Salmonella Flashcards
Salmonella
Salmonella
- Salmonella enterica has over 2500 subspecies (serovars/serotypes), causes:
- Typhoid fever (enteric fever)*
- Gastroenteritis*
- Osteomyelitis*
-
Reactive arthritis (Reiter syndrome) *
- in 30% patients following gastrointestinal disease
- Septicemia
Salmonella typhi
Typhoid fever
Salmonella typhi
Typhoid fever
- Gram negative rod
- Oxidase negative
- Non-lactose fermentor*
- Motile *
- Produces H2S gas *
- Vi antigen (associated with capsule) *
- Survives inside macrophages *
- Causes Typhoid fever (enteric fever)
- Reservoir: only humans *
- Transmission:
- Fecal-oral route
- _Typhoid carriers (gall bladder) *_
- Prediposing factors for infection
- Decreased stomach acid
- Sickle cell anemia* (impairment of mononuclear cells)
Peyers Patches
Peyers Patches
- Ileum
- Contain macrophages, dendritic cells, B-lymphocytes and T-lymphocytes
- Peyers patches are an important part of immune surveillance and the generation of the immune response.
Salmonella typhi – Pathogenesis and disease
(Week 1)
Salmonella typhi – Pathogenesis and disease
- Organism ingested (large number required if stomach acid is normal)
- →Infection begins in ileocecal region, Peyers patches
- →Organism passes through enterocytes, M cells
- →engulfed by macrophages (survive intracellularly)
- →Mesentric lymph nodes + blood
- transient primary bacteremia
- At Week 1:
- Blood cultures positive*
- “Rose spots”*
- Constipation*
What’s going on with this boy?
Typhoid fever – Rose spots
Rose spots
- on abdomen, trunk
- only 25% patients
Salmonella typhi – Pathogenesis and disease
(week 3)
S.typhi – Pathogenesis and disease
- →Macrophages carry organism to reticuloendothelial system (RES)
- bacteria multiply - liver, spleen, bone marrow, _gall bladder*_
- ** septicemia** (mainly fever)
- →organisms re-enter GI tract (through bile)
- By Week 3:
- Stool cultures positive *
- Salmonella survives intracellularly and replicates inside macrophages *
- When extracellular its’ Vi antigen protects it from complement-mediated killing *
Typhoid fever – Clincal disease
Typhoid fever – Clincal disease
- Incubation period: 5-21 days
- Symptoms:
- Fever
- Headache
- **Abdominal pain **
- enlargement of liver (hepatomegaly)
- Constipation (occasionally diarrhea)
- Untreated – mortality rate is 15%
- Among survivors symptoms resolve in a month
Typhoid
Typhoid
- Complications (if untreated)
- Intestinal hemorrhage
- Perforation of Peyers patches
- Rarely endocarditis
-
Small percentage of patients on recovery become chronic carriers – reservoir of infection & transmission of disease*
- S.typhi hides in gall bladder*
Typhoid - Diagnosis
Typhoid - Diagnosis
- S.typhi can be isolated from:
- Blood cultures*
-
Stool cultures*
- Hektoen enteric agar
- MA – lactose negative
- Other specimens:
- Urine, Bone marrow, tissue biopsy of rose spots
- Widal test*
- Presumptive test (no longer used in US)
- Antibodies to O and H antigens in patient’s serum detected
Typhoid treatment *
Typhoid treatment *
- Fluoroquinolones or 3rd generation cephalosporins
- Vaccines
- Oral vaccine - live attenuated strain of S.typhi
- Parenteral vaccine – Vi capsular polysaccharide
- Vaccination recommended for those travelling to endemic areas – Asia, Africa, Latin America
Salmonella serovars other than typhi
Salmonella serovars other than typhi
S. enteritidis
S. typhimurium
- Salmonella serovars other than typhi
- S. enteritidis
- ** S. typhimurium**
- Reservoir: GI tract of animals
- _Chickens*_
- _Pet turtles*, domestic pets_
-
Transmission: Fecal-oral
-
Ingestion: chicken products
- Raw chicken, eggs*
-
Ingestion: chicken products
-
Petting Reptiles
- Snakes , turtles*
Salmonella other than S. typhi
Salmonella other than S. typhiGastroenteritis/enterocolitis
-
Gastroenteritis/enterocolitis
- Second most common cause after Campylobacter*
-
Reactive arthritis
- Post-gastrointestinal infection
- _Osteomyelitis*_
- Sickle cell disease predisposes to ostoemyelitis *
- _Salmonella (paratyphi) is the most common cause of osteomyelitis in sickle cell disease patients (>80%) *_
-
Septicemia
*
Salmonella Gastroenteritis
Salmonella Gastroenteritis
Salmonella Gastroenteritis
- 95% cases are foodborne
- Ingestion of Salmonella (large infectious dose – sensitive to gastric acid)
- **→Lowered stomach acid increases risk **
- (antacids, gastrectomy)
- →Invades mucosa ileocecal region → invasive to lamina propria → inflammation
- →watery diarrhea, shallow ulceration
- Septicemia may occur – fever
- Salmonella can be isolated in blood cultures
Gastroenteritis treatment
Gastroenteritis treatment
Treatment:
-
Gastroenteritis
- Not indicated, may prolong convalescent carrier state
- For invasive disease*
- Fluoroquinolones or
- 3rd generation cephalosporins or
- TMP-SMX
Identifying Salmonella
Identifying Salmonella
- **GNB, oxidase negative **
- Nonlactose – fermentor
- **Motile (distinguishes from Shigella) **
- H2S
- Vi capsular antigen