II-A. Systemic Bacteriology | 21. Clostridium tetani and Clostridium botulinum Flashcards

1
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
1. What are the features of Clostridium tetani?

A
  • terminal endospore formation
  • peritrichous fimbriae
  • beta-haemolysis on blood agar
  • swarming!
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2
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
2. What is the source of infection of Clostridium tetani?

A

usually from the environment (soil)

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3
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
3. What is the route of transmission of Clostridium tetani?

A

direct inoculation (through injury)

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4
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
4A. What is the disease caused by Clostridium tetani?

A

tetanus

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5
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
4B. What are the features of tetanus?

A
  1. spastic paresis of skeletal muscles
    - Trismus (lockjaw)
    - sardininan grin
    - opisthotonus
    - asphyxia! (resp. muscle paresis)
  2. incubation time depends on the distance of infection site from the spinal cord
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6
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
5. How do we diagnose diseases caused by Clostridium tetani?

A
  • based on clinical sign and symptoms
  • usually sampling is not performed (wound swab)
  • laboratory: culturing (anaerobic)
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7
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
6A. What is the therapy for diseases caused by Clostridium tetani?

A
  • terminal endospore formation
  • peritrichous fimbriae
  • beta-haemolysis on blood agar
  • swarming!
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8
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
6B. What is the therapy before the appearance of symptoms (tetanus prone and high risk wounds)?

A
  • wound care
  • post-exposure immunization (booster tetanus-vaccine)
  • wound care (necrectomy, lavage)
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9
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
6C. What is the therapy for symptomatic disease?

A
  • wound care
  • intravenous TETIG (human anti-tetanus toxin immunoglobulin)
  • antibiotics (penicillins, metronidazol)
  • muscle relaxant, artificial ventilation
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10
Q

I. Clostridium tetani
7. What is the prevention for diseases caused by Clostridium tetani?

A

DTPa mandatory vaccine

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11
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
1. What are the features of Clostridium botulinum?

A
  • found in GI microbiota of different animals
  • central or subterminal endospore formation
  • intensive gas production
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12
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
8. What is the patho-mechanism of botulism?

A
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13
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
3. What are the virulence factors of Clostridium botulinum?

A

exotoxin A-E

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14
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
4. How does Clostridium botulinum infect

A
  • usually only intoxication (technically food poisoning)
    +) in infants might be a real bowel infection
  • wound infection might happen rarely
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15
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
5A. What is the source of infection of Clostridium botulinum?

A
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16
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
5B. Why is “contaminated food consumption (ingestion of preformed toxin)” the source of infection of Clostridium botulinum?

A

canned / fermented food
* anaerobic environment
* spores survive cooking, proliferate, produces toxin
* bacteria usually die over time, but the toxin is quite stable

17
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
6. What are the diseases caused by Clostridium botulinum

A

botulism

18
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
7. What are the feature of botulism?

A
  • flaccid paresis (toxins inhibits ACh release of motoneurons)
  • incubation period: few hours – 2 days
  • spores are found in honey naturally!
19
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
9. What is the effect of botulism to baby?

A

spores are found in honey naturally!
* as infants do not have a developed GI microbiota, they could be colonized
* bacterium produces toxin in the bowels (“infection”)
* “floppy baby syndrome”

20
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
10. How do we diagnose Clostridium botulinum

A
  • based on clinical signs and symptoms
  • sampling: food, blood, stool
  • laboratory: toxin detection (injecting animals; rarely)
21
Q

II. Clostridium botulinum
11. What is the therapy for Clostridium botulinum?

A
  • IV antitoxin: trivalent human serum (anti-A, anti-B, anti-E antitoxin)
  • antibiotics are not needed!