Gram negative- Adam Flashcards
What are clinically significant Gram negative bacteria
(CHHEAPSS)
Camplobacter spp.
Helicobacter pylori
Haemophilus influenza
Escherichia coli
Anaerobes
Pseudomonas spp.
Salmonella spp.
Salmonela typhi
What is escherichia coli
Ferments lactose
Bloody diarrhoea
Important cause of UTI
What is salmonella spp
- Doesn’t ferment lactose
- Self-limiting enterocolitis with/without bloody diarrhoea
- Second most common cause of bacterial diarrhoea in UK
- Can be invasive (enter bloodstream)
What is campylobacter spp
Causes foul smelling diarrhoea
Most common cause of bacterial diarrhoea in UK
What is helicobacter pylori
- Curved rods
- Inhabit human stomach
- Damages mucosa and causes ulcers
- Risk factor for gastric adenocarcinoma
What is Haemophilus influenza
- Mixed appearance
- Causes respiratory tract infection
What is pseudomonas spp.
- May contaminate medical equipment
- Hospital acquired cause of sepsis, UTI, bacteraemia, pneumonia (rare)
- Multi-drug resistance mechanisms
List clinically significant bacteria which are not readily identified by Gram staining and outline how they are identified or distinguished
Mycobacterium spp.
- Visualised by special stains e.g. ZN or auramine
- Resistant to decolorisation by acid and alcohol (AAFB)
- Leprosy
- TB
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- High HIV prevalence in TB cases
- 9 million new cases/year
Spirochaetes
- Long, spiral shaped
- Syphilis, Lyme disease, Leptospirosis