Term
what is the morphology of Haemophilus? |
|
Definition
- gram neg
- coccobacillus
- encapsulated strains (a-f)
- type B is predominant (Hib) with polyribosyl ribitol phosphate (PRP)
- also unencapsulated strains, aka non typable (NTHi)
|
|
|
Term
what are essential for Haemophilus growth? |
|
Definition
blood factors:
- factor X (hemin)
- factor V (NAD)
|
|
|
Term
what diseases tend to be caused by unencapsulated H.influenzae? |
|
Definition
- infections tend to be more localized respiratory infections with unencapsulated Hi:
- otitis media
- sinusitis
- bronchitis
- pneumonia
- COPD
|
|
|
Term
what diseases tend to be caused by encapsulated H.influenzae? |
|
Definition
encapsulated Hi causes more diffuse infections:
- meningitis in kids
- septic arthritis in kids
- bacteremia w/ fever and no localization
- cellulitis involving face
- epiglottitis
|
|
|
Term
what is Hi's most important virulence factor and what are some others? |
|
Definition
- most important: polysaccharide capsule (PRP is imp component for Hib)
- adherence factors:
- pilus (hif genes)
- non pilus adhesins (nontypeable strains)
- hap adhesin (nontypeable strains)
- mucus binding proteins
- iron uptake proteins
- lipooligosaccharide (LOS)
- biofilm formation
|
|
|
Term
in a mouse model of the upper respiratory tract, which organism does better and why: Hib vs. Strep pneumoniae? |
|
Definition
Hib outcompetes Strep pneumoniae in the UR tract when the two are both present; strep pneumoniae infections are cleared in a complement and neutrophil mediated way that leaves Hib relatively unbothered, likely due to its encapsulation which makes it hearty against these immune attacks! |
|
|
Term
how is H.influenzae treated? |
|
Definition
- amoxicillin
- 3rd gen cephalosporins (severe infections)
- rifampin for chemoprophylaxis
- VACCINES
- PRP-protein conjugate, which significantly reduced incidence of childhood meningitis
|
|
|
Term
what is the major legionella human pathogen and whats its morphology? |
|
Definition
- L.pneumophila
- morphology:
- gram neg bacillus on med & coccobacillus on tissue
|
|
|
Term
what are the major illnesses caused by legionella? |
|
Definition
- legionnaire's disease:
- severe pneumonia
- fever, dry cough, multiorgan invmnt pssble
- high mortality rate (15-20%)
- low attack rate, no p-2-p spread
- pontiac fever:
- low mortality
- flu like illness
- high attack rate
|
|
|