Term
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Definition
Mycobacteria. Contain large amounts of waxes, making the cells impervious to harsh chemicals. No peptidoglycan. |
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Term
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Definition
Preformed organic compounds that
all pathogenic bacteria need |
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Term
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Definition
Condensed, walled-off nucleoid and cytoplasm surrounded by a spore coat (resistant to microwaves, chemicals, desiccation, heat, and antimicrobials) |
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Term
Elementary Bodies (EB) and Small Cell Variants (SCV) |
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Definition
Condensed forms of obligate intracellular
bacteria taht are suited for survival
outside the host cell (metabolically inactive) |
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Term
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Definition
Exotoxins that are capable of
intoxicating multiple cell types |
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Term
Effectors (Effector toxins) |
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Definition
Protein toxins that are injected from the bacterium directly into the cytosol of hte host cell via injectosomes |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Protein toxins that cause symptoms
associated with enteric disease |
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Term
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Definition
Protein toxins that are exported from bacterial
cells in to the extracellular environment |
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Term
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Definition
Bacteria attached to surfaces and encased in a hydrated polymeric matrix containing polysaccharides, proteins, and nucleic acids |
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Term
Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) |
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Definition
Lowest concentration of drug that visibly inhibits growth of bacteria after 18-22 hr incubation |
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Term
Disk-diffusion susceptibility test (K-B) |
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Definition
Diameter of zone of inhibition correlates inversely with MIC |
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Term
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Definition
Concentration of antimicrobial drug sufficient to inhibit isolate's growth in vivo not achievable and/or tolerated |
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Term
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Definition
Standard dosage of drug will usually achieve concentrations sufficient to inhibit isolate's growth in vivo |
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Term
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Definition
Criteria for classification of results as "susceptible" or "resistant" |
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Term
|
Definition
- Beta-lactam
- Inhibits cell wall synthesis
- Rapidly bactericidal
- Gram positive aerobes and most anaerobes susceptible
- Resistance aquared through production of beta-lactamases
- Calvulanic acid binds to B-lactamase and neutralizes it (clavamox = clavulanic acid + amoxicillin)
- Methicillin and oxacillin is resistant to B-lactamase
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Term
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Definition
- Beta-lactam
- Inhibits cell wall synthesis
- Rapidly bactericidal
- Resistance acquired by production of beta-lactamases (not all B-lactamases work against both Penicillins + cephalosporins)
- First Generation: cephalexin, cefadroxil, cephapirin, cefazolin (gram-positives, some gram-negatives)
- 2nd Generation: cefoxitin (more gram-negative and anaerobe)
- 3rd Generation: less gram positive activity, more gram-neg activity
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Term
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Definition
- Broad-spectrum
- Bacteriostatic by inhibiting protein synthesis (Binds to 30S and 50S subunits of bacterial ribosomes)
- Resistance through plasmid mediated efflux pumps
- Names include "-cycline"
- Provides cross resistance
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Term
Chloramphenicol, Florfenicol |
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Definition
- Broad-spectrum
- Bacteriostatic by inhibiting protein synthesis (ribosomes)
- Most resistace in plasmid mediated chloramphenicol acetyltransferases
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Term
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Definition
- Bactericidal
- Inhibits rate of protein synthesis and causes transcript misreads
- Uptake requires O2 dependent, active transport into bacterial cell.
