Category:Pseudomonas and Burkholderia species
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Overview
- Organisms found in soil and water worldwide
- Burkholderia mallei causes glanders; rodents act as reservoir of infection
- Burkholderia pseudomallei causes meliodosis
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa, found on skin, mucous membranes and in faeces, causes opportunistic infections
Characteristics
- Gram-negative rods
- Obligate aerobes
- Oxidase and catalase positive
- Pseudomonas species and Burkholderia pseudomallei motile by polar flagellae
- Burkholderia mallei non-motile
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Burkholderia mallei
Burkholderia pseudomallei
- Causes melioidosis - endemic in Asia and Australia
- Primarily infects rodents
- Pathogenesis:
- Infection via ingestion, inhalation or skin wounds from environment
- Exotoxin, dermonecrotic protease and lecithinase implicated in pathogenicity
- Strain virulence and host immunosuppression important
- Clinical infections:
- Opportunistic infection with stress and immunosuppression predisposing to disease
- Abscesses develop in many organs including lungs, spleen, liver, joints, CNS, upper respiratory tract
- Chronic, debilitating, progressive disease with long incubation period
- Many animal species susceptible
- Referred to as pseudoglanders in horses
- Diagnosis:
- Specimens: pus from abscesses, affected tissues, blood
- Fluorescent antibody technique on tissue smears
- Blood agar and MacConkey agar plates, incubated aerobically
- Colonies have musty smell
- Lactose fermentation on MacConkey
- Slide agglutination
- ELISA, complement fixation and indirect haemagglutination tests for serum antibodies
- Treatment/control: slaughter of infected animals where exotic
Pages in category "Pseudomonas and Burkholderia species"
The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.