Category:Streptococcus species
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This article has been peer reviewed but is awaiting expert review. If you would like to help with this, please see more information about expert reviewing. |
Overview
- Cause suppurative infections in many different animals
- Cause abscess formation and septicaemia
- Cause mastitis, metritis, polyarthritis, meningitis
- Primary or secondary infections following viral infection
- Neonatal septicaemia related to maternal genital tract infection
- Haemolytic streptococci of Lancefield group C are common inhabitants of the equine nasopharynx
- Streptococcus zooepidemicus and S. equisimilis are usually non-pathogenic
- Involved in peritonitis in pigs, pyothorax, osteomyelitis, catarrhal stomatitis
- In infectious arthritis of sheep, arthritis in calves, arthritis in horses and arthritis in pigs
- Often commensals on mucous membranes of upper respiratory and lower urogenital tract
- Opportunistic infections
Characteristics
- Gram positive cocci forming chains
- Catalase negative, facultative anaerobes
- Fastitidious - require enriched media such as blood or serum
- Small haemolytic, translucent colonies, some mucoid
- Catalase negative
- Susceptible to desiccation
Identification
- Beta haemolysis (complete with clear zones surrounding colonies)
- Alpha haemolysis (partial with green zones surrounding colonies)
- Lancefield grouping - serology based on group-specific polysaccharide in cell wall
- Biochemical testing
Diagnosis
- Swabs of pus or exudate cultured on blood agar and MacConkey agar
- No growth on MacConkey except S. faecalis
- PCR, Lancefield grouping and biochemical tests
Pathogensis and Pathogenicity
- Beta-haemolytic strains more pathogenic than alpha-haemolytic strains
- Virulence factors include streptolysins, hyaluronidase, DNase, streptokinase and proteases
- S. pyogenes, S. pneumoniae and some strains of S. equi have polysaccharide capsules which are antiphagocytic
- S. pyogenes and S. equi have antiphagocytic cell wall M proteins
Streptococcus equi subsp. equi
Streptococcus suis
- Meningitis, arthritis, septicaemia and pneumonia of pigs
- Sporadic cases of endocarditis, neonatal deaths and abortion
- 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
Bovine streptococcal mastitis
- S. agalactiae, S. dysgalactiae and S. uberis primarily cause mastitis
- Also S. pyogenes, S. zooepidemicus and Enterococcus faecalis can be involved
- S. agalactiae colonises milk ducts causing persistent infections with acute outbreaks
- S. dysgalactiae found in the oral cavity and on the skin of the udder causes acute mastitis
- S. uberis inhabits normal skin, tonsils and vaginal mucosa, and causes mastitis without systemic signs
- Cause inflammation of mammary tissue and clots form in milk
- Milk samples are cultured on blood agar, Edward's medium and MacConkey agar for diagnosis
S. equisimilis
- Found on skin and vagina of horses
- Causes abscesses, endometritis and mastitis in horses
- Suppurative conditions in pigs, cattle, dogs, birds
S. zooepidemicus
- Colonises mucous membranes
- Causes mastitis, pneumonia, sinusitis and navel infections in horses
- S. zooepidemicus can cause similar signs to strangles in horses and may accompany COPD
- Secondary invador after equine influenza
- Colonises skin and mucous membranes of cattle, lambs, pigs and poultry and causes suppurative infections and septicaemia
- Can cause vascular fragility, leading to haemorrhagic disease
Enterococcus faecalis
- Colonises intestinal tract
- Causes opportunistic suppurative infections in many species
S. canis
- Found in vagina and anal mucosa of carnivores
- Neonatal septicaemia, suppurative infections, toxic shock syndrome
- In deep pyoderma and subcutaneous abscesses
S. pneumoniae
- Found in upper respiratory tract of primates
- Causes septicaemia, pneumonia and meningitis
- Pneumonia in guinea-pigs and rats
S. porcinus
- Submandibular lymphadenitis in pigs
Pages in category "Streptococcus species"
The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.