l Acute infectious disease of intestine caused by dysentery bacilli l Place of lesion: sigmoid & rectum  Shigellosis is endemic throughout the world.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gasrtointestinal bacterial infections Gastroentritis *Is the most common form of acute gastrointestinal infection, causing diarrhea with or without vomiting.
Advertisements

Lecture 17: Microbial diseases of the digestive system Edith Porter, M.D. 1.
Epidemic hemorrhagic fever ----hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome , HFRS.
Thanksgiving at the Scholle’s. The year it all blew up…
Infectious diseases Diseases resulting from the infectioninfection.
Bacteria that cause diarrhea and dysentery
Gram Negative Rods of the Enteric Tract
Microbial Diseases of the Digestive System
GIT BLOCK Dr. Ali Somily & Prof. Hanan Habib Department of Pathology KSU.
Ulcerative Colitis.
SHIGELLOSIS INFECTIOUS DEPARTMENT INTRODUCTION Shigella organisms cause bacillary dysentery, Shigellosis occurs world-wide. The incidence in.
Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis
Agricultural & Environmental Lab. Water quality testing II: PCR-based testing for water bacterial contaminants The Islamic University Faculty of Science.
Waterborne Pathogens: Bacteria February 9 th -11 th, 2010.
Dr. Adnan Hamawandi Professor of Pediatrics
Bacillary Dysentery (shigellosis)
Digestive Diseases Shigellosis Campylobacter jejuni Cholera.
Campylobacter Dr. Abdulaziz Bamarouf
Bacillary Dysentery (shigellosis)
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation prepared by Christine L. Case Microbiology.
Non-Invasive Enteritis and Food Poisoning. FOODBORNE ILLNESS (Bacterial) Foodborne illness results from eating food contaminated with organisms or toxins.
Vibrio cholerae Asiatic or Epidemic Cholera. Readings Question #1 Describe the Vibrio cholerae bacterium. Where is it found?
Clinical Microbiology (MLCM- 201) Prof. Dr. Ebtisam. F. El Ghazzawi. Medical Research Institute (MRI) Alexandria University.
Infectious Diarrheas - Overview Greatest cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide Scope of disease: 1993, E.coli 0157:H Cyclospora 1998.
Dr Sabrina Moyo Department of Microbiology and Immunology
The organism is the principal cause of 'Travellers' diarrhoea'. It is also a major cause of dehydrating diarrhoea in infants and children in less.
Salmonella Gastroenteritis, typhoid fever, paratyphoid fever.
Bacillary Dysentery (shigellosis) Dept. Of Infectious Disease Huang Fen.
Shigella Dr.T.V.Rao MD 1. Shigella a Highly Infectious Bacteria organismsShigella is one of the most infectious of bacteria and ingestion of.
Shigellosis Bacterial dysentery. Microbial Agent Four species of Shigella: –boydii –dysenteriae (causes deadly epidemics) –flexneri (1/3 of U.S.) –sonnei.
SHIGELLA By: Hunter Reynolds.
SHIGELLA Important Gram-negative, Lactose negative rods.
~CHOLERA~ BY MARIA MARTINEZ.
Dept. Infectious Disease 2nd Affiliated Hospital CMU
Most virulent strain of E. coli Enterohemorrhagic E. coli Symptoms range from mild gastroenteritis with fever to bloody diarrhea About 10% of patients.
By: Ryan Bradberry & Jordyne Schultz
EHEC By Marie and Alicia. What is it? E. coli is a bacterium that is found in the intestine of humans E. coli is a bacterium that is found in the intestine.
CHOLERA Vibrio cholerae Brenda Anna Kwambana Wangeci Kagucia.
VIBRIO CHOLERAE CHOLERA. CHARACTERISTICS GRAM-NEGATIVE, COMMA SHAPED BACILLI MOTILE – POLAR FLAGELLA OXIDASE – POSITIVE CATALASE – POSITIVE ALKALNE PH.
Chapter 16 Vibrio section 1 Vibrio cholera Biological characterization A. Morphology and identification  Comma shaped, curved rod  G-  Single polar.
Vibrio.
Other gram negative rods. Yersinia The genus yersinia is a member of the family enterobacteriaceae The genus yersinia includes three species of medical.
Vibrios, Campylobacters and Associated Bacteria
What is Cholera?  A life-threatening secretory diarrhea induced by enterotoxin secreted by V. cholerae  Water-borne illness caused by ingesting water/food.
GIT BLOCK Dr. Ali Somily & Prof. Hanan Habib Department of Pathology& Laboratory Medicine KSU.
Case 2-A. 2 year old child 3 days diarrhea Stool – blood-streaked, 3-4x per day Moderate grade fever, tenesmus, abdominal pain PE –Conscious, slightly.
BACILLARY DYSENTERY SHIGELLOSIS
PRESENTER ADEOYE ABISOYE MPH STUDENT WALDEN UNIVERSITY PUBH 6165 INSTRUCTOR: DR HOWARD RUBIN FALL QUARTER, 2012.
 Most strains of Escherichia coli bacteria are harmless and found in the intestines of warm blooded animals.  We need E. coli to breakdown cellulose.
Dr.a.khaleghjoo MD pediatrics. Diarrhea is the passage of loose or watery stools at least three times in a 24 hour period. Diarrheal illness is the second.
Dept. of Infectious Diseases 杨绍基. Amebic dysentery Definition Parasitic disease, Entamoeba histolytica, trophozoites induce submucosal ulcerations abdominal.
Clostridium difficile infections
 Coliform bacilli (enteric rods)  Nonmotile gram-negative facultative anaerobes  Four species  Shigella sonnei (most common in industrial world) 
Some Bacterial Diseases. Normal Microbial Flora of the Digestive System Mouth 1 ml saliva = millions of bacteria Stomach and small intestine Few organisms.
Cholera is an acute intestinal infection caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae
ORAL-FECAL TRANSMITTED DISEASES
Enterobacteriaceae Opportunistic pathogens Escherichia coli
Cholera Cholera is a disease caused by infection with the gram-negative bacterium Vibrio cholerae.
PHARMACEUTICAL MICROBIOLOGY -1I PHT 313
Bacillary Dysentery (Shigellosis)
Bacillary Dysentery (shigellosis)
Shigellosis Bacterial dysentery.
Dr Mustafa Nema /Baghdad college of Medicine 2014
Body Systems Infection from Salmonella enteriditis
Microbial Diseases of the Digestive System
Bacillary Dysentery (shigellosis)
Dr Paul T Francis, MD Community Medicine College of Medicine, Zawia
Cholera.
Enterobacteriaceae.
SHIGELLA Bacillary dysentry. ETIOLOGY Shigella dysenteriae Shigella dysenteriae Shigella flexneri Shigella flexneri Shigella boydii Shigella boydii Shigella.
Presentation transcript:

