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Corynebacterium diphtheriae

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Gray-black colonies on tellurite???? ... Chinese-letter morphology in Gram stain. Electron micrograph of corynebacteriophage , which carries tox. Transmission ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Corynebacterium diphtheriae


1
Corynebacterium diphtheriae

2
Biological Features
  • Aerobic, Gram, Noncapsulated, rods
  • Gray-black colonies on tellurite????medium
  • Metachromatic granules

3
Chinese-letter morphology in Gram stain
4
Electron micrograph of corynebacteriophage ß,
which carries tox
5
Transmission
  • solely among humans
  • spread by droplets
  • secretions
  • direct contact

6
Risk factors
  • Poor nutrition
  • Crowded or unsanitary living conditions
  • Low vaccine coverage among infants and children
  • Immunity gaps in adults

7
Pathogenesis of diphtheria
  • Early stages Sore throat. Low fever. Swollen
    neck glands.
  • Late stages Airway obstruction and breathing
    difficulty. Shock

8
Diphtheria Toxin (DT)
  • Cleaved to yield A/B fragment, joined by S-S
    bond- A (catalytic domain)
  • - B (transmembrane and receptor binding
    domains)

9
Diphtheria Toxin (DT)
  • Receptor
  • - heparin-binding epidermal growth factor -
    rich on cardiac cells and nerve cells
  • Toxin diffuses throughout body via blood -
    Cardiac, neurologic complications -
    Heart/respiratory damage, paralysis

10
Schematic diagram of the diphtherial intoxication
of a sensitive eukaryotic cell.
11
  • Thick grey pseudomembrane composed of fibrin,
    epithelial cells, bacteria and polymorph
    neutrophils
  • Pseudomembrane may cause blockage, suffocation

12
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13
The cervical lymph nodes enlarge causing oedema
of the neck (a classical condition of bullneck)

14
Epidemiology
  • Largely controlled now by vaccination
  • However, factors such as poverty and other social
    factors have led to diphtheria being an
    endemic/epidemic in many regions of the world

15
Immunity
  • Immunization of animals with altered toxin,
    producing antitoxin, was first done in 1890, 1st
    used in humans in 1891
  • Toxin-antitoxin introduced by Theobald Smith in
    1909, used little
  • Toxoid introduced in 1923, now widely used

16
Schick test
  • Be used to ascertain population risk
  • This test involves the injection of a minute
    amount of
  • the diphtheria toxin under the skin. The
    absence of a reaction indicates immunity.

17
DIAGNOSIS
  • Clinical Muscle weakness, edema and a
    pseudomembranous material in the upper
    respiratory tract characterizes diphtheria.
  • Laboratory Tellurite media is the agar of choice
    for isolation of Corynebacteria, which produce
    jet black colonies

18
Elek immunodiffusion test.
19
Control
  • Sanitary Reduce carrier rate by use of vaccine.
  • Immunological A vaccine (DPT) prepared from an
    alkaline formaldehyde inactivated toxin (i.e.
    toxoid) is required. Passive immunization with
    antitoxin can be used for patients.
  • Chemotherapeutic Penicillin, erythromycin or
    gentamicin are drugs of choice.

20
Prospect
tumors !!
  • For therapy of

tumor
Ab
DT
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