- Primarily used for treatment of serious gram-neg infections. Limited gram-pos activity
- Resistance acquired primarily by plasmid-mediated enzymatic modification
- limited cross-resistance
- Gentamicin, amikacin, neomycin, streptomycin
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Term
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
- Bacteriostatic by inhibiting protein synthesis
- Active against gram0positive aerobes, mycoplasma, and anaerobes but NOT for gram negative aerobes
- Great for respiratory infections because drug concentrates in lungs
- Erythromycin, tilmicosin, azithromycin, clarithromycin, tylosin, tulathromycin
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Term
|
Definition
- Bacteriostatic by inhibiting protein synthesis similar to macrolides
- Active against gram-positive aerobes, mycoplasma, and anaerobes, but poor gram-negative penetration
- -clindamycin, lincomycin, pirlimycin
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Term
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Definition
- Rapidly bactericidal
- Targets 2 types of topoisomerases (doesn't allow for recoiling of bacterial chromosome and allows for rapid nuclease digestion)
- Potent,broad spectrum, but limited activity against anaerobes and streptococci
- Resistance through: mutations in DNA gyrase and topoisomerase genes, acquiring efflux pumps, conjugation (target not as susceptible to binding)
- Names have "floxacin" in it (baytril = enrofloxacin)
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Term
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Definition
- Bacteriostatic and slow acting
- Competitive analogs of p-aminobenzoic acid in the synthesis of folic acid
- Broad spectrum
- Cross resistance by plasmid-mediated alternative enzyme or over production of targeted enzyme
- Trimethoprim, ormethoprim = potentiated with sulfa and makes it bactericidal
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Term
Beta Lactam antimicrobials |
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Definition
Penicillins and Cephalosporins |
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Term
Antibiotics inhibiting protein synthesis |
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Definition
Tetracyclines
Chloramphenicol
Florfenicol
Aminoglycosides
Macrolides |
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Term
Antimicrobials that target topoisomerases |
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Definition
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Term
Antimicrobials that prevent folic acid synthesis |
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Definition
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Term
Antimicrobials for Gram Positive Aerobes |
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Definition
Beta-labtams
Chloramphenicol
Fluoroquinolones
Macrolides
Tetracyclines
Sulfonamides |
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Term
Antimicrobials for Gram-positive Anaerobes |
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Definition
Beta-lactams
Chloramphenicol
Macrolides
Tetracyclines
Sulfonamides |
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Term
Antimicrobials for Gram-negative Aerobes |
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Definition
Aminoglycosides
Beta-lactams
Chloramphenicol
Fluoroquinolones
Sulfonamides
Tetracyclines |
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Term
|
Definition
Beta-lactams
Chloramphenicol
Tetracyclines
Sulfonamides |
|
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Term
|
Definition
Staphylococcus
Stretpococcus
Enterococcus
Erysipelothrix
Listeria
Bacillus
Corynebacterium |
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Term
|
Definition
Actinomyces
Clostridium
Peptostreptococcus |
|
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Term
|
Definition
E. coli
Salmonella
Klebsiella
Pasteurella
Pseudomonas
Proteus |
|
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Term
|
Definition
Bacteroides
Porphyromonas
Prevotella
Fusibacterium |
|
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Term
|
Definition
- Gram-positive coci occuring singly, in pairs, or in chains
- Commensals of mucosal membranes, mostly upper respiratory, genital, and digestive tracts. Infections mostly opportunistic
- Most require blood/serum components for growth
- Common dzz: URI, lymphadenitis, neonatal septicemia (failure passive transfer), secondary pneumonia, pyogenic infections in any body site
- Live for 6-8 wks in dried pus, soil, bedding, etc.. but susceptible to desiccation. (aerosol, direct contact/fomites = spread)
- Some cause contagious dz + transmit by convalescent carriers
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Term
Pathogenesis of Pyogenic Infection |
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Definition
- Pyogenic = pus (dead leukocytes, liquefied tissue, living and dead bacteria) encapsulation of liq tissue = abscess
- Bacteria enter tissues or attach and colonize (adhesins include M protein, capsule, teichoic acids)
- Initiate chemotactic leukocytic response
- Antiphagocytic factors: capsule and M protein
- Produce a variety of exotoxins:
- Evoke vascular dilation, exudation of plasma and neutrophils
- Hemolysins (leukotoxin), hyaluronidase, proteases)
- B-hemolysis: clear zone @ colony on blood agar mostly pathogenic
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Term
Antimicrobial selection for B-hemolytic streptococci |
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Definition
- Predictable susceptibility: B-lactams (esp PENICILLINS), cchloramphenicol, trimethoprim/sulfas, macrolides, lincosamides
- Resistance: quinolones, aminoglycosides, tetracyclines
- Resistance mostly innate, due to lack of penetration through thick cell wall (not acquired genetic changes)
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Term
Major Streptococcus species |
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Definition
- Streptococcus pyogenes
- Streptococcus equi ssp equi
- Streptococcus equi ssp. zooepidemicus
- Streptococcus canis
- Streptococcus agalactiae
- Streptococcus suis
- Enterococcus spp
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
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Term
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Definition
- B-hemolytic
- pharyngitis/tonsilitis of humans
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Term
Streptococcus equi ssp. equi |
