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Leptospira & Borrelia Spirochetes-2/2
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Key words Borrelia –Vincent’s angina –Recurrent fever –Lyme Disease Ixodide tick Leptospira –L. icterohaemorrhagiae erythema chronicum migrans Weil’ disease (leptospirosis) –Transmission - urine of rats
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B.vincenti Normal mouth commensal May give rise to ulcerative gingivostomatitis or oropharyngitis (Vincent’s angina) during malnutrition or viral infections B. vincenti always associated with fusiform bacilli – fusospirochetosis Diagnosis – gram staining of exudates Treatment – Penicillin
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4 Borrelia burgdorferi and Lyme disease
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B. burgdorferi Causes Lyme disease, transmitted by the bite of Ixodid ticks (deer tick) Characteristic rash – erythema chronicum migrans Diagnosis – culture, serological tests Treatment – Pen, tetracyclines, cephalosporins in early stages. –Late stage – Antibiotics ineffective.
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6 Lyme disease - symptoms bacteremia –acute arthritis cardiac neurologic –chronic *weeks, months later
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7 Diagnosis serum antibodies to B. burgdorferi serum antibodies to B. burgdorferi. laboratory strains – grow extremely slowly – tissue culture media – not bacteriological media patient body fluids/tissue sample patient body fluids/tissue sample – almost never growth
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8 acute – responds to antibiotic –antibodies not detectable late diagnosis late diagnosis – not curable – antibodies detectable A physicians dilemma
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9 Lyme Disease - etiology reactive arthritis similar to reactive arthritis similar to – Reiter's syndrome – rheumatic fever resembles rheumatoid arthritis.
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10 Relapsing fever transmission transmission –tick-B. hermsii * rodent, primary host – lice-B. recurrentis * human, primary host
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11 “Relapsing” fever “Relapsing” fever immune response developsimmune response develops –disease relapses new antigens expressednew antigens expressed –no immunity –disease reappears
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12 Diagnosis no cultureno culture no serological testno serological test detected - blood smeardetected - blood smear
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13 Leptospirosis
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Leptospira Very thin, delicate spirochetes with hooked ends 2 species are recognised : 1.L. interrogans – include human pathogenic serogroups: L.icterohaemorrhagiae (rats are the reservoir) 2.L. biflexa – saprophytic, mainly found in surface water.
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Laboratory characteristics Morphology – stained with Giemsa/ silver impregnation, hooked ends resemble umbrella handles Culture – media (semi solid/ liquid) enriched with rabbit serum - Fletcher’s medium Pathogenicity – causes Weil’ disease (leptospirosis)
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Weil’s disease Transmission - Leptospires in water contaminated by the urine of rats; enters the body through cuts or abrasions on the skin or through intact mucosa of mouth, nose or conjunctiva Incubation period – about 10 days (2 to 26) Mild fever to severe or fatal illness with hepatorenal damage Fever, rigors, headache, vomiting, icterus, purpuric hemorrhages
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Diagnosis Examination of blood – 1 st week only Urine – 2 nd week of disease, should be examined immediately after voiding Serology – Abs appear by the end of 1 st week & increase till 4 th week of disease. Treatment Should be started early in disease Penicillin I.V., Tetracyclines
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