Institute for Microbiology, Medical Faculty of Masaryk University and St. Anna Faculty Hospital in Brno Agents of digestive system infections Digestive system •Its both ends are the „buggiest“ parts of the body •Normal colonic flora: 99 % anaerobes (Bacteroides, Fusobacterium, Clostridium, Peptostreptococcus), only 1 % enteric bacteria (mostly E. coli) & enterococci Mouth cavity – I Normal flora: •viridans (= α-haemolytic) streptococci (e.g. Streptococcus salivarius) •oral neisseriae (e.g. Neisseria subflava) •haemophilli of low pathogenity (e.g. Haemophilus parainfluenzae) Dental plaque: adherent microbial layer made up from living and dead bacteria and their products together with components from the saliva In essence, dental plaque is a biofilm It cannot be washed off, only mechanically removed. Biofilm •Bacteria regulas the quantity of their population by regulative compounds •Process – quorum sensing •More resistant to –desinfectants –antibiotics –immune rection •The product of normal flora (which is positive) and pathogens as well Foto: Veronika Holá Mouth cavity – II Dental caries: chronic infections caused by normal oral flora → localized destruction of tooth tissue Etiology: mouth microbes (mostly Strept. mutans) making acids from sucrose in food Thrush (in Latin soor): Candida albicans It occurs mostly in newborns Herpetic stomatitis: primary infection with HSV 1 Ludwig´s angina: polymicrobial anaerobic infection of sublingual and submandibular spaces (Porphyromonas, Prevotella etc.) Herpetic stomatitis http://imaging.cmpmedica.com Thrush http://www.mydochub.com/images/oral_thrush.jpg http://www.clarian.org/ADAM/doc/graphics/images/en/17284.jpg C.albicans www.medmicro.info Oesophagus Infections never in previously healthy individuals Only in severely immunocompromised persons (AIDS): •Candida albicans •Cytomegalovirus (CMV) Stomach Stomach = sterile, killing by means of HCl most of swallowed microbes Helicobacter pylori produces a potent urease and by splitting tissue urea it increases pH around itself (1 molecule of urea → 1 CO2 + 2 NH3) H. pylori causes •chronic gastritis •peptic ulcers Helicobacter pylori http://vietsciences.free.fr/nobel/medecine/images/helicobacter%2520pylori.JPG www.univie.ac.at/hygiene-aktuell/helicobacter.jpg Biliary tree & the liver Acute cholecystitis (colic, jaundice, fever): obstruction due to gallstones Etiology: intestinal bacteria (E. coli etc.) Complication: ascending cholangitis Chronic cholecystitis: the most important is Salmonella Typhi (carriers of typhoid fever) Granulomatous hepatitis: Q fever, tbc, brucellosis Parasitic infections of the liver: amoebiasis (Entamoeba histolytica: liver abscess), malaria (the very first, clinically silent part of the plasmodial life cycle), leishmaniasis (Leishmania donovani: kala-azar), schistosomiasis (eggs of Schistosoma japonicum) Systemic infections which start in the digestive tract Enteric fever (typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever): Salmonella Typhi, Salmonella Paratyphi A, B and C Listeriosis: Listeria monocytogenes Peritonitis: colonic flora Viral hepatitis: HAV, HBV, HCV, HDV, HEV Bacterial agents of diarrhea – I Escherichia coli Most E. coli strains (approx. 1 %) normal intestinal flora - beneficial - non-pathogenic in the intestine Some E. coli strains pathogenic in GIT Escherichia coli www2.mf.uni-lj.si/~mil/bakt2/bakt2.htm Bacterial agents of diarrhea – II Escherichia coli strains causing diarrhea: •ETEC (enterotoxic E. coli): children in developing countries, traveller´s diarrhea, toxins •EPEC (enteropathogenic E. coli): O55, O111; infants; disruption of microvillus structure •EIEC (enteroinvasive E. coli): invasion of colonic cells •EHEC (enterohaemorrhagic E. coli): O157:H7; 2 cytotoxic Shigatoxins, hemorrhagic colitis & hemolytic-uremic syndrome Salmonella - MAL agar Photo O. Zahradníček. Bacterial agents of diarrhea – III A) Salmonella systemic infections (enteric fever): S. Typhi, S. Paratyphi A – C (humans) Gut invasion and infection becomes generalized → no diarrhea, pronounced fever, detection in blood, urine and stool, in susp. carriers in duodenal fluid, antibiotics B) Salmonella gastroenteritis (salmonellosis, reservoir: poultry & animals): >4.000 serotypes – e.g. S. Enteritidis Localized in ileocaecal region → diarrhea, nausea & vomiting, abdominal pain, temperature, examination of stool only Treatment: symptomatic, no antibiotics Campylobacter jejuni www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol5no1/altekruseG.htm. Bacterial agents of diarrhea – IV Campylobacter jejuni invades jejunal epithelium, reservoir: poultry, cultured on a special medium, in reduced oxygen, at 42 °C Shigella sonnei, S.flexneri, S.boydii, S.dysenteriae - very low infectious dose → epidemic outbreaks - transmitted only among human beings - invasion - cells of colon and rectum - bacterial dysentery Vibrio cholerae http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/brd/Research/Bio/water-borne-bioterrorism.htm Bacterial agents of diarrhea – V Yersinia enterocolitica - gastroenteritis, in children also mesenterial lymphadenitis (mimicking acute appendicitis) - vector: contaminated food, multiplies at 4 °C Vibrio cholerae Cholera toxin activates adenylate cyclase → hypersecretion of water & electrolytes → death by dehydration/electrolyte abnormalities V. cholerae flourishes in water & causes epidemics Diarrhoea during antibiotic therapy Clostridium difficile: pseudomembranous colitis frequently after clindamycin, cephalosporines (virtually after every ATB), hypervirulent serotype O27 Patients contaminate the hospital environment with resistant spores. Treated with metronidazol or vancomycin http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clostridium_difficile Direct proof of the Cdiff toxins essential, C. difficile can be found in healthy people Proof of the toxin A in C. difficile. Photo: MÚ archive Rotavirus http://web.uct.ac.za/depts/mmi/stannard/emimages.html Viral agents of diarrhea Generally: small, acid- and bile-resistant non-enveloped viruses Rotaviruses (Reoviridae family) serious diarrhea of young children, epidemics in winter, vaccination Noroviruses and sapoviruses (formerly agents Norwalk and Sapporo, Caliciviridae family) epidemics in children and adults, in hospitals Astroviruses (star-shaped virions) Adenoviruses type 40 and 41 Lamblia CD-ROM „Parasite-Tutor“ – Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of Washington, Seatle, WA Ascaris lumbricoides egg CD-ROM „Parasite-Tutor“ – Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of Washington, Seatle, WA Parasitic agents of diarrhea Protozoa: Entamoeba histolytica: amoebic dysentery Giardia lamblia: giardiasis Cryptosporidium parvum: cryptosporidiosis Helminths in the small intestine: Ascaris lumbricoides (human roundworm) Strongyloides stercoralis (threadworm) Taenia saginata (beef tapeworm),T.solium (pork tapeworm) Hymenolepis nana (dwarf tapeworm) ......in the large intestine: Enterobius vermicularis (pinworm) Trichuris trichiura (whipworm) Food poisoning Intoxication due to a toxin preformed in the food Staphylococcus aureus: heat-stable enterotoxin Clostridium perfringens: heat-labile enterotoxin Bacillus cereus: heat-stable enterotoxin and vomiting toxin (mostly in rice) Clostridium botulinum: heat-labile neurotoxin Harmenszoon Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669) Anatomy Lecture of Doctor Tulp (1632)