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Definition
- B-hemolytic
- Strangles of Equidae
- Reservoirs & chronic carriers: chondroid in guttural pouch (10-30% up to 56 mos)
- Diagnosis: culture, PCR, serology for Abs to M protein
- Strangles Vaccine: attenuated bacterium with no capsule. IN application, fully virulent in tissue
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Term
Streptococcus equi ssp. zooepidemicus |
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Definition
- B-hemolytic
- Common pyogenic agent in many species of animals
- Most common pyogenic agent of horses (90% time)
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Term
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Definition
- B-hemolytic
- Neonatal septicemia (in failure of fetal transfer)
- Genital, skin, and wound infections
- Canine streptococcal toxic shock syndrome and necrotizing fasciitis
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Term
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Definition
- Chromic bovine mastitis
- Only obligate parasite of udder
- Only CAMP positive org: synergistic "arrow-head hemolysis at intersection of Strep. and Staph. streak lines on BA
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Term
|
Definition
- Pneumonia, septicemia, arthritis, meningitis
- Sporadic-major issue
- Zoonotic and causes meningitis with high morbidity
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Term
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Definition
- Very close to strep, but survive well in GI
- a-hemolytic (so not usually pyogenic)
- endocarditis and 10-15% canine urinary tract infections (UTI
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Term
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Definition
- Gram positive cocci that tend to be in clusters
- Commensals of upper respiratory tract and skin of all endotherms
- Unlike strep, prolonged survival in inanimate environ.
- Spread of strains b/w diff animal species very limited
- Pyogenic, associated with abscess formation and suppuration
- Invasive enzymes: hyaluronidase, protease, lipase, fibrinolytic enzymes
- Capsules and Protein A = antiphagocytic (fxns as Fc receptor)
- Exotoxins (leukotoxins and cytolysins = alpha toxin, which is a pore forming hemolysin) can cause cell death and release of inflammatory mediators
- Superantigens cause massive T cell stimulation
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Term
Importance of Urease in UTI caused by Staphylococcus |
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Definition
Urease hydrolyzes urea into ammonia, which
increases the pH and reduces the solubility of
salts, which precipiates out of solution and
forms phosphate (struvite, apatite) uroliths). |
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Term
Identifying characteristics of Staphylococcus |
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Definition
- Coagulase test positive strains correlate well with pathogenicity/virulence
- S. aureus and S. intermedius groups are coagulase +
- Coagulase - strains considered normal skin flora with limited virulence
- Hemolytic reactions can be complete, incomplete, or nonhemolytic.
- Double zone of hemolysis (2 diff hemolysin toxins produced) produced by animal strains correlates with coagulase+)
- Isolation of Staph spp must be interpreted with caution (should be isolated in assoc with lesion, from deep within tissue, abscess or pustule)
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Term
Species in Staphylococcus intermedius group (SIG) |
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Definition
Staphylococcus pseudintermedius
Staphylococcus delphini
Staphylococcus intermedius |
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Term
Common Staphylococcus strains outside of SIG
|
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Definition
Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcus hyicus
>40 spp of coagulase - Staphylococcus |
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Term
Staphylococcus pseudintermedius |
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Definition
- MOST common pyogenic agent of dogs: pyoderma, infections of respiratory tract, bones, joints, wounds, etc...
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Term
|
Definition
- From dolphins, horses, camels, mink, domestic pigeons
- Most common SIG from horses
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Term
Staphylococcus intermedius |
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Definition
Only isolated from wild pigeons |
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Term
|
Definition
- Humans and many animal species: abscesses, mastitis, osteoyelitis, etc...
- Bumble-foot, botryomycosis in birds
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Term
|
Definition
- Exudative epidermitis (greasy pig disease of piglets)
- Very devastating
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Term
Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus |
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Definition
- Aka Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Can only differentiate via genomic studies
- Infections associated with medical devices
- Common cause of subclinical bovine mastitis
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Term
Antimicrobial selection for Staphylococcus |
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Definition
- Penicillinase-resistant penicillins, cephalosporins, clavulanate/amoxicillin, macrolides, trimethoprim/sulfas, chloramphenicol, aminoglycosides, quinolones
- 60-80% has B-lactamase
- Resistance issues with B-lactams and tetracyclines
- Transduction of B-lactamase gene
- Inducible B-lactamase genes
- Broad spectrum B-lactamases (cephalosporins)
- Methicillin resistance
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Term
Methicillin resistance in MRSA and MRSP |
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Definition
- mecA resistance gene (penicillin binding protein with affinity to B-lactams and methicillin)
- MRSA contains staphylococcal cassette chromosome
- Mobile genetic element wth integrated copies of plasmids
- No phage-related genes, but mobility due to two recombinases
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Term
|
Definition
- Gram-positive coccobacillus
- Occurs in soil, manure, + the intestine of mammals and birds
- Foal intestine serves as incubator
- Acquired by inhalation of dust, ingestion, umbilicus?
