Microbio - GI infections Flashcards
Most common travellers’ diarrhoea?
E coli
most common bloody travellers’ diarrhoea
Shigella
Bacteria with incubation period <6 hours?
B. Cereus + S. Aureus
Which bacteria is assoc with reheated rice? Incubation period? presentation?
Bacillus Cereus
<6 hours incubation period
VOmiting + watery non-bloody diarrhoea
Pear shaped trophozoite w 2 nuclei?
Giardia lamblia
Presentation of giardia?
Foul smelling non-bloody diarrhoea (malabsorption of protein and fat)
Which protozoan causes severe diarrhoea in immunocompromised?
What is seen in the stool?
Cryptosporidium parvum
Oocysts seen in stool
Reportable GI infections?
Salmonella Shigella E Coli O157 Listeria Campylobacter Norovirus
3 subspecies of Clostridia?
Botulinum
Perfringens
Difficile
Clostridia Botulinum - how is it picked up?
Pathophysiology? Presentation?
Canned/vacuumed food + honey in kids
Blocks ACh release from peripheral nerves
Presentation: descending paralysis (diff to Guillan Barre)
Tx of C botulinum
Antitoxin
C Perfringens - how is it picked up? Pathophysiology? Presentation and duration? Complication?
Reheated meats
- superantigen enterotoxin –> binds directly to TCR and MHC –> huge cytokine release
WATERY diarrhoea + cramps for 24 hours.
Complication: gas-gangrene
Tx of C difficile. Complication of C difficile infection?
Stop abx
start vancomycin. 2nd line = metronidazole
Pseudomembranous colitis
B. Cereus - gram stain findings?
How does it cause diarrhoea?
Gram +ve rods
2 toxins: HEAT STABLE EMETIC + HEAT LABILE DIARRHOEAL TOXIN
Staph aureus: virulence factor?
Microbe features?
How does it cause diarrhoea?
Duration of illness
Protein A = main virulence factor
- Catalase and Coagulase +ve. Beta haemolytic
- produces enterotoxin w superAg –> IL1 + IL2 release
- <1 day
Subtype of E coli which is most common cause of travellers diarrhoea?
Pathophysiology?
Where does it act?
ETEC (toxigenic)
Heat labile toxin = activates AC + cAMP.
Heat stable toxin = activates GC
- Acts on SI and NOT the colon.
subtypes of E Coli - name 3 which aren’t ETEC… what are they characterised by
EHEC - haemorrhage, caused by verotoxin. causes HUS
EIEC - invasive dysentry
EPEC - paediatric diarrhoea
2 types of Salmonella - what do they cause?
Salmonella typhi = enteric fever
Salmonella ENTERITIDES = enterocolitis
6 clinical features of salmonella typhi infection?
Slow onset fever + Constipation Relative bradycardia Splenomegaly Rose spots Low WBCs
Tx of salmonella typhi?
Ceftriaxone
Salmonella enteritides
- how is it transmitted?
Presentation?
tx?
Poultry, eggs, meat
Invades SI and LI –> Non-bloody diarrhoea
Ciprofloxacin
Salmonella - H2S?
H2S producer
Shigella
- motility? H2S?
- presentation?
- pathophysiology?
- important subtype?
Shigella
- non motile, non H2S producer
- Bloody diarrhoea, fever
- Shiga enterotoxin = v effective!
- S. flexneri = common in MSM (men who have sex with men)
Which GI infection is associated w necrotising granulomas and reactive arthritis?
Yersinia enterocolitis
Name 2 GI infections which prefer 4C?
Yersinia and Listeria monocytogenes
Yersinia enterocolitis - transmission?
Clinical features?
Associations?
- Food contaminated by animal excrement
- Enterocolitis + mesenteric adenitis w necrotising granulomas
- Assoc with reactive arthritis + erythema nodosum.