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Staphylococci Chapter 14

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Title: Staphylococci Chapter 14


1
Staphylococci Chapter 14
2
Staphylococci Chapter 14
  • Family Micrococcaceae
  • Genus
  • Staphylococcus
  • Micrococcus

3
Staphylococcus General Characteristics
  • Gram-positive spherical cells (0.5-1.5 mm) in
    singles, pairs, and clusters
  • Appear as bunches of grapes

Gram-stained smear of staphylococci from colony
Scanning electron micrograph of staphylococci
4
Staphylococcus General Characteristics
  • Nonmotile
  • Nonspore-forming
  • Nonencapsulated
  • Catalase-producing
  • Oxidase negative
  • Glucose fermenters
  • Primarily aerobic, some facultatively anaerobic

5
Genus Staphylococcus
  • Approximately 33 species
  • 14 to 17 species associated with humans, mainly
    on skin and mucous membranes
  • Several veterinary pathogens
  • Staphylococcus divided into coagulase-positive
    and coagulase-negative categories with the
    coagulase test

6
Genus Staphylococcus
  • Bacitracin resistant
  • Grow on agar that contains peptone
  • Inhibited by media that has high bile salt
    concentration
  • Some are ß-hemolytic
  • Colony morphology buttery looking, cream or
    white colored

7
Coagulase-Positive Staphylococci
  • S. aureus
  • S. intermedius
  • S. hyicus
  • S. delphini
  • S. schleiferi

Human pathogens
Veterinary pathogens
Animal-associated species
8
Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci
  • Coagulase negative
  • Found as normal flora
  • In clinical environment, seeing an increase due
    to prosthetic devices, catheters and
    immunocompromised
  • Abbreviated CNS or CoNS

9
Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci
  • S. capitis
  • S. caprae
  • S. sciuri
  • S. hominis
  • S. schlieferi
  • S. cohnii
  • S. xylosus
  • S. epidermidis
  • S. saprophyticus
  • S. haemolyticus
  • S. lugdunensis
  • S. kloosii
  • S. saccharolyticus
  • S. simulans

10
Clinically Significant Staphylococci
Staphylococcus aureus
  • Habitat anterior nares (carriers)
  • Colonization axilla, vagina, pharynx
  • Primary pathogen of the genus
  • Produce superficial to systemic infections
  • Mode of transmission traumatic introduction,
    direct contact with infected person, inanimate
    objects
  • Predisposing conditions
  • Chronic infections
  • Indwelling devices
  • Skin injuries
  • Immune response defects

11
Staphylococci Chapter 14
  • Infection will elaborate inflammatory response
    with GPC accumulating as pus
  • Pus mix of active and inactive neutrophils,
    bacterial cells and extravascular fluid

12
Virulence Factors Extracellular Enzymes
  • Enterotoxins heat stable _at_ 100o C for 30 minutes
  • A through D food poisoning (i.e potato salad,
    custard foods)
  • F TSSAT
  • B pseudomembranous enterocolitis, occurs when
    normal flora are altered in bowel

13
Virulence Factors Extracellular Enzymes
  • Exfoliatin
  • Epidermolytic toxin
  • Phage group II staphylococci
  • SSS or Ritters Disease
  • TSST-1 Toxic shock syndrome toxin-1
  • Multisystem disease
  • High fever
  • Hypotension
  • Shock

14
Virulence Factors Extracellular Enzymes
  • Cytolytic Toxins
  • Alpha- hemolysin lyses rbcs, damages plts,
    causes severe tissue damage
  • ß- hemolysin acts on sphingomyelin in the plasma
    membrane of rbcs, exhibited in CAMP test to id
    Group B strep
  • Gamma
  • Delta only found with Panton-Valentine
    leukocidin, PVL is lethal to PMNs

15
Virulence Factors Extracellular Enzymes
  • Hyaluronidase Hydrolyzes hyaluronic acid in
    connective tissue allowing spread of infection
  • Staphylokinase fibrinolysin which allows spread
    of infection
  • Coagulase virulence marker
  • Lipase allows colonization

16
Virulence Factors Extracellular Enzymes
  • Penicillinase confers resistance
  • DNase degrades DNA
  • Beta-lactamase
  • Protein A in cell wall, it binds to Fc part of
    IgG to block phagocytosis

17
Staphylococcus aureus Clinical Infections
  • Skin and wound
  • Impetigo
  • Furuncles/Boils (Infection of hair follicles
    usually in areas that sweat)
  • Carbuncles (clusters of boils)
  • Surgical wound infections
  • Food poisoning source is infected food handler

Bullous impetigo
18
Staphylococcus aureus Clinical Infections
  • Scalded skin syndrome Ritters disease
  • Extensive exfoliative dermatitis
  • Young children and newborns

