Camplyobacter...(Ex3) Flashcards
General features of Campylobacter
- curved, Gram negative rods
- microaerophilic
- opportunistic extracellular pathogen
- habitat is GI tract or lower genital tract
Campylobacter jejuni
- major effect
- transmission
- hosts
- major cause of intestinal illness and diarrhea in humans and animals
- serotypes associated with Guillain-Barre syndrome
- ingestion of contaminated material
- raw chicken, raw milk, contaminated water, diarrheic animals
- chickens are major carrier
- pigs, cattle, dogs, cats, horses, humans, birds
Campylobacter jejuni pathogenesis and virulence
- colonizes mucus, invades epithelial cells, and leads to bacteremia
- motility through single bipolar flagellum
- heat labile enterotoxin attributes to diarrhea
- cytolethal distending toxin causes cell cycle arrest
What problems/diseases does Campylobacter jejuni cause?
- gastroenteritis, diarrhea, and bacteremia in all species
- abortion in ruminants
- hepatitis in young poultry
- superficial erosive enteritis
- ileitis-colitis
Campylobacter fetus subsp venerealis
- main disease caused
- transmission
- general features
- bovine venereal campylobacteriosis
- subclinical infection in preputial crypts of bulls
- transmission at breeding
- obligate animal parasite
Campylobacter fetus subsp venerealis clinical signs
- early embryonic death
- repeat breeding, extended cycles
- abortion rare
- no disease in bulls
Campylobacter fetus subsp fetus
- habitat
- major disease
- transmission
- signs
- commensals in intestinal tract of cattle and sheep
- causes ovine genital campylobacteriosis
- sheep infected via contaminated food/water, bacteremia
- sheep: inflammation of placenta, abortion storms
- cattle: occasional abortions
Helicobacter general features
- small, spirally curved Gram-negative rods
- microaerophilic
- motile, bipolar flagella
- pathogenic and commensals in gastric mucosa and intestine
What are Helicobacter hepaticus and H. bilis?
- mouse pathogens involved in hepatic necrosis, nonsuppurative hepatitis, and hepatocellular tumors
Virulence factors of Helicobacter
adhesions, flagella, endotoxin, extracellular urease, mucinase, vacuolating cytotoxin, catalase/SOD
Lawsonia intracellularis general features, disease caused, signs
- small, spirally curved gram-negative rods
- obligate intracellular
- associated with porcine proliferative enteropathy
- reduced weight gain and proliferative hemorrhagic enteropathy
Helicobacter pylori
- habitiat
- what does it cause
- in stomach
- causes gastric ulcers
- associated with gastric neoplasms
Diagnosis of Helicobacter
- endoscopy and biopsy
- urease breath test
- microscopic detection of agent, serology, PCR
Treatment of Helicobacter infections
proton pump inhibitors and antimicrobials
Treatment of Lawsonia infections
- antimicrobials in feed/water
- resistance to beta-lactams and aminoglycosides