Difference between revisions of "Streptococcus suis"

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*Meningitis, arthritis, septicaemia and pneumonia of pigs
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==Introduction==
*Sporadic cases of endocarditis, neonatal deaths and abortion
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''Streptococcus suis'' is best known for causing '''multisystemic disease and mortality in pigs and septicaemia in poultry'''. It is one of the [[Streptococci|''Streptococcus'' genus]] of '''gram positive cocci [[Bacteria|bacteria]]'''.
*Carried in tonsils and nasal cavity of carrier pigs  
 
*Outbreaks occur in intensively-reared herds with poor hygiene
 
*Carrier sows infect litters causing neonatal deaths
 
*Meningitis with fever, tremors, incoordination, opisthotonos and convulsions
 
*Treatment with penicillin; prophylactic long-acting penicillin for sows and piglets
 
*Suppurative conditions in cattle, sheep, horses, cats
 
*Septicaemia and meningitis in humans
 
  
===[[Streptococcus & Enterococcus Infections - Pigs]]===
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There are many serotypes of ''S. suis'', most clinical infections generate isolates of capsule types 1-8. '''Capsule type 2''' is responsible for most human infections
  
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==Lifecycle==
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The bacterium is a '''commensal of healthy pigs''' and is carried in the '''tonsils''' of asymptomatic carrier pigs. It is transmitted via '''respiratory secretions, ingestion of faeces or exudates or vertically from sows'''. Disease usually presents after a stressful incident allows '''opportunistic infection''' by resident microflora from the respiratory or gastrointestinal tracts.
  
[[Category:Streptococcus_species]][[Category:Pig Bacteria]][[Category:Cat Bacteria]][[Category:Cattle Bacteria]][[Category:Sheep Bacteria]][[Category:Horse Bacteria]]
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==Pathogenesis==
[[Category:To_Do_-_Bacteria]][[Category:To Do - Medium]]
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Virulence factors for ''S. suis'' include '''fimbriae, haemagglutinins, capsular antigens, cell wall proteins, IgG binding proteins and haemolysins'''. The capsule protects the bacteria from phagocytosis.<ref>Smith, H. E., Damman, M., Velde, Jvan der., Wagenaar, F., Wisselink, H. J., Stockhofe-Zurwieden, N., Smits, M. A (1999) '''Identification and characterization of the cps locus of Streptococcus suis serotype 2: the capsule protects against phagocytosis and is an important virulence factor'''. Infection and Immunity, 67(4):1750-1756; 43</ref>
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==Diseases==
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Disease is often '''multisystemic''' and includes meningitis, arthritis, Pericarditis, pneumonia, endocarditis, rhinitis and septicaemia most notably in pigs and poultry but also in cattle, horses, dogs, cats and people. ''S. suis'' is a '''zoonosis of utmost importance.'''
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See [[Streptococcus & Enterococcus Infections - Pigs]] and [[Streptococcus & Enterococcus Infections - Poultry]] for details.
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{{Learning
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|flashcards = [[Streptococcus suis Flashcards|''S. suis'' Flashcards]]
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}}
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==References==
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<references/>
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Animal Health & Production Compendium, '''Streptococcus suis datasheet''', accessed 04/06/2011 @ http://www.cabi.org/ahpc/
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[[Category:Streptococcus_species]][[Category:To Do - CABI review]]

Revision as of 15:47, 4 July 2011

Streptococcus suis
Phylum Firmicutes
Class Bacilli
Order Lactobacillales
Family Streptococcaceae
Genus Streptococcus
Species S. suis

Introduction

Streptococcus suis is best known for causing multisystemic disease and mortality in pigs and septicaemia in poultry. It is one of the Streptococcus genus of gram positive cocci bacteria.

There are many serotypes of S. suis, most clinical infections generate isolates of capsule types 1-8. Capsule type 2 is responsible for most human infections

Lifecycle

The bacterium is a commensal of healthy pigs and is carried in the tonsils of asymptomatic carrier pigs. It is transmitted via respiratory secretions, ingestion of faeces or exudates or vertically from sows. Disease usually presents after a stressful incident allows opportunistic infection by resident microflora from the respiratory or gastrointestinal tracts.

Pathogenesis

Virulence factors for S. suis include fimbriae, haemagglutinins, capsular antigens, cell wall proteins, IgG binding proteins and haemolysins. The capsule protects the bacteria from phagocytosis.[1]

Diseases

Disease is often multisystemic and includes meningitis, arthritis, Pericarditis, pneumonia, endocarditis, rhinitis and septicaemia most notably in pigs and poultry but also in cattle, horses, dogs, cats and people. S. suis is a zoonosis of utmost importance.

See Streptococcus & Enterococcus Infections - Pigs and Streptococcus & Enterococcus Infections - Poultry for details.


Streptococcus suis Learning Resources
FlashcardsFlashcards logo.png
Flashcards
Test your knowledge using flashcard type questions
S. suis Flashcards


References

  1. Smith, H. E., Damman, M., Velde, Jvan der., Wagenaar, F., Wisselink, H. J., Stockhofe-Zurwieden, N., Smits, M. A (1999) Identification and characterization of the cps locus of Streptococcus suis serotype 2: the capsule protects against phagocytosis and is an important virulence factor. Infection and Immunity, 67(4):1750-1756; 43

Animal Health & Production Compendium, Streptococcus suis datasheet, accessed 04/06/2011 @ http://www.cabi.org/ahpc/