Difference between revisions of "Salmonella"
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===Pathogenesis=== | ===Pathogenesis=== | ||
− | * | + | *Faecal-oral transmission |
*Comparitively large dose required for infection due to gastric acid, normal intestinal flora and local immunity | *Comparitively large dose required for infection due to gastric acid, normal intestinal flora and local immunity | ||
*Enterocolitis: | *Enterocolitis: | ||
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**Degeneration of microvilli | **Degeneration of microvilli | ||
*Systemic disease: | *Systemic disease: | ||
− | |||
**Bacteria internalised by intestinal epithelial cells | **Bacteria internalised by intestinal epithelial cells | ||
**Stimulate immune response on reaching the lamina propria | **Stimulate immune response on reaching the lamina propria | ||
Line 70: | Line 69: | ||
**Bacteria either destroyed by the phagocytic cells or survive and multiply in the cells to cause systemic disease | **Bacteria either destroyed by the phagocytic cells or survive and multiply in the cells to cause systemic disease | ||
**Intracellular carriage if bacteria no completely removed | **Intracellular carriage if bacteria no completely removed | ||
+ | **Invasive potential of certain strains e.e ''Salmonella'' Dublin associated with carriage of a large plasmid, encoding genes to allow intracellular survival in macrophages and also to allow iron acquisition | ||
+ | **''Salmonellae'' are facultative intracellular organisms, allowing them to move from the gut in macrophages and cause a bacteraemia and lesions throughout the body | ||
+ | **Possession of Pathogenicity islands associated with virulence | ||
===Clinical infections=== | ===Clinical infections=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Some serotypes are host-specific, some are not | ||
+ | *''S.'' Tymphimurium infects many species; causes severe diarrhoea; non-invasive; causes of food poisoning in humans, e.g. from infected poultry | ||
+ | *''S. enteritidis'': non species-specific; losses in young birds; causes food poisoning in humans | ||
+ | *''S.'' Dublin: invasive serovar; infects cattle | ||
+ | *''S.'' Cholerae-Suis: primarily infects pigs; also causes severe human disease | ||
+ | *''S.'' Pullorum: infects poultry; egg-transmitted; causes bacillary white diarrhoea, known as pullorum disease | ||
+ | *''S.'' Gallinarum: infectes older birds; known as howl typhoid | ||
+ | *''S.'' Pullorum and ''S.'' Gallinarum now rare in UK due to eradication programs including the Pullorum test (whole blood slide agglutination to detect antibody to both ''S.'' Pullorum and ''S'' Gallinarum | ||
+ | *''S.'' Abortis-ovis: infects sheep | ||
+ | *''S.'' Abortus-equi: infects horses outside of the UK | ||
+ | *''S.'' Typhi, ''S.'' Paratyphi: infect humans | ||
Revision as of 19:08, 16 February 2008
- Some serotypes tend to be more species specific, whereas others can affect a wide range of species. For example:
- Salmonella enteritidis
- Salmonella typhimurium
- Widespread in most species.
- Salmonella dublin
- Cattle
- Salmonella cholerae suis
- Pigs
- Usually speticaemic.
- A cause of ulcerative enteritis in the pig.
- Not very common now.
- Salmonella montevideo
- Produces outbreaks from contaminated imported meat and bone meal.
- Salmonellosis
- * Can cause haemorrhagic disease by secondary thrombocytopenic disease.
- Salmonella in Osteomyelitis
- In arthritis of horses
Overview
- Important member of the enterobacteria
- Cause disease in humans and animals
- Reservior of infection in poulty, pigs, rodents, cattle, dogs
- Cause enteritis and systemic infection (septicaemia and abortion)
- Salmonella may be carried sub-clinically
- Some human strains cause enteric fever (S. Typhi causes typhoid), also gastroenteritis, septicaemia or bacteraemia
Characteristics
- Gram negative bacilli
- Facultative intracellular pathogens
- Non-lactose fermentor, oxidase negative
- Do not produce urease or indole from tryptophan
- Utilise citrate as a carbon source
- Reduce nitrates to nitrites
- Grow on MacConkey
- Ferment glucose to produce acid and gas
- Usually produce hydrogen sulphide
- Most motile with flagellae (H antigen)
- H antigen can be in phase 1 or phase 2, depending on a genetic switch allowing for one of the H antigen genes to be transcribed at any one time
Classification
- Single species, Salmonella enterica
- Over 2400 pathogenic serotypes or serovars identified
- Grouped into 9 groups according to O antigen (lipopolysaccharide) by the Kauffmann-White scheme - determined by slide agglutination of the bacteria with specific antisera
- Categorised into serovars depending on and H (flagellar) antigen, e.g. Salmonella enterica subspecies enterica serovar Tymphimurium; must also determine phase of H antigen
Pathogenesis
- Faecal-oral transmission
- Comparitively large dose required for infection due to gastric acid, normal intestinal flora and local immunity
- Enterocolitis:
- Acute enteritis
- Bacteria multiply in the intestine and damage epithelial cells
- Cytotoxin may cause epithelial cell damage
- Enterotoxin may induce fluid secretion into intestinal lumen
- Degeneration of microvilli
- Systemic disease:
- Bacteria internalised by intestinal epithelial cells
- Stimulate immune response on reaching the lamina propria
- Inflammatory response with phagocytosis of bacteria by neutrophils and macrophages
- Bacteria either destroyed by the phagocytic cells or survive and multiply in the cells to cause systemic disease
- Intracellular carriage if bacteria no completely removed
- Invasive potential of certain strains e.e Salmonella Dublin associated with carriage of a large plasmid, encoding genes to allow intracellular survival in macrophages and also to allow iron acquisition
- Salmonellae are facultative intracellular organisms, allowing them to move from the gut in macrophages and cause a bacteraemia and lesions throughout the body
- Possession of Pathogenicity islands associated with virulence
Clinical infections
- Some serotypes are host-specific, some are not
- S. Tymphimurium infects many species; causes severe diarrhoea; non-invasive; causes of food poisoning in humans, e.g. from infected poultry
- S. enteritidis: non species-specific; losses in young birds; causes food poisoning in humans
- S. Dublin: invasive serovar; infects cattle
- S. Cholerae-Suis: primarily infects pigs; also causes severe human disease
- S. Pullorum: infects poultry; egg-transmitted; causes bacillary white diarrhoea, known as pullorum disease
- S. Gallinarum: infectes older birds; known as howl typhoid
- S. Pullorum and S. Gallinarum now rare in UK due to eradication programs including the Pullorum test (whole blood slide agglutination to detect antibody to both S. Pullorum and S Gallinarum
- S. Abortis-ovis: infects sheep
- S. Abortus-equi: infects horses outside of the UK
- S. Typhi, S. Paratyphi: infect humans