Streptococci Flashcards
How does streptococci gram stain?
Gram positive (purple) cocci. Make chains!
String of Pearls = Strep Pyrogenes.
How do you classify haemolysis?
A haemolysis - Viridans (green forming - group of organisms not a single organism) streptococci e.g. Streptococcus pneumoniae. Don’t frequently cause invasive disease (but cause endocarditis)
B haemolysis - Streptococcus pyogenes - very virulent as ability to haemolysis
Non-haemolytic gammas Enterococcus faecalis e.g. if capsule.
Alpha-hemolytic species cause oxidization of iron in hemoglobin molecules within red blood cells, giving it a greenish color on blood agar. Beta-hemolytic species cause complete rupture of red blood cells. On blood agar, this appears as wide areas clear of blood cells surrounding bacterial colonies. Gamma-hemolytic species cause no hemolysis.
How do you classify streptococci?
According to ability to haemolyse.
But can subdivide B haemolytic strain further as different strains of antibiotics are present on surface. They are classified by the Lancefield antigen.
E.g. Group A B haemolytic strep = Strep pyogenes
Sherman also classified the species according physiological properties (but this is less commonly used).
Now, also classified according to 16S ribosomal RNA sequences now.
Why is Strep Pyogenes virulent?
Lots of virulence factors.
What are Strep Pyogenes virulence factors?
- Hyaluronic acid capsule
- M protein
- Adhesions, including lipoteichoic acid, M protein, Fibronectin binding proteins.
- Streptolysins O and S
- DNAses A,B,C and D
- Hyaluronidase
- Strepkinase
- Streptococcal pyrogens exotoxins.
What is streptococcal pharyngitis?
Streptococcus pyogenes
Painful sore throat
Peak incidence at 5-15 years
Droplet spread
Association with over crowding (Schools, households, student accommodation..)
Untreated patients develop M protein specific antibody so, not routinely treated with antibiotics. Also less likely to develop resistance.
What are the clinical features of Streptococcal Pharyngitis?
- Abrupt onset sore throat Malaise,
- Fever,
- Headache,
- Lymphoid hyperplasia,
- Tonsillopharyngeal exudates.
- A throat swap would show group A strep.
What are the complications of streptococcal pharyngitis?
Scarlet fever
- Due to infection with streptococcal pyreogenic exotoxins strain of S. pyogenes.
- Local or haematogenous spread.
- High fever, sepsis, arthritis. Jaundice.
- 1800’s epidemic wit 20% mortality.
- Isolate and treat with antibiotics.
Suppurative complications
- Peritonsillar cellulitis / abscess.
- Retropharyngeal abscess.
- Mastoiditis, sinusitis, Otis media - getting into bone.
- Meningitis, brain abscess - from getting into carotid artery.
Acute Rheumatic fever (immunological)
- Inflammation of heart, joints, CNS.
- Follow on from pharyngitis,
- Only rheumatogenic M types cause this.
- Possible mechanisms :
- Autoimmune,
- Serum sickness,
- binding of M protein to collagen,
- ASO, ASS induced tissue injury.
- Endocarditis could be a late complication of R fever.
Acute post-strep glomerulonephritis (inflammation of glomerulus)
- Acute Inflammation of renal glomerulus,
- M type specific but NOT same as ARF M types.
- Antigen-antibody complexes in glomerulus.
What skin infections can Strep pyogenes cause?
- Impetigo
- Erysipelas
- Cellulitis
- Necrotising fasciitis
What is impetigo?
- Childhood infection 2-5 years
- Initial skin colonisation, followed by intradermal innoculation
- No ARF but impetigo is most common cause of glomeruonephritis
What is Erysipelas?
- Dermis infection with lymphatic involvement.
- Face and lower limb
- Facial lesions, frequently preceded by pharyngitis
- Lower limb infection usually secondary to invasion of skin via trauma, skin disease or local fungal infection.
What is cellulitis?
- Skin and subcutaneous tissue infection - usually only on one of the lower limbs.
- Impaired lymphatic drainage and illicit injecting drug use important risk factors.
What is necrotising fasciitis?
- This is an infection of the deeper subcutaneous tissues and fascia.
- This can spread to the muscles.
- Rapid, extensive necrosis
- Usually secondary to skin break (group A strep in skin)
- Severe pain, even before gross clinical changes
- High fever, fulminant course, high mortality (20-70%).
- Patients are SEVERELY unwell.
- Probably will need to amputate.
- The ‘sweep test’ to see if you can move hand freely.
- Also need antibiotic treatment - if group A strep then penicillin.
What is streptococcal toxic shock syndrome?
- Deep tissue infection with Strep pyogenes AND bacteraemia AND vascular collapse AND organ failure.
- They can go from health to death in hours.
- Entry of group A strep into deeper tissues and bloodstream.
- Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins stimulate T-cells through binding to MHC class II antigen presenting cells and V-B region of T cell receptor inducing monocytes, cytokines (TNF-a, IL-1B, IL6) and lymphokines
- M protein fibrinogen complex and formation.