- No diff in # of orgs on prob farms vs. okay farms because problem farm strain has plasmid containing virulence factor
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Term
Pathogenesis of Rhodococcus equi |
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Definition
- Foals at-risk as MAb declines (peak incidence 6-12 weeks) Passive transfer important
- Neutrophils are fully competent bactericidal defense
- Infection largely within macrophages/monocytes b/c virulence factor allows entry into macrophage (Entry via non-Fc recep (CRs) allows evasion of Ab-mediated killing in macrophages and intracellular survival). Presence of vapA plasmid necessary to arrest phagosome maturation
- chronic pyogranulomatous inflammation
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Term
Immunoprophylaxis/Treatment of Rhodococcus equi |
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Definition
- Commercial vaccines not approved in US due to lack of efficacy
- Passive immunization via hyperimmune plasma presumably vs. Vaps
- Macrolides are best with Rifampin (combo to limit resistance) - Erythromycin gentamicin,clarithromycin
- Lots of resistance issues because high freq of emergence of resistant mutants
- Hard to get antimicrobials to penetrate intracellular and abscess
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Term
Biotypes of Corynebacterium psuedotuberculoses |
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Definition
- Ovine and equine biotypes
- In sheep/goats: caseus lymphadenitis which is chronic with multiple chronic abscesses resuting in debilitation, weight loss, poor production. 3rd leading cause of economic loss in western US sheep indust.
- In horses: ulcerative lymphangitis (pigeon breast, pigeon fever, dryland distemper) in horses. Results in deep abscesses in inguinal and pectoral regions
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Term
Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis |
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Definition
- Small, pleomorphic gram-positive rods. Diphtheroids (Palisades, Chinese letters, club and filamentous)
- Occurs on the skin and mucous membranes and in legions
- Survives on exposed pen floor 10 days, in hay and bedding >1 yr
- Enters through abrasions, shearing wounds, insect bites
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Term
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Definition
- Caused by ovine biotypes of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
- Incubation period from 25-140 days
- Faculatative intracellular pathogen, having capacity to replicate within and ultimately escape from macrophage phagolysosomes
- Abscesses form in lymph nodes with onion-like concentric layers
- Susceptibility: penicillins, tetracyclines, sulfonamides, macrolides
- Virulence factors:
- toxic cell-wall lipid (protects from lysosomal enzymes)
- Sphingomyelinase-specific phospholipase D (exotoxin) causes hemolysis, increased vascular permeability, and cytolysis
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Term
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Definition
- Pigeon breast, pigeon fever, dryland distemper
- Caused by equine biotype of Corynebacterium psuedotuberculosis
- Deep abscesses in inguinal and pectoral regions
- Seasonal occurence
- Susceptibility: Penicillins, tetracyclines, sulfonamides, macrolides
- Treatment ineffective in walled off abscesses
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Term
Diagnosis of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis |
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Definition
- Serology: no correlation between Ab titer and extent of lesion development
- Multiplex PCR can identify and differentiate from other corynebacteria
- Readily grows on standard lab media
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Term
Immunization for Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis |
|
Definition
- Toxoid vaccines provide good protection vs. dz in sheep and goats
- Bacterins provide variable protection and reduce number of abscesses
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Term
|
Definition
- Short, pleomorphic, gram positive rods
- Inhabits lower genital tract of cattle
- Transmitted via direct contact and by urine splashing
- Pili-mediated attachment to uroepithelium is critical in pathogenesis
- Predilection for urinary tract due to bacteria's ability to metabolize large quantities of urea (urease). Mucosal damage results from chem irritation when urease -> ammonia
- Causes chronic ascending pyonecrotic urinary tract infection (bovine pyelonephritis)
- Ovine posthitis (pizzle rot) necrotizing inflammaiton of prepuce
- Penicillin is antibiotic of choice
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|
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Term
|
Definition
- Small gram-positive rods (facultative anaerobe)
- Commensal of mucous membranes and skin of suscleptible animals (cattle, goats, sheep and pigs)
- Causes suppurative processes (usually complicated by other potential pathogens or debilitated tissues, chronically progressing to thick walled abscesses
- The most common pyogenic agent of cattle
- Susceptible to penicillins, tetracyclines, sulfas
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Term
|
Definition
- Small, motile gram-positive rods
- L. monocytogenes is most important pathogen
- Widely distributed in environ including soil, plants, decaying vegetation and GIT of over 50 spp animals
- Graow in temp 1-45C and pH of 4.4-9.6. Remarkable resistance to dessication. survives for months in dairy, plants, meats, and soil
- Ingestion primary route of entry
- Facultative intracellular parasitism
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|
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Term
|
Definition
- Attachment, parasite-directed endocytosis, lysis of phagosome, growth in cytoplasm, directed budding/endocytosis into second cell, release into cytoplasm
- Intestinal colonization and translocation
- Replication in the liver and spleen
- T-cell dep resolution or spread
- Tissue invations:
- Blood-borne bacteria directly invade endothelial cells
- Monocytes carry and spread bacteria to target cells
- Oral-phagocyte-facilitated spread to trigeminal axon, retrograde movement to brain stem.
