Title: Laboratory Evaluation of Intestinal Infections
 1Laboratory Evaluation of Intestinal Infections
- Dr. John R. Warren 
- Department of Pathology 
- Northwestern University 
- Feinberg School of Medicine 
- June 2007
2Intestinal Infections
- Pathophysiology, clinical features, and 
 microbiology
- Laboratory detection of enteric pathogens 
- Guidelines for laboratory evaluation of 
 intestinal infections
3Pathophysiology, Clinical Features, and 
Microbiology
- Acute dysentery 
- Enteric fever 
- Mesenteric adenitis 
- Antibiotic-associated colitis 
4Acute dysentery
- Frequent bowel movements accompanied by visible 
 blood, mucus, fecal leukocytes, and tenesmus
- Pathologic changes of intestinal mucosa include 
 moderate to intense exudative (neutrophilic)
 inflammation, often hemorrhage, and formation of
 superficial ulcers
5Acute dysentery
- Shigella 
- Salmonella 
- Campylobacter jejuni 
- Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli 
- Yersinia enterocolitica 
6Shigella
- Fermentative, non-motile, small gram-negative 
 bacilli
- Facultative intracellular parasite (colonic 
 epithelial cell)
- Four species S. dysenteriae (serogroup A), S. 
 flexneri (serogroup B), S. boydii (serogroup C),
 and S. sonnei (serogroup D)
- Elaborates potent exotoxin (Shiga toxin) with 
 enterotoxic, cytotoxic, and neurotoxic properties
- Invades colonic epithelial cells provoking 
 neutrophilic inflammatory response
- Infection produces widespread, shallow colonic 
 mucosal ulcers 3-7 mm in diameter with intense
 inflammatory exudate
7Shigellosis
- Incubation period from 6 hours to 9 days, usually 
 less than 3 days, after person to person
 transmission by fecal-oral route
- Acute bloody dysentery with high fever, abdominal 
 pain, malaise, headache, occasionally meningismus
 and fever
- Most common cause of bloody diarrhea in children 
- Syndrome particularly severe in malnourished 
 children
8Complications of Shigellosis
- Untreated diarrhea lasts 1 day to 1 month with 
 average of 7 days
- Severe dehydration 
- Febrile seizures 
- Intestinal obstruction (3) 
- Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (Shiga toxin-producing 
 S. dysenterieae 1)
- Post-infectious arthritis (2-5 weeks after acute 
 dysentery) associated with the histocompatibility
 antigen HLA-B27 (S. flexneri)
- Bacteremia and disseminated infection rare 
9Salmonella
- Fermentative, non-spore forming, motile 
 gram-negative bacilli
- Facultative intracellular parasite (intestinal 
 epithelial cells, macrophages)
- Single species (Salmonella enterica) with 1,454 
 serotypes in genetic subspecies 1 (Group I)
 having O-antigen groups A, B, C1, C2, D, E
- Subspecies 1 strains usually isolated from humans 
 and other warm-blooded animals
- Nomenclature Salmonella serotype Dublin 
- Salmonella serotype Typhimurium and S. serotype 
 Enteritidis most frequent cause of salmonellosis
10Salmonellosis
- Fever, cramping, abdominal pain, and diarrhea 
 within 8-48 hours after ingestion of infective
 dose (contaminated poultry, shell eggs, dairy
 products, beef, exotic pets such as reptiles)
- Inflammatory (neutrophilic) enteritis most 
 typically involving the small bowel mucosa,
 occasional cause of colitis with crypt abscesses
 and erosive ulceration of colonic mucosa
 (Salmonella serotype Typhimurium)
- Moderate number of fecal neutrophils, usually 
 fewer than in shigellosis except colitis with
 blood and pus in stool
11Complications of Salmonellosis
- Diarrhea usually self-limited (3-7 days), if 
 persists gt10 days another microbial etiology
 likely
- Occasional dehydration requiring hospitalization 
- Bacteremia (1-4 immunocompetent cases) 
 (persistent bacteremia suggests endovascular
 infection site such as atherosclerotic plaques
 and aneurysms)
- After resolution of diarrhea mean duration of 
 carriage in stool is 4-5 weeks
12Campylobacter jejuni
- Microaerophilic, thermophilic, motile, S-shaped 
 gram-negative bacilli
- Adhere to and invade intestinal epithelial cells 
- Optimal growth at 42oC in ambient gas mixture of 
 5 O2, 10 CO2, and 85 N2
13Campylobacteriosis
- Severe abdominal pain with fever and diarrhea 1-7 
 days after infectious dose (poultry, raw milk,
 contact with infected pets, fecal-oral route)
- Campylobacter jejuni multiplies in human bile, 
 facilitating initial colonization of small
 intestine
- Tissue injury with invasion includes jejunum, 
 ileum, and colon, provoking a mixed
 neutrophilic-mononuclear cell inflammatory
 response with erosive mucosal ulceration
14Complications of Campylobacteriosis
- Enteritis usually self-limiting (1 day to 1 week 
 or longer)
- Guillain-Barré syndrome (structural homology of 
 LPS O-antigen with human nerve gangliosides)
- Post-infectious reactive arthritis (associated 
 with HLA-B27)
- Bacteremia (rate of 1.5/1,000 intestinal 
 infections)
15Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli
- Non-sorbitol fermenting Escherichia coli 
 (Escherichia coli 94  for sorbitol
 fermentation)
- Majority of enterohemorrhagic strains positive 
 for somatic O157 and flagellar H7 antigens (O104
 and O111 strains have caused outbreaks in the US)
