II-A. Systemic Bacteriology | 21. Clostridium tetani and Clostridium botulinum Flashcards
I. Clostridium tetani
1. What are the features of Clostridium tetani?
- terminal endospore formation
- peritrichous fimbriae
- beta-haemolysis on blood agar
- swarming!
I. Clostridium tetani
2. What is the source of infection of Clostridium tetani?
usually from the environment (soil)
I. Clostridium tetani
3. What is the route of transmission of Clostridium tetani?
direct inoculation (through injury)
I. Clostridium tetani
4A. What is the disease caused by Clostridium tetani?
tetanus
I. Clostridium tetani
4B. What are the features of tetanus?
- spastic paresis of skeletal muscles
- Trismus (lockjaw)
- sardininan grin
- opisthotonus
- asphyxia! (resp. muscle paresis) - incubation time depends on the distance of infection site from the spinal cord
I. Clostridium tetani
5. How do we diagnose diseases caused by Clostridium tetani?
- based on clinical sign and symptoms
- usually sampling is not performed (wound swab)
- laboratory: culturing (anaerobic)
I. Clostridium tetani
6A. What is the therapy for diseases caused by Clostridium tetani?
- terminal endospore formation
- peritrichous fimbriae
- beta-haemolysis on blood agar
- swarming!
I. Clostridium tetani
6B. What is the therapy before the appearance of symptoms (tetanus prone and high risk wounds)?
- wound care
- post-exposure immunization (booster tetanus-vaccine)
- wound care (necrectomy, lavage)
I. Clostridium tetani
6C. What is the therapy for symptomatic disease?
- wound care
- intravenous TETIG (human anti-tetanus toxin immunoglobulin)
- antibiotics (penicillins, metronidazol)
- muscle relaxant, artificial ventilation
I. Clostridium tetani
7. What is the prevention for diseases caused by Clostridium tetani?
DTPa mandatory vaccine
II. Clostridium botulinum
1. What are the features of Clostridium botulinum?
- found in GI microbiota of different animals
- central or subterminal endospore formation
- intensive gas production
II. Clostridium botulinum
8. What is the patho-mechanism of botulism?
II. Clostridium botulinum
3. What are the virulence factors of Clostridium botulinum?
exotoxin A-E
II. Clostridium botulinum
4. How does Clostridium botulinum infect
- usually only intoxication (technically food poisoning)
+) in infants might be a real bowel infection - wound infection might happen rarely
II. Clostridium botulinum
5A. What is the source of infection of Clostridium botulinum?