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Term
Clinical forms of listeriosis |
|
Definition
- Zoonotic with incubation period upto 70 days (septicemia, meningitis, abortion)
- Visceral form: septicemia with localization in parenchymous organs (liver and spleen) resulting in focal necrosis (primarily in monogastric species)
- Abortion: localizes in placental and fetus (common in cattle and sheep
- Neural form: localizes in pons and medulla via sheath of trigeminal nerve or in meninges via bacteremia
- Most common in ruminants --> circling dz
- Microabscesses: Perivascular cuffing with infiltrate of leukocytes, focal necrosis
- Meningitis sporadically occurs in other species
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|
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Term
|
Definition
- Susceptible: penicillin/ampicillin, sulfonamides, tetracyclines, chloramphenicol, erythromycin
- Listeriosis very severe: 30% mortality with antibiotic, and 100% in case of meningoencephalitis
- Diagnose:
- Collect correct tissue specimen
- Cold enrichment enhancess success of isolation from brain tissue after weeks of incubation
- Typing to characterize and demonstrate possible epidemiological assoc.
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Term
Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae |
|
Definition
- Pleomorphic, small gram-positive rods
- Erysipelas occurs in may spp with swine most freq and severely affected
- Persistent and widespread in environment (Carrier pigs primary reservoire)
- Survives dessication for several months
- Spread by ingestion of contaminated materials
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Term
Pathogenesis of Erysipelas |
|
Definition
- Following ingestion: invasion, bacteremia, localization in various tissues
- Virulent strains produce high levels of NA; causes vascular damage and thrombus formation
- Articular cartilage damaged by immune response to persisting Ag
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Term
Erysipela syndromes in swine |
|
Definition
- Acute septicemia
- Urticarial form (Diamond skin dz)
- Vegetative endocarditis (chronic)
- Polyarthritis (chronic
|
|
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Term
|
Definition
- Turkeys, geese and other birds (acute septicemia, vegetative endocarditis, arthritis)
- Sheep (polyarthritis
- Dogs (vegetative endocarditis, bacteremia)
- Marine mammals (serious, fatal septicemia
- Humans (Erysipeloid is localized cellulitis)
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Term
Treatment and Vaccine for Erysipelas |
|
Definition
- Susceptibility: Penicillin, tetracyclines
- 28 serotypes of varying virulence, though surface protective ags essential for immunization and are cross-protective
- Most animals passively protected from naturally occuring dz by hyperimmune antiserum
- Both live attenuated vaccines and bacterins available for pigs and turkeys.
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|
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Term
|
Definition
- Filamentous, branching, gram-positive rods
- Most are obligate anaerobes or capnophilic
- Present on mucous membranes, often in oral cavity and nasopharynx
- Endogenous infections causing pyogenic or pyogranulomatous reactions
- May form "Sulfur granules" in tissues and exudate (colonies surrounded by calcium phosphate mineral.)
