pathogenic): - Lack of a ____ ____
two, Bacillary, L, cell wall Bacillary form = occurs normally and is pathogenic Can conform to L form under unfavorable conditions
48
Streptobacillus moniliformis is present in the _____ respiratory tract of rodents and is also found in which species?
upper, mice, guinea pigs, gerbils, and squirrels
49
Streptobacillus moniliformis is a causative agent of ____ _____ _____. - Streptobacillus moniliformis in the ___. - _____ ____ in Asia (known as sodoku).
rat bite fever, US, Spirillum minus
50
What is seen here?
Streptobacillus moniliformis
51
What is seen here?
Streptobacillus moniliformis
52
How is rat bite fever transmitted?
1. Rat bite or contact (mouth or nose of infected rodent --> human) 2. Ingestion of contaminated products (Haverhill fever = first outbreak here) 3. Transmission from rats to cats and dogs to humans --> abscess --? dogs can be a vector and transmit to humans
53
What are the clinical symptoms of rat bite fever?
fever, rash, joint and muscle pain, headache, vomiting, sore throat
54
What are the complications of rat bite fever?
abscess, pneumonia, hepatitis, nephritis, meningitis, endocarditis
55
Streptobacillus moniliformis are ______ bacteria associated with _____ contact
zoonotic, rodent
56
What is seen here?
Rat bite fever
57
What specimens would you collect to determine if your patient is suffering from rat bite fever (S. monoliformis)?
blood, synovial fluid, pus, exudates, and tissue lesions
58
How would you isolate the bacterium (S. monoliformis) to determine if your patient is infected?
Brain hear infusion enriched with 15% blood, 20% horse or calf serum, or 5% ascetic fluid in 5-10% CO2 at 35-37°C for up to 7 days (fastidious bacteria)
59
How would you identify the bacterium (S. monoliformis) to determine if your patient is infected?
1. Blood agar: Non-hemolytic, small, greyish colonies 2. L-form colonies stained by Dienes’ stain (‘fried-egg’ appearance)
60
What biochemical tests would you collect to determine if your patient is suffering from rat bite fever (S. monoliformis)?
Catalase(-), Oxidase(-)
61
What serological tests would you collect to determine if your patient is suffering from rat bite fever (S. monoliformis)?
PCR-based assay
62
What is seen here?
S. moniliformis on blood agar
63
What is seen here?
S. moniliformis L forms
64
How would you treat of S. moniliformis infection?
--> Antibiotic therapy 1. Penicillin 2. Doxycycline 3. Tetracycline 4. Cephalosporins 5. Surgical drainage
65
Chromobacterium violaceum is a Gram-______, facultative _______ ____ shaped bacterium.
negative, anaerobic, rods
66
Chromobacterium violaceum is a ____ by ____ or _____ flagella
Motile, polar, lateral
67
Chromobacterium violaceum produces a ____ pigment (______)
violet, violacein
68
Chromobacterium violaceum is present in ___ and ____ of _______ and ______ regions
soil, water, subtropical, tropical
69
Chromobacterium violaceum is an _______ pathogen of ______ (species?)
opportunistic, mammals, humans, pigs, dogs, etc.
70
Chromobacterium violaceum leads to ______ ______ disease
fatal systemic
71
What can be seen in the images below?
Chromobacterium violaceum
72
Violacein is an _______.
antibiotic Secete mebrane vesicles containig violacein, and is bacteriocidal towards gram + especilly staph auerus and use vesicles to to ? violacein and trasnport to microbes.
73
74
Violacein has an antibiotic activity against ______-_____ bacteria
Gram-positive
75
Symptoms of C. violaceum in humans include _____ _____ and _______ --> ?
skin abscesses, septicemia, multi-organ abscess, pneumonia Mortality rate if 53%.
76
What is seen here?
C. violaceum
77
What is an example of C. violaceum infection in a horse?
* A 3-year-old Quarter Horse stallion − Recurrent episodes of pneumonia − Fever (41.3°C) and severe dyspnea − Multiple nodules in the lung − Pinpoint lesions in the liver and kidney − Petechiae in the brain and spinal cord * Rod-shaped bacteria in the lesions − Violet-pigmented colonies on cultures − Gram (-), catalase (+), motility (+) − API 20E system − 16S rRNA gene sequencing
78
What is seen here?
C. violaceum infection in a horse Multiple nodules in the lung
79
What is seen here?
C. violaceum infection in a horse Petechiae in the brain and spinal cord
80
C. violaceum infection in two dogs from Florida Clinical signs? * Skin _____ * No ____ *_____-pigmented colonies on cultures * _____ and _____ administration with _______.
necrosis, fever, Violet, Surgery, antibiotic, fluoroquinolones
81
What is seen here?
Skin necrosis C. violaceum
82
What is seen here?
C. violaceum Debridement of tissues
83
What specimens would you collect if you suspect your patient is infected with C. violaceum?
Specimens: blood, tissues, or exudates
84
How would you isolate C. violaceum from the samples you collected from your patient?