l Acute infectious disease of intestine caused by dysentery bacilli l Place of lesion: sigmoid & rectum  Shigellosis is endemic throughout the world where it is held responsible for some 120 million cases of severe dysentery with blood and mucus in the stools

 About 1.1 million people are estimated to die from Shigella infection each year, with 60% of the deaths occurring in children under 5 years of age.  about cases of shigellosis are reported each year among military personnel and travellers from industrialized countries  Since the late 1960s, pandemic waves of Shigella dysentery have hit sub-Saharan Africa, Central America and South and South-East Asia.

l Causative organism: dysentery bacilli, genus shigella, gram-stain negative, short rod,non-motile l Groups: 4 groups & 50 serotypes - S. Dysenteriae-the most severe - S. Flexnerii- endemic in developing countries. easily turn to chronic - S. Boydii - S. sonnei -the most mild

 Found only in the human intestinal tract.  Carriers of the pathogenic strain can excrete the organisms up to 2 wks after the infection &occasionally for longer periods.  Killed by drying

 Transmitted by fecal-oral route  High incidence of shigellosis occur in areas of poor sanitation and where water supplies are polluted.  Lack of personal hygiene  Young children are more frequently affected than adults [> 6 months]  Horseflies are also thought to be important in transferring Shigella from faeces to food.  Epidemics can be caused by ingestion of contaminated milk and milk products.

Antigenic structure  Differentiation into groups (A, B, C, and D) is based on O antigen serotyping; K antigens may interfere with serotyping, but are heat labile.  Virulence factors  Shiga toxin – An A-B toxin produced by S. dysenteriae and in smaller amounts by S. flexneri and S. sonnei.  Enterotoxic, neurotoxic and cytotoxic effects  This Damages intestinal epithelium and glomerular endothelial cells (associated with HUS) plays a role in the ulceration of the intestinal mucosa.