- Some produce L-forms in tissue
|
|
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Term
|
Definition
Actinomyces bovis
Actinomyces viscosus
Actinomyces hordeovulnaris
|
|
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Term
|
Definition
- Causes lumpy jaw
- Chronic progressive infection
- principally of cattle
- development of granulomatous, suppurative legions involving bone and soft tissue
|
|
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Term
|
Definition
- Cutaneous pyogranulomas, pyothorax (focal abscess in lungs), osteomyelitis (very hard to treat)
|
|
|
Term
Actinomyces hordeovulnaris |
|
Definition
Cutaneous pyogranulomas, pyothorax, osteomyelitis often associated with tissue migrating foxtail awns |
|
|
Term
Treatment for Actinomycosis |
|
Definition
Susceptibility: Trimethoprim/sulfa, penicillin/ampicillin (not for L-forms), tetracyclines
Resistance: aminoglycosides or quinolones (anaerobes!) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Aerobic saprophytic soil organisms
- Filamentous, gram positive rod
- PARTIAL ACIDFAST staining differs from Actinomyces
- Causes suppurative and pyogranulomatous reactions in immunosuppressed hosts or compromised tissues
- Rarely produce sulfur granules
- Susceptibility: Trimethoprim/sulfas, tetracyclines (pennicillin NOT ok b/c lipid cell wall is acidfast)
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Cutaneous granulomas and pyothorax in dogs
- Mastitis in cattle
- Pneumonia in SCID foals
|
|
|
Term
Dermatophilus congolensis |
|
Definition
- Pleomorphic, beaded chains (stacked coins), gram-positive
- Reside in foci of infection on carrier animals or within scabs in environment
- Cause sueprficial dermatitis with thick crusts, hair loss in scabs
- Affects cattle, horses, sheep, goats, etc...
- Many names for dermatophilosis: rain-scald, cutaneous streptothricosis, lumpy wool, strawberry footrot
- Susceptibility: penicillins, tetracyclines
- Happens in dirty animals (won't invade further than dermis)
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|
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Term
|
Definition
- large, gram-positive, spre-forming, aerobic rods.
- ubiquitous in soil, air, dust, and water
- B. anthracis is the only important pathogen
- Acute, usually septicemic dz, primarily of hervibores
- Often peracute in cattle and sheep, found dead without premonitory signs
- All domestic and wild mammals are susceptible
- Birds are resistant
- Worldwide
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|
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Term
|
Definition
- Broad, gram-positive rods with squared ends, commonly in chains, and within capsules in vivo
- Putrefaction kills vegetative cells within 48-72 hrs
- Most spores form from carcass within 48 hrs
- Requires free oxygen for sporulation
- Temperature 18-46C, tropical/temperate regions
- High humidity allows for fast sporulation
|
|
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Term
Spores of Bacillus anthracis |
|
Definition
- Ca+, moist alkaline environ favors spore survival (long time in graves)
- Spores markedly resistant to extremes of heat, cold, pH, desiccation, chemicals and other adverse conditions
- UV inactivates spores in 4-6 hrs
- Mov't of spores by wind, rain, soil disturbance
|
|
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Term
Transmission/Pathogenesis of Bacillus Anthracis |
|
Definition
- Ingestion of spores while grazing, and legion is necessary for initiation of infection
- Spores phagocytosed by macrophages --> lymph nodes
- Low-level germination at entry site --> local edema, hemorrhage, and necrosis
- Macrophage survival --> multiplication and escape --> extracellular growth --> toxin + virulence factor expression --> macrophage + cytokines --> host symptoms and death --> nutrient depletion --> sporulation in environ.
- Major virulence factors plasmid encoded (antiphagocytic polypeptide capsule --> poor Ab response) (Tripartite toxin = leukocidal, increases vascular permeability, capillary thrombosis --> shock and death)
- Suden death, bleeding from orifices, rigor mortis absent/incomplete, bloating
- Septicemic lesions, subcutaneous hemorrhages, edema, blood fails to clot, splenomegaly
|
|
|
Term
Host Range & Disease of Bacillus anthracis |
|
Definition
- Ruminants: sudden death, bleeding from orifices, subQ hemorrheages, without prior signs, brief period of fever, edema, blood fails to clot, splenomegaly
- Equids & wild herbivores: Fever, restlessness, dyspnea, agitation
- Pigs, carnivores: local edema, swelling of face, neck, and lymph nodes
- Chronic infections characterized by localized subQ edematous swellings
|
|
|
Term
Diagnosis & Treatment of Anthrax |
|
Definition
- Prepare blood smear from superficial body sites
- Look for large, capsulated bacillus withoug spores that are gram +
- Know Bacillus anthracis does not reliably survive more than 24 hrs in carcass
- Diagnostic confirmation: nonmotile, nonhemolytic, pXO1 - toxins, pXO2-capsule-producing, susceptible to gamma phage
- Susceptibility: penicillin, tetracycline, macrolides, quinolones
- Sterne spore vaccine is live "avirulent" (nonencapsulated) strain that produces toxins that are good for cattle but not other spp.
