Yersinia pestis Flashcards
Specifics
PLAGUE (the black death)- can be weaponized
travels in proventriculus of fleas of wild rodent
John Graunt- first epidemiology to study plague
Pathogenesis: fleas feed on host–> bacT block proventriculus and contaminates feed site–> bacteria killed due to PMNs and inflammation–> some survive a 37 *C in macrophages and induce apoptosis (T3ss, Gsr)–> secrete antiphagocytic/ antiinflammatory proteins–> extracellular survival (capsule/sidephores)
Yersinia pestis in humans CS
bubonic- local lymphadenitis
pneumonic- pneumonia
septicemic- septicemia
Yersinia pestis dx and tx
culture, PCR, serology
Antibiotics are rare for resistance
Yersinia pestis in cats CS
fever, depression, sneezing, coughing, CNS
lymphandenitis, tonsilitis, CN/CV, edema, pneumonia
mortality
Yersinia pestis virulence factors and transmission
capsule, toxins, iron acquisition, located on plasmid 1
transmission- fleas, airborne, oral
Yersinia pestis epidemiology humans
Western USA, S/W Africa, N/Central S. America
in warm months more prevalent
sylvatic for rural/wild animals, NEED RODENTS
Yersinia pestis epidemiology cats
after ingestion of wild prey