Categories: All - treatment - infection - transmission - bacteria

by Tiffany Yuen 1 year ago

98

BMS 232 Concept Map Project #2

Certain bacterial infections are caused by pathogens such as Streptococcus pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Chlamydia spp., Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Haemophilus influenzae. These bacteria can spread through direct person-to-person contact, coughing, sneezing, or bodily fluids.

BMS 232 Concept Map Project #2

Streptococcus pneumoniae Pseudomonas aeruginosa Chlamydia spp. Mycoplasma pneumonaie Haemophilus influenzae

Haemophilus influenzae

The capsules are an antigen used to prepare the vaccine (widespread immunization with the Hib vaccine has almost eliminated disease from this pathogen in the US).
Most infections of H. influenzae are from strain H. influenzae type b
use of alternative antibiotics should be guided by in vitro susceptibility tests
Broad-spectrum cephalosporins used for initial empiric therapy
most strains have phagocyte-resistant capsules, which contains ribose, ribitol, and phosphate (known as polyribitol phosphate or PRP)
colonize the mucous membranes of humans and some animals.
Bacterial infection spread bydirect person-to-person contact as well as coughing and sneezing.

Mycoplasma pneumoniae: walking pneumonia

macrolide or tetracycline class antibiotic therapy to treat MP infection
Oral steroid rinse to reduce inflammation
Bacterium has no cell wall so they are therefore resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics (which target a bacteria's cell wall)
Intracellular structure and the membrane bound P1 adhesin proteins form its attachment organelle which anchors MP to the host cell, for motility, and nutrient uptake.
Secretes community acquired respiratory disease syndrome (CARDS) toxin
Transmission through contact with droplets from the nose and throat of infected people especially as they cough or sneeze.
Primary habitat: mucous surfaces of the respiratory and urogenital tracts of humans and animals

Chlamydia spp

Use macrolides (Azithromycin), lincosamides (Clindamycin), and fluoroquinolones (Cipro)
generally resistant to antibiotics in the penicillin and cephalosporin class
virulence factors
2 stage bodies

Their Elementary Bodies can form into Reticulate Bodies, which protects them from host degradation (they also can modulate host immune response). They can enter a "persistent" state which allows CT to go undetected inside the cell

Spread via sexual transmission and can be transmissible by exposure to bodily fluids close to the infected epithelial tissue.
Inhabit epithelial tissue in multiple locations within the body. Entering the cytosol of a host cell is required for its life-cycle.
Obligate intracellular pathogen in humans

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Other methods are hyperimmune serum, and granulocyte transfusions
Because of resistance to most antibiotics and how resistance can develop during therapy, a combination of aminoglycosides (poor activity in the acidic environment of an abscess) and ß-lactam antibiotics with beta lactamase inhibitors: [ (ticarcillin + clavulanic acid = timentin) or (piperacillin + tazobactam = “Zosyn”) ]
Also has antibiotic resistance factors like mutation of porin proteins and b-lactamase production
Adhesins, bacterial neuraminidase, polysaccharide capsule, endotoxin, exotoxin A, exoenzymes S and T, elastases, phospholipase C, pyocyanin, bacterial and phagocyte proteases.
Spread from contaminated water, medical devices, or surfaces or from infected individual contact
opportunistic pathogen that is common in hospitalized patients
Also in hexachlorophene-containing soap solutions and disinfectant solutions.
In hospitals: food, cut flowers, sinks, toilets, floor mops, equipment for respiratory therapy and dialysis.
In soil, decaying organic matter, vegetation and water.

Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus)

most common cause of bacterial pneumonia in the US
Prevention
pneumococcal vaccine targets multiple capsule polysaccharide types and neutrophils via antibodies (PPSV & PCV)
Treatment
resistant strains with mutated PBP could be treated with vancomycin instead
Usually treatable with antibiotics (Penicillin)
virulence factors
Polysaccharide capsule (94 pneumococcal capsular serotypes), pneumolysin, Secretory IgA protease, PsA, Psp (PspA and PspC), Pneumolysin,
habitat
Part of the normal flora of upper respiratory system (human nasopharynx)
transmission
Spread by individual contact and respiratory droplets from person-person, which can enter the blood through lacerations or tissue damage

BMS 232 Concept Map Project #2

bacterial pneumonia

Prevention
Good Hygiene

take vitamins, eat balanced meals

exercise

Get at least 6 hours of sleep

practice good dental and overall health habits

Vaccination
avoid smoking
Symptoms
Fatal Complications

respiratory failure

lung abscess

Hemolytic anemia

meningitis, encephalitis

chest pain, malaise, fatigue
pleural effusion (fluid around the lungs)
Difficulty breathing and/or shortness of breath
chills, cough, fever
bacteremia
Severe acute lower respiratory tract lung infection affecting the pulmonary parenchyma
Diagnostics
Test

Thoracentesisbtopic

bronchoscopy

X-rays, CT scan

CBC (check complete blood cell count)

saliva, blood and sputum cultures

measuring arterial blood gases

Physical exam

percussion (tapping on chest wall to hear abnormal sounds)

(listen for abnormal breathing sounds, crackles)

Overall Risk factors:
weakened or suppressed immune system

Patients on chemotherapy, or long-term medication / steroids / treatment

patients who had an organ transplant

Patients who are HIV + or AIDS+

Serious illness

heart disease, liver cirrhosis, diabetes

brain injury / disorder

dementia, stroke, cerebral palsy

smoking
chronic disease

asthma, COPD, heart disease, bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis

being hospitalized, or having a breathing apparatus (ventilator)
- children 2 and younger - people 65 and over
Types:
community acquired pneumonia

Not acquired in a hospital or health-care facility (nursing home, rehabilited setting)

Atypical bacteria can cause CAP (community-acquired pneumonia)

nosocomial pneumonia

transmitted during a hospital stay and/or health-care visit (hospital-acquired)

Increased Risk Factors

patients on ventilators or in the ICU

Recent surgery or trauma to the individual can increase risk

ex. long-term care facility, outpatient clinics (like dialysis centers)

severity may increase depending on if the patient is already sick or if the bacterial strain is antibiotic-resistant

bronchopneumonia (atypical)

Can cause CAP

History: "Atypical" due to having different features compared to "typical pneumonia"

responds differently to antibiotics

appears different on chest x-ray

different symptoms

pneumonia caused by "atypical" bacteria, which are hard to detect through standard methods

includes

Mycoplasma pneumoniae

walking pneumonia

Legionella pneumophila

Legionnaires' Disease

Chlamydia psittaci

Psittacosis

transmission from infected birds and poultry

Chlamydia pneumoniae

most common in children

pneumonia involving acute inflammation of the bronchi

lobar pneumonia

4 stages of inflammatory response if untreated:

4. Resolution and restoration of the pulmonary

3. Grey hepatization/late consolidation

2. Red hepatization/early consolidation

1. congestion / consolidation

Acute exudative inflammation of one or more lobes of the lung

Usually caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae

Tiffany Yuen Student ID: D25142

Citations

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9783917/#:~:text=Atypical%20pathogens%20are%20intracellular%20bacteria,commonly%20included%20in%20this%20category.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK534295/#:~:text=Lobar%20pneumonia%3A%20Acute%20exudative%20inflammation,are%20caused%20by%20Streptococcus%20pneumoniae.
https://www.cdc.gov/pneumonia/atypical/index.html
https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000145.htm
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/pneumonia/symptoms-causes/syc-20354204
BMS 232 Lecture Slides