 These proteins are expressed at body temperature and upon contact with M cells in the intestinal mucosa they induce phagocytosis of the bacteria into vacuoles  Shigella destroy the vacuoles to escape into the cytoplasm  From there they spread laterally (Polymerization of actin filaments propels them through the cytoplasm.) to epithelial cells where they multiply but do not usually disseminate beyond the epithelium.

 Adheres to small intestine receptors  Blocks absorption (uptake) of electrolytes, glucose, and amino acids from the intestinal lumen  Note: This contrasts with the effects of cholera toxin (Vibrio cholerae) and labile toxin (LT) of enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) which act by blocking absorption of Na +, but also cause hypersecretion of water and ions of Cl -, K + (low potassium = hypokalemia), and HCO 3 - (loss of bicarbonate buffering capacity leads to metabolic acidosis) out of the intestine and into the lumen

 B subunit of Shiga toxin binds host cell glycolipid  A domain is internalized via receptor-mediated endocytosis (coated pits)  Causes irreversible inactivation of the 60S ribosomal subunit, thereby causing:  Inhibition of protein synthesis  Cell death  Microvasculature damage to the intestine  Hemorrhage (blood & fecal leukocytes in stool)  Neurotoxic Effect: Fever, abdominal cramping are considered signs of neurotoxicity

 Shigellosis is primarily a pediatric disease, and is restricted to the GI tract.  Mean infective dose:  Mouth colon invade M cells and subsequently spread to mucosal epithelial cells cause microabscess in the wall of colon and terminal ileum necrosis of the mucous membrane, superficial ulceration, bleeding, and formation of pseudomembrane.

Two-stage disease:  Early stage:  Watery diarrhea attributed to the enterotoxic activity of Shiga toxin following ingestion and noninvasive colonization, multiplication, and production of enterotoxin in the small intestine  Fever attributed to neurotoxic activity of toxin  Second stage:  Adherence to and tissue invasion of large intestine with typical symptoms of dysentery  Cytotoxic activity of Shiga toxin increases severity

 Common Type Incubation period: 1-3 days  Sudden onset of abdominal pain, fever and watery diarrhea, number of stools increase, less liquid, often contain mucus and blood, rectal spasms with resulting lower abdominal pain (tenesmus)  symptoms subside spontaneously in 2-5 days in adult cases, but loss of water and electrolytes frequently occur in children and the elderly. a small number of patients remain chronic carriers.

 Some cases are accompanied by hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), characterized by acute hemolysis, renal failure, uremia, and disseminated intravascular coagulation.  Death can occur from circulatory collapse or kidney failure.  Total WCC is raised with neutrophilia  Infection with S. dysenteriae can lead to leukemoid reaction developing 5-10 days after infection caused by an endotoxin.  S. sonnei is not very pathogenic, therefore infections are rarely serious.

Acute dysentery mild type: caused by S. sonnei low fever or no fever Abdominal pain is mild stool mixed with mucus, without blood & pus diagnosis by isolation bacteria

Abrupt onset, high fever, Temperature rise to 40 o C Listlessness, lethargy, convulsion, coma. circulatory & respiratory collapse diarrhea mild or absent at beginning shock form: septic shock brain form: respiratory failure mixed form

l Chronic dysentery: > 2 months Chronic delayed type: diarrhea long-time and repeated Chronic obscure type: acute history in 1 year, no symptoms, stool culture Pos. or sigmoidscopy Acute attack type: same as common acute dysentery

 Blood picture: total WBC count increase, neutrophils increase  Stool examination: direct microscopic exam.: WBC, RBC, pus cells bacteria culture:  Sigmoidoscope: shallow ulcer, scar, polyps

 oral rehydration therapy, intravenous fluid replacement  Antibiotic treatment: chloramphenicol, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacine, tetracycline, and trimethoprim- sulfamethoxazole. Drug resistance is common.  Restoration of electrolytes  Opiates and anti-diarrhoea medications should be avoided.

 Humans are the only reservoir for shigellae.  Transmission of shigellae: water, food, fingers, feces, and flies.  Most cases occur in children under 10 years of age.  Prevention and control of dysentery:  1. Sanitary control of water, food and milk; sewage disposal; and fly control.  2. Isolation of patients and disinfection of excreta.  3. Detection of subclinical cases and carriers.