- Disinfect with sporicidal solutions (bleach)
- Incinerate carcasse and MAKE SURE TO REPORT (REPORTABLE DZ)
|
|
|
Term
Human threat to Bacillus anthracis |
|
Definition
- Cutaneous form: black scab and edema. Fatality rate of 10-20% if untreated
- Inhalational form: pulmonary edema and hemorrhagic pneumonia, septicemia; nearly 100% fatal
- Intestinal anthrax of consumption of diseased meat. Highly fatal
- Not contageous-age resistance in youngsters
- Antimicrobial: ciprofloxacin (quinolone), doxycycline, amoxicillin
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Term
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Definition
- Large gram-positive rodes, obligate anaerobes, spore-forming (resistant to drying, heat, irradiation, and disinfectants)
- Wide distribution in soil (major habitat), freshwater, marine sediments, and intestinal tract of animals and humans. (some types only present in localized areas)
- Infection acquired by wound contamination, ingestion (including indigenous flora)
- Most pathoogetic types produce potent exotoxins with variable invasive ability.
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Term
Pathogenic types of clostridia: |
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Definition
- Neurotoxic: potent exotoxins, limited colonization or invasiveness (C. tetani and C. botulinum)
- Histotoxic: Invasive and potent exotoxin producers resulting in acute necrosis of tissues (wounds, mm, liver). Includes gas gangrene (C. chauvoei, C. septicum, C. novyi, C. sordelli, C. perfringens)
- Enterocolitis: Produce exotoxins active within intestinal tract causing necrosis, food poisoning, diarrhea. May also be histotoxic (c. perfringens, C. difficile)
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Term
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Definition
- Widely but unevenly distributed in soils and aquatic environ
- Growth and toxin production in anaerobic environ (contaminated meat, fish, veggies, carcasses, rottin gvegetation etc...)
- Only time colonization occurs is wound and infant botulism
- Toxin ingested, absorbed, and distributed to myoneural junctions and release of ACh suppressed via hydrolysis of SNARE proteins --> flaccid paralysis
- Most common in water birds (limber neck), ruminants, horses, mink and poultry. Carnivores relatively resistant
- Limited serotype-specific vaccine and diagnostic reagents
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Term
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Definition
- Natural habitat is soil, esp contaminated by animal feces; transient in intestines
- Endospores enter traumatized tissue/wounds (castration, docking, umbilicus, parturition, etc...)
- Local bacterial growth and production of tetanus toxin
- Tetox travels retrograde through motor neurons at nueromuscular jxn to spinal cord + medulla in inhibitory neurons and prevents NT release by hydrolyzing SNARE proteins --> uninhibited ACh release in neuromuscular junction
- Susceptibility: humans + horses > pigs > cattle and sheep > dogs, cats, poultry resistant
- Toxoid used as vaccine. Antitoxin= hyperimmune serum w/ Abs vs tetox
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Term
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Definition
- Inhabit soil and intestinal tract
- May enter wounds or spores may be absorbed and carried to mm or liver
- Damage to tissue reduces oxygenation and enhances growth (emphysema in tissues due to fermentation)
- Produce potent exotoxins, proteases, lecithinases (causes extensive necrosis, hemorrhage, emphyseme in tissues)
- May progress to toxemia, septic shock and death
- Antitoxin immunity is essential for resistance
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Term
Histotoxic Clostridia Spp |
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Definition
Clostridium chauvoei
Clostridium septicum
Clostridium perfringens
Clostridium sordellii
Clostridium novyi
Clostridium haemolyticum |
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Term
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Definition
- Causes blackleg in ruminants (primarily cattle)
- Spore ingested, carried to mm, growth facilitated by anaerobic conditions
- vaccination 98-99% effective
- Usually results in sudden death
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Term
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Definition
- 2nd most common
- Causes malignant edema in ruminants, pigs, and horses.
