Water-borne infections Flashcards

1
Q

What are the public health measures to prevent water-borne infections?

A

Treatment of sewage
Treatment of drinking water
Will eliminate or reduce most water-borne disease

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2
Q

What is cholera responsible for?

A

The foundation of the science of epidemiology and for start of public health measures to control disease

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3
Q

How many organisms are shed a day in someone with cholera?

A

10 (power 12) organisms a day

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4
Q

Who does vibrio cholerae infect?

A

Infects only man

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5
Q

How does vibrio cholerae?

A
Environmental survival (fresh and salt water) biofilms
Short-term, asymptomatic carriers
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6
Q

What is the main infectious serotype of v. cholerae?

A

Serotype O1

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7
Q

How many pandemics has there been of cholera?

A

7

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8
Q

What are the clinical features of cholera?

A

Incubation 2-3 days, duration up to 7 days
Profuse watery diarrhoea (rice-water stools) up to 20 L/day
40-60% mortality if untreated, <1% if treated

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9
Q

How is cholera treated?

A

Intravenous or oral fluid and electrolyte replacement with a simple glucose and salts solution

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10
Q

Is v. cholerae invasive?

A

No

Sits on epithelial and produces a AB subunit toxin

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11
Q

What is the A/B subunit toxin encoded by?

A

CTX phage- intestinal colonisation factor TCP

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12
Q

What is A1?

A

A1 is ADP-ribosyl transferase, transfers ADP-ribose moiety from NAD to G protein Gs

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13
Q

What does A1 activate?

A

Activates host cell adenylate cyclase giving high levels of cAMP from ATP

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14
Q

What type of signal is cAMP?

A

Intracellular

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15
Q

What does cAMP cause?

A

Causes active secretion of Cl- Decreased absorption of Na+ and Cl-
Massive loss of water and electrolytes from body

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16
Q

What are additional toxins?

A

Zot (Zonula occludens toxins)

Ace (Accessory cholera toxin)

17
Q

What does Zot affect?

A

Intracellular tight junctions

18
Q

What does Ace cause?

A

Increased transmembrane ion transport

19
Q

How is infection prevented in cholera?

A

Both cholera toxin and bacterial surface antigens are necessary

20
Q

What are the new oral vaccines for cholera?

A

Better for stimulating mucosal immunity, IgA antibodies
WC/B: heat-killed and formalin-killed cells of various serotypes and biotypes and B subunit of cholera toxin
Live attenuated vaccine- a subunit gene deleted

21
Q

What is shigella?

A

Non-motile Gram-negative rods (closely related to E. coli)

22
Q

How severe is shigella sonnei?

A

Usually mild disease

23
Q

How severe is Sh. Flexneri, Sh. Boydii?

A

More severe

24
Q

How severe is Sh. Dysenteriae?

A

Most severe

25
How is shigellosis spread?
Person to person
26
Who does shigellosis primarily affect?
Primarily a disease of children and the elderly
27
What is Sh. Dysenteriae (serotype 1)?
Mainly associated with epidemics in developing countries Affects all ages High fatality rate in children
28
What are the clinical features of shigellosis?
Incubation 1-4d, duration 5-7d Diarrhoea with blood and mucus, abdominal cramps, fever Dehydration may be severe Frequent complication: kidney damage in S. dysenteriae infections (vero toxin)
29
What's the treatment of shigellosis?
Oral rehydration therapy Antibiotics only given in severe cases Antibiotic resistance is common and plasmid-mediated
30
How does shigellosis cause disease?
Organisms attach to, invade and destroy the cells of the mucosal epithelium of the distal ileum and colon, causing inflammation and ulceration
31
What happens in shigellosis when bacteria is taken up by M cells of the Peyer's patches?
Then invade the mucosal epithelial cells Escape from the phagosome into the cytoplasm Multiply rapidly Spread from cell to cell via actin filaments
32
What vaccines are there for shigellosis?
No effective vaccines