Fastidious Gram Negative Rods Respiratory II - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Fastidious Gram Negative Rods Respiratory II

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Title: Fastidious Gram Negative Rods Respiratory II


1
Fastidious Gram Negative RodsRespiratory II
Please click audio icon to hear Carols narration
  • Clinical Laboratory Science Program
  • Carol Larson MSEd, MT(ASCP)

2
General Information
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  • Fastidious
  • Complex / extensive nutrient requirements
  • Faint staining Gram Negative Rods
  • Safranin counterstain for gt2 minutes
  • Substitute carbolfuschin for safranin
  • Serological testing useful

3
Bordetella pertussisClinical Significance
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  • Causes Pertussis / Whooping cough
  • Spread by airborne droplets
  • Virulence factors
  • Attachment to ciliated epithelium of the upper
    respiratory tract
  • Exotoxin tracheal cytotoxin
  • Exotoxin - Pertussis toxin
  • Cell wall endotoxin

4
Bordetella pertussisSpecimen Collection
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  • Nasopharyngeal swab or aspirate
  • Plate at bedside
  • Regan-Lowe media
  • Bordet-Gengou media
  • Methicillin or cephalexin added to media to
    inhibit normal flora
  • Perform DNA probe testing on aspirate

5
Bordetella pertussisGrowth Characteristics
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  • 35ºC, ambient air for at least 7 days
  • Colony morphology
  • No growth onBAP MAC
  • Bordet-Gengou
  • Regan-Lowe

6
Bordetella pertussisIdentification
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  • Gram stain
  • Small, faintly staining gram-negative
    coccobacilli
  • Oxidase
  • Nitrate
  • Urea
  • Nonmotile

7
Bordetella pertussisSerological Testing
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  • DNA probes for direct detection in
  • Specimen
  • Culture confirmation
  • Direct fluorescent antibody test
  • Agglutination methods

8
Bordetella pertussisTreatment Prevention
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  • Erythromycin is drug of choice
  • Vaccination

9
What media is used to culture Bordetella
pertussis?
Regan-Lowe media and Bordet-Gengou media.
Bordetella pertussis will not grow on BAP or MAC.
Methicillin or cephalexin can be added to the
media to inhibit normal flora.
10
Bordetella parapertussis
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  • Causes acute respiratory infection
  • Grows on BAP and sometimes on MAC
  • Bordet-Gengou media
  • Oxidase negative
  • Urease positive (24 hours)

11
Bordetella bronchiseptica
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  • Immunocompromised patients
  • Grows on BAP and MAC
  • Bordet-Gengou media
  • Oxidase positive
  • Urease positive (3-4 hours)
  • Motile
  • Nitrate positive

12
How can you differentiate between Bordetella
pertussis and B. parapertussis?
Colony morphology on Bordet-Gengou media, growth
on BAP/MAC, oxidase, and urease.
13
Capnocytophaga speciesClinical Significance
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  • Normal oropharyngeal flora
  • Associated with
  • Periodontal disease
  • Sepsis
  • Granulocytopenia
  • Malignancies
  • Endocarditis
  • Animal bites

14
Capnocytophaga speciesSpecimen Collection
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  • Respiratory specimens
  • Capnophilic
  • Facultative anaerobe
  • Set up BAP, CHOC

15
Capnocytophaga species Growth Characteristics
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  • BAP colony morphology
  • Slight yellow, nonhemolytic, spreading over agar
    surface (at 48 hrs)
  • Center of colony moist, mottled
  • No growth on MAC
  • Only grows in presence of CO2 (microaerophilic
    and anaerobic)

16
Capnocytophaga species Identification
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  • Fusiform, filamentous gram-negative rod
  • Oxidase
  • Catalase
  • Motility gliding, no flagella so ittwitches

17
What atmosphere does Capnocytophaga require to
grow?
Higher concentrations of CO2 (capnophilic)
microaerophilic or anaerobic conditions.
18
Francisella tularensisClinical Significance
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  • Causes Tularemia an acute febrile, HIGHLY
    INFECTIOUS disease
  • Acquire by
  • Direct contact with infected animals (rabbits)
  • Bite from an insect
  • Inhalation of infectious aerosols

19
Francisella tularensisSpecimen Collection
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  • Inflammatory material from infected site
  • Wear gloves and use biosafety hood
  • Do not aerosolize or allow contact with skin or
    mucous membranes
  • CDC Biosafety Level 2 pathogen

20
Francisella tularensisSpecimen Processing
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  • Requires cysteine / cystine for growth
  • Glucose-cystine blood (Francis) agar
  • Grows on
  • Chocolate
  • BCYE
  • Modified TM

21
Francisella tularensisGrowth Characteristics
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  • Strict aerobic
  • 35C with 5-10 CO2 for 7 days
  • Colony morphology
  • BAP MAC No growth
  • CHOC Small, gray alpha-hemolytic colonyat 2-5
    days

22
Francisella tularensisIdentification
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  • Pale staining gram negative coccobacilli
  • Oxidase
  • Catalase to weak
  • Glucose fermenter
  • Nonmotile

23
Francisella tularensisSerological Testing
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  • Most cases diagnosed serologically
  • DFA tests may be performed on specimen
  • ELISA and agglutination tests
  • Four-fold rise in titer is diagnostic
  • Single titer of gt1160 is presumptive

24
Francisella tularensisTreatment Prevention
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  • Streptomycin is drug of choice

25
What substance is required in culture media in
order to grow Francisella?
Cysteine / Cystine
26
What is the best method for determining if a
patient has Tularemia and Why?
Serological testing is best. To actually culture
the organism in the laboratory has a high risk
for laboratory personnel becoming infected.
27
Legionella speciesClinical Significance
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  • Legionnaires disease
  • Pontiac Fever
  • Transmission inhalation of the organism in
    aerosols
  • Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1

28
Legionella speciesSpecimen Collection
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  • BAL, BW, lung biopsy, pleural fluid
  • Avoid aerosolization
  • Transport ambient temperature
  • Requires cysteine and iron salts for growth
  • Buffered Charcoal Yeast Extract agar
  • Selective media BCYE antibiotics

29
Legionella speciesGrowth Characteristics
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  • Aerobic
  • 35C in 5-10 CO2 for 10 days
  • Colony morphology
  • BAP MAC no growth
  • CHOC grows slowly
  • BCYE convex, grayish white, glistening with an
    entire edge at 2-4 days

30
Legionella speciesIdentification
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  • Thin, faintly staining short to filamentous GNR
  • Oxidase wk
  • Catalase wk
  • Non-F
  • Non-O
  • Motilepolar flagella

31
Legionella speciesSerological Testing
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  • Specimen screen Isolate ID
  • DFA stain and DNA probe
  • IFA test of choice (serum)
  • Four-fold rise in titer to at least 1128

32
Legionella speciesTreatment and Prevention
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  • Susceptibility testing not routinely performed
  • Drug of choice Erythromycin alone or with
    Rifampin

33
What substance is required in culture media in
order to grow Legionella?
Cysteine and iron salts.
34
What populations are most prone to Legionella
infections?
Men, cigarette smokers, people with underlying
disease, immunocompromised/immunosuppressed
patients, people who drink alcohol and nosocomial
infections.
35
Fastidious GNRSummary
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  • Looked at several organisms
  • Clinical significance
  • Specimen collection, transport processing
  • Growth characteristics identification
  • Serological testing
  • Treatment and prevention

36
Who am I?
Reagin-Lowe media
Gram Stain
Causes Whooping Cough
Bordetella pertussis
37
Who am I?
BCYE agar
Gram Stain
Causes Pontiac Fever
Legionella species
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