Isolation and identification: 1. Grow well on nutrient agar, blood agar and MacConkey agar media with violet pigments - Almond-like smell - β-hemolysis - Biochemical tests: Catalase (+), Oxidase (+) - PCR assay or MALDI-TOF MS systems
85
C. violaceum is resistant to which antibiotics?
cephalosporins and ampicillin
86
C. violaceum antibiotic therapy?
1. Fluoroquinolones 2. Aminoglycosides 21
87
What is seen here?
C. violaceum
88
Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) is a gram-______, non-____, microaerophilic, pleomorphic rods.
negative, motile
89
Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) is found from many ____ and _______ species of birds
wild, domesticated
90
Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) is an emerging _____ pathogen --> (________)
poultry, Ornithobacteriosis
91
Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) is an ____, contagious _______ disease (______ and _______) in what bird species?
acute, respiratory, pneumonia, airsacculitis, chickens, turkeys, and older birds
92
Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) spreads via ______ and _____ transmission.
horizontal, vertical
93
Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT) is not a ______ bacterium.
zoonotic
94
What is seen here?
Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale (ORT)
95
Clinical symptoms of ORT in chickens includes?
1. Coughing 2. Reduced weight gain 3. Reduced egg production 4. Airsacculitits 5. Pneumonia
96
What is seen here?
Airsacculitits with accumulation of yoghurt-like exudates
97
What is seen here?
Pneumonia with accumulation of fibrin in the parabronchial space
98
Isolating and identifying ORT: 1. Sample: (3) 2. _____ blood agar: _______, ____, ____, ____, non- ______ colonies at 37°C with 5-10% ____ 3. No growth on _____ agar 4. Biochemical tests: Oxidase (__), Catalase (___) 4. ____ test
tracheal swabs, lungs, and air sacs Sheep, Pinpoint, circular, small, grey, hemolytic, CO2, MacConkey, +, -, PCR
99
How would you treat your patient suffering from ORT?
Amoxicillin administered in drinking water for 3-7 days at 200 ppm
100
What is seen here?
ORT Sheep blood agar: Pinpoint, circular, small, grey, non-hemolytic colonies
101
Riemerella anatipestifer is Non-____ forming, non- ____, Gram-______ ___.
spore, motile, negative, rods
102
Riemerella anatipestifer is ________ in the environment and is found in ___ and _____ ___ species.
ubiquitous, wild, domestic, bird
103
Riemerella anatipestifer is a causative agent of _______ ____.
duck septicemia
104
Riemerella anatipestifer is a causative agent of duck septicemia a new duck disease found in ?
domestic ducks, geese, turkeys, chickens, and other wild birds
105
Riemerella anatipestifer has a ____ mortality (~75%) in ducklings up to __ weeks of age.
high, 6
106
Riemerella anatipestifer ____-to-____ transmission through ______ tract and ___ wounds
Bird, Bird, respiratory, skin If infection occurs on a farm it becomes endemic.
107
What is seen here?
Riemerella anatipestifer
108
What are the clinical symptoms of Riemerella anatipestifer?
- Ocular and nasal discharges - Sneezing and coughing - Leg paddling - Head and neck tremors - Incoordination - Depression and anorexia - Greenish diarrhea
109
Describe the post-mortem lesions found in a patient suffering from Riemerella anatipestifer.
- Fibrinous pericarditis - Fibrinous Perihepatitis - Fibrinous meningitis - Fibrinous airsacculitis - Pneumonia may be present - Fibrin present over liver and heart.
110
What is seen here?
Riemerella anatipestifer Fibrinous adhesions between the epicardium and pericardial sac
111
What is seen here?
Fibrinous capsular hepatitis and pericarditis
112
What specimens would you collect if you suspected your patient was positive for R. anatipestifer?
Swabs from infected tissues
113
What cultures would you use if you suspected your patient was positive for R. anatipestifer?
Blood or chocolate agar: Small, transparent, and glistening colonies at 37°C in 5-10% CO2 for 48-72 hours (non-hemolytic) No growth on MacConkey agar
114
What biochemical tests would you run if you suspected your patient was positive for R. anatipestifer?
Biochemical tests: Catalase (+) and oxidase (+)
115
What serological tests would you run if you suspected your patient was positive for R. anatipestifer?
 MALDI-TOF mass-spectrometry  PCR based techniques
116
What is seen here?
R. anatipestifer Small, transparent, and glistening colonies
117
How would you treat your patient suffering from R. anatipestifer?
--> Antibiotic therapy 1. Ampicillin 2. Amoxicillin 3. Tetracycline 4. Sulfonamides
118
How would you control the spread of R. anatipestifer?
Hygiene management
119
D.
120
B.
121
What is seen here?
Bartonella quintana infection --> Trench fever
122
What is seen here?
Bartonella henselae infection --> Cat scratch disease
123
What is seen here?
Bartonella bacilliformis infection --> Carrion's disease
124
B.
125
D. Chromobacterium violaceum Found in soil/water
126
A = Cat B = Rat C = creek D = Poultry E = Duck A & = humans too (zoonotic)