- Causes sudden death in ruminants and pigs
- Causes massive area of necrosis and sloughing in horses, but survive
- Primarily enters and grows in wounds
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Term
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Definition
Causes wound infection and gas gangrene in all species |
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Term
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Definition
Similar to C. septicum (wound infections and edema |
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Term
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Definition
- Big head in rams (subQ lesion in head) - type A
- Black disease (infectious necrotic hepatitis) - type B
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Term
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Definition
- Causes bacillary hemoglobinuria (redwater)
- Predominantly in mountain valleys of western US, esp wherever liver flukes occur.
- Death by lysis of erythrocytes
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Term
Antimicrobials for Clostridium |
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Definition
- Susceptibility: penicillin/ampicillin, tetracyclines, chloramphenicol, macrolides, lincosamides
- Resistance: aminoglycosides, quinolones, sulfonamides
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Term
Clostridial spp for Neurotoxic Clostridia |
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Definition
Clostridium tetani
Clostridium botulinum |
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Term
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Definition
Clostridium perfringens
Clostridium difficile |
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Term
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Definition
- Enterotoxemia. Potent lethal toxins produce din intestine by overgrowth (over eating dz)
- Locally may cause necrotizing hemorrhagic enteritis
- Absorbed --> toxemia-->septic shock and death
- Enterotoxin produced in large intestine when bacteria convert to spores, causing diarrhea
- Hemorrhagic bowel syndrome in cattle prob multifactorial
- Occurs in dogs too
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Term
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Definition
- Enterocolitis and diarrhea in horses, pigs, and dogs
- Fibrin and plasma leakage --> hemorrhage too
- Important nosocomial problem, some strains with increased virulence
- Difficult to isolate, not all strains are toxigenic - test for toxins
- No vaccine
- Spores hard to rid of --> nosocomial problems
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Term
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Definition
- aka Bacillus piliformis, Tyzzer's bacillus
- Tyzzer's dz: acute fatal infection causing focal necrotic hepatitis, enteritis and colitis
- Lab mice, foals and other animals
- Reservoire is probably infestine of rodents
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Term
Non-spore-forming obligate anaerobes |
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Definition
- Large grp of gram-pos and gram-neg bacteria that exist primarily as commensals (normal flora) of mucous membranes.
- Commonly found (35%) in necrotic and suppurative infections, usually in mixed infections
- Lowered redox potential req for growth (trauma, necrosis, ischemia, parasitic invasion, or concomitant growth of facultative anaerobes)
- Infection occurs by extension of normal flora into compromised tissues
- Virulence factors: capsules, pili, exotoxins, LPS, leukotoxins, and other metabolic byproducts
- Typically foul-smelling, pyonecrotic lesions
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Term
Spp of non-spore-forming obligate anaerobes |
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Definition
Fusobacterium spp
Bacteroides spp
Porphyromonas spp
Prevotella spp |
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Term
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Definition
- Periodontal dz begins as reversible gingivitis
- normal flora in mouth interact with nutrients
- form plaque which mineralize to form calculus on teeth
- Calculus blocks oxygen diffusion (Porphyromonas spp proliferate in biofilms and produce toxins destructive to the tissue)
- Inflammatory rxn releases enzymes in subgingival space and periodontal pockets
- non-reversible destruction of periodontal lig, bone loss, eventually leading to tooth loss
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Term
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Definition
- An aid to preventing periodontitis in dogs
- Bacterin contains P. denticanis, P. gulae and P. salivosa
- Duration of immunity, efficacy, potency unknown
- Circulating IgG Abs supposedly prevent dz by opsonizing Porphyromonas bacteria to reduce biofilm (calculus) formation and to prevent release of toxins
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Term
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Definition
- Non-spore-forming obligate anaerobe
- Contagious footrot: infection of interdigital skin of ovine feet (progressively spreads inside the inner wall of hoof, across sole, causing separation of horny layer of hoof)
- Pili mediate adherence
- Serine proteases digest horn promoting separation
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Term
Treatment/Diagnosis of Non-spore-forming anaerobes |
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Definition
- Suseptibility: penicillin/ampicillin, tetracyclines, macrolides, chroramphenicol
- Resistance: aminoglycosides, quinolones, sulfonamides
- When isolating: protect from O2 exposure. specimen collected from sites that normally possess anaerobic flora NOT appropirate for anaerobic culture. culturing and ID not very helpful anyway.
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