19
Staphylococcus aureus Clinical Infections
  • Toxic shock syndrome
  • Other infections
  • Respiratory (less often)
  • pneumonia
  • Bacteremia
  • Osteomyelitis/arthritis
  • Endocarditis
  • Pseudomembranous enterocolitis

20
Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci
  • Habitat skin and mucous membranes
  • Common human isolates
  • S. epidermidis
  • S. saprophyticus
  • S. haemolyticus

21
Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci Staphylococcus
epidermidis
  • Virulence factor slime Helps to prevent
    phagocytosis
  • Mode of transmission implantation of medical
    devices such as catheters, shunts, and prosthetic
    devices
  • Infections are acquired nosocomially
  • Serious infections among immunosuppressed
    patients may occur

22
Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci Staphylococcus
saprophyticus
  • Habitat skin and mucosal membranes of the
    genitourinary tract
  • Common cause of urinary tract infections in
    young, sexually active females
  • When present in urine cultures, may be found in
    low numbers, but significant

23
Other Gram-Positive Cocci
  • Habitat skin and mucous membranes
  • Rarely implicated in infections
  • S. haemolyticus associated with wound
    infections, bacteremia, and endocarditis

24
Laboratory Diagnosis Specimen Collection and
Handling
  • Samples must be taken from the actual site of
    infection
  • Prevent delay in transport of collected material
    from infected sites
  • Transport in appropriate collection device that
    would prevent drying and minimize growth of
    contaminating organisms

25
Laboratory Diagnosis Direct Smear Examination
  • Microscopic Examination
  • Gram-positive cocci
  • pairs and clusters
  • Numerous polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs)

Insert Figure 10-1
26
Laboratory Diagnosis Cultural Characteristics
  • Colony morphology
  • Smooth, butyrous, white to yellow, creamy
  • Grow well _at_ 18-24 hours
  • S. aureus may produce hemolysis on blood agar


S. aureus
27
Laboratory Diagnosis Cultural Characteristics
  • Coagulase-negative staphylococci
  • Smooth, creamy, white
  • Small-to medium- sized, usually non-hemolytic
  • S. saprophyticus
  • Smooth, creamy, may produce a yellow pigment

28
Identification Tests Catalase
  • Principle tests for enzyme catalase
  • 2 H2O2 2 H2O O2
  • Drop H2O2 onto smear
  • Bubbling POS (Most bacteria, O2 generated)
  • No bubbling NEG (Streptococci and other lactic
    acid bacteria, no O2 generated)

29
Identification Tests Coagulase Test
  • Detects enzyme coagulase
  • Cell-bound clumping factor converts fibrinogen
    to fibrin which precipitates on cell causing
    agglutination
  • Extracellular enzyme free coagulase
  • Two methods
  • Slide test screens for clumping factor
  • Tube test

Slide coagulase test detects clumping factor
30
Identification Tests Coagulase Test
Tube test detects the extracellular enzyme free
coagulase or staphylocoagulase by causing a
clot to form when bacterial cells are incubated
with plasma
31
Novobiocin Susceptibility Test
  • Test to differentiate coagulase-negative
    staphylococci from S.saprophyticus from urine
    samples
  • S. saprophyticus is resistant (top)
  • Other CNS are susceptible

32
Schematic Diagram for Identifying Staphylococcal
Species
33
Antimicrobial Susceptibility
  • For nonbeta-lactamase producing S. aureus
    (methicillin-susceptible)
  • Penicillinase-resistant synthetic penicillins
    (methicillin, nafcillin, oxacillin,
    dicloxacillin)
  • Beta-lactamase producers break down the
    beta-lactam ring of penicillin so it inactivates
    antibiotic before it acts on bacterial cells

34
Antimicrobial Susceptibility
  • For methicillin -resistant S. aureus (MRSA) and
    methicillin-resistant S. epidermidis (MRSE)
  • Vancomycin combined with rifampin or gentamicin
  • Increased in hospital acquired infections
  • Must adhere to strict infection control practices
  • To detect methicillin resistance, use oxacillin.
    Resistance is due to gene mecA which codes for
    new penicillin binding protein (PBP)
  • Gold standard for testing for MRSA is nucleic
    acid probe or PCR
  • Emergence of vancomycin resistance (VRSA)
  • Use screening agar and confirm

35
Antimicrobial Susceptibility
  • Macrolide Resistance
  • Clindamycin sensitivity often requested by
    physician to treat Staph skin infection.
    Referred to as D test
  • Clindamycin resistance is often inducible meaning
    it only is detectable when bacteria are also
    exposed to erythromycin
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