Camplyobacter...(Ex3) Flashcards

1
Q

General features of Campylobacter

A
  • curved, Gram negative rods
  • microaerophilic
  • opportunistic extracellular pathogen
  • habitat is GI tract or lower genital tract
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2
Q

Campylobacter jejuni

  • major effect
  • transmission
  • hosts
A
  • 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
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3
Q

Campylobacter jejuni pathogenesis and virulence

A
  • 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
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4
Q

What problems/diseases does Campylobacter jejuni cause?

A
  • gastroenteritis, diarrhea, and bacteremia in all species
  • abortion in ruminants
  • hepatitis in young poultry
  • superficial erosive enteritis
  • ileitis-colitis
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5
Q

Campylobacter fetus subsp venerealis

  • main disease caused
  • transmission
  • general features
A
  • bovine venereal campylobacteriosis
  • subclinical infection in preputial crypts of bulls
  • transmission at breeding
  • obligate animal parasite
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6
Q

Campylobacter fetus subsp venerealis clinical signs

A
  • early embryonic death
  • repeat breeding, extended cycles
  • abortion rare
  • no disease in bulls
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7
Q

Campylobacter fetus subsp fetus

  • habitat
  • major disease
  • transmission
  • signs
A
  • 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
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8
Q

Helicobacter general features

A
  • small, spirally curved Gram-negative rods
  • microaerophilic
  • motile, bipolar flagella
  • pathogenic and commensals in gastric mucosa and intestine
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9
Q

What are Helicobacter hepaticus and H. bilis?

A
  • mouse pathogens involved in hepatic necrosis, nonsuppurative hepatitis, and hepatocellular tumors
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10
Q

Virulence factors of Helicobacter

A

adhesions, flagella, endotoxin, extracellular urease, mucinase, vacuolating cytotoxin, catalase/SOD

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11
Q

Lawsonia intracellularis general features, disease caused, signs

A
  • small, spirally curved gram-negative rods
  • obligate intracellular
  • associated with porcine proliferative enteropathy
  • reduced weight gain and proliferative hemorrhagic enteropathy
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12
Q

Helicobacter pylori

  • habitiat
  • what does it cause
A
  • in stomach
  • causes gastric ulcers
  • associated with gastric neoplasms
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13
Q

Diagnosis of Helicobacter

A
  • endoscopy and biopsy
  • urease breath test
  • microscopic detection of agent, serology, PCR
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14
Q

Treatment of Helicobacter infections

A

proton pump inhibitors and antimicrobials

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15
Q

Treatment of Lawsonia infections

A
  • antimicrobials in feed/water

- resistance to beta-lactams and aminoglycosides

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