Salmonella
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
BACK TO ENTEROBACTERIACEAE
BACK TO BACTERIA
BACK TO INFECTIOUS AGENTS AND PARASITES
- 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
- Faemcal-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 invade the body
- 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