II-A. Systemic Bacteriology | 10. Proteus, Pseudomonas Flashcards
I. Proteus genus
1. What are the important species of Proteus genus?
Proteus vulgaris, P. mirabilis
I. Proteus genus
2. What are the features of proteus?
- peritrhichous flagella→ able to move even on solid surfaces (phenomenon called swarming)
=> EMB agar contains a swarming inhibitor → colony formation is seen - urease enzyme production (urease-positive)
- member of the normal intestinal flora
I. Proteus genus
3. What are biochemical properties of Proteus?
I. Proteus genus
I. Proteus genus
4. What are the diseases caused by Proteus genus?
urinary tract infections nosocomial infections
I. Proteus genus
5. What is the diagnosis for Proteus genus?
Culture of blood or urine for lactose-negative organisms with swarming motility
I. Proteus genus
6. Describe empirical treatment for Proteus genus?
originally species of the genus are sensitive to a few penicillins and most cephalosporins, but has some intrinsic (natural) resistance
I. Proteus genus
7. What are the hospital-acquired strains?
hospital-acquired strains tend to produce different beta-lactamases, hence tend to be resistant to different groups of beta-lactams
* ESBL production: resistance to penicillins and cephalosporins (quite common in hospitals)
* carbapenemase production: resistance to penicillins, cephalosporins and carbapenems
II. Pseudomonas genus
1. What are the features of Pseudomonas genus?
- saprophytic, ubiquitous species (soil, water)
- Gram-negative rods with polar fimbriae
- obligate aerobic metabolism
II. Pseudomonas genus
2. What are the important species of Pseudomonas genus?
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
II. Pseudomonas genus - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
3. What are the features of Pseudomonas aeruginosa?
- opportunisic pathogen, usually seen in nosocomial infections
- could develop resistance against multiple antibiotic groups
- smells like grapes, green colonies (pioverdin, piocianin)
- beta-haemolytic on blood agar
II. Pseudomonas genus - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
4. What are the virulence factors of Pseudomonas aeruginosa?
- A-toxin (inhibits protein synthesis)
- exoenzymes: elastase, phospholipase, haemolysin
- endotoxin
- biofilm production!
II. Pseudomonas genus - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
5. What are the diseases caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa?
- superficial infections in healthy individuals
- otitis externa, wound infections, conjunctivitis, hot-tub dermatitis - invasive infections in immunocompromised patients (burn patients, patients with diabetes, cystic fibrosis)
- pneumonia, blood stream infection, UTI, meningitis
II. Pseudomonas genus - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
6. What is the diagnoses for Pseudomonas aeruginosa?
- based on clinical signs and symptoms
- sampling: based on clinical disease
- laboratory: cultivation, PCR
II. Pseudomonas genus - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
7. What is empirical therapy for pseudomonas aeruginosa?
- Multiresistant, based on antibiogram
- Antipseudomonal penicillin
- Aminoglycoside
- Fluoroquinolone