- Bacteriophage-mediated production of Shiga-like 
 toxin (Stx1 or Stx2) which are cytotoxic
 (verotoxin)
- Accounts for 15 to 36 of cases of bloody 
 diarrhea
16Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli Diarrhea
- Abdominal cramps and watery diarrhea 3 to 8 days 
 following ingestion of contaminated food
 (undercooked beef, raw milk, fresh produce) or
 water
- Shiga toxin absorbed from intestine and damages 
 vascular endothelial cells (intestinal mucosa and
 kidney)
- Watery diarrhea followed by grossly bloody 
 diarrhea
- Uncomplicated illness lasts 1 to 12 days 
- Use of antibiotics contraindicated 
 (phage-mediated production of Shiga toxin
 enhanced by ampicillin, norfloxacin, and other
 antibiotics)
17Complications of Hemorrhagic Escherichia coli 
Colitis
- Fever and neutrophilic leukocytosis herald 
 hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)
 (thrombocytopenia, oliguria, hematuria,
 microangiopathic hemolytic anemia)
- HUS in 8 of infections in children with a 3 to 
 5 mortality
-  
18Yersinia enterocolitica
- Fermentative, rod-shaped or coccoid gram-negative 
 bacteria, non-motile and metabolically inactive
 at 37oC but motile and metabolically active at
 22-30oC
- Enteropathogenic strains cytotoxic by 
 penetratating human epithelial cells
- Infection results in inflammatory ileitis 
 (generally) and colitis (occasionally involving
 ascending colon) with mixed neutrophilic and
 mononuclear cell response
- Necrosis of Peyers patches, mesenteric lymph 
 node enlargement, and in severe cases thrombosis
 of mesenteric blood vessels with intestinal
 necrosis and hemorrhage
19Yersinosis
- Febrile diarrhea with abdominal pain 16 to 48 
 hours following ingestion of an infectious
 inoculum (undercooked pork, chitterlings1)
- Duration of illness ranges from 1 day to a 
 prolonged diarrhea of 4 weeks
- 1Chitterlings (chitlins) intestines of young 
 pigs, cleaned and stewed, and then frequently
 battered and fried
20Complications of Yersinosis
- Can simulate acute appendicitis (mesenteric 
 lymphadenitis)
- Bacteremic dissemination with hepatic and splenic 
 abscess formation
- Reactive arthritis associated with HLA-B27 
 histocompatibility antigen (10-30)
- Exudative pharyngitis (8 of infections 
 accompanied by fever but no diarrhea)
21Infective Dose of Enteric Pathogens
- Shigella 10 to 102 
- Campylobacter jejuni 102 to 106 
- Salmonella 105 
- Escherichia coli 108 
- Yersinia 109 
22Enteric Infections United States 2002 (CDC)1
- Salmonella 16.10 
- Campylobacter 13.17 
- Shigella 10.34 
- Escherichia coli O157H7 1.73 
- Yersinia 0.44 
- 1Incidence per 100,000 population
23Enteric Infections United States 2004 (CDC)1,2
- Salmonella 14.7 
- Campylobacter 12.9 
- Shigella 5.1 
- Yersinia 3.9 
- Escherichia coli O157H7 0.9 
- 1CDC FoodNet (10 States) 
- 2Incidence per 100,000 population
24Mortality of Enteric Infections 2001 (Notifiable 
Diseases, CDC)
-  Cases Deaths () 
- Salmonellosis 40,495 40 (0.1) 
- Shigellosis 20,221 2 (0.01) 
- Hemorrhagic E. coli1 3,287 6 (0.2) 
- HUS 202 35 (17.3) 
- 1O157H7
25Enteric Fever
- Bacterial pathogens ingested (facultative 
 intracellular parasites)
- Pathogens penetrate small intestinal mucosa, 
 infect and multiply in intestinal lymphatic
 tissue (7-14 days), then disseminate by the
 lymphatic and hematogenous routes
- Infection of the mononuclear phagocyte system 
 (reticuloendothelial system), including lymph
 nodes, spleen, liver and bone marrow
- Bacteremia secondary to infection of the 
 mononuclear phagocyte system
26Causes of Enteric Fever
- Prototype Salmonella serotype Typhi (typhoid 
 fever)
- Other salmonellae S. serotype Paratyphi A, S. 
 serotype Schottmuelleri (formerly Paratyphi B),
 S. serotype Hirschfeldii (formerly Paratyphi C)
 (paratyphoid fever) S. serotype Cholerasuis
- Non-salmonellae Yersinia enterocolitica, Y. 
 pseudotuberculosis, and Campylobacter fetus
27Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever
- Ingestion of infectious inoculum (fecal 
 contaminated food or water) followed within 5 to
 21 days by remittent fever that becomes sustained
 (occasional enterocolitis with fever for 3-4 days
 that resolves before fever)
- Patients acutely ill with fever, chills, 
 diaphoresis, dull frontal headache, anorexia,
 weakness, muscle pains
- Leukopenia 
- Bradycardia (lt50) 
- Cutaneous rose spots (blanching erythematous 
 maculopapular lesions) (30 typhoid fever, 3
 paratyphoid fever)
-  
28Typhoid Fever
- Typhoid fever in the United States associated 
 with international travel
- During the period 1985-1994, of 2,445 reported 
 typhoid cases, 72 associated with international
 travel, most frequently to Mexico, India, the
 Philippines, and Pakistan in descending order
29Enteric Fever-Like Syndromes Due to 
Non-Salmonellae
- Fever and headache as in typhoid and paratyphoid 
 fever
- Fever with Yersinia intermittent not sustained as 
 in Salmonella
- Leukopenia infrequent 
- Acute diarrhea prominent feature of Yersinia 
 enterocolitica
- Salmonella enteric fever in individuals lt30 years 
 of age, non-Salmonella gt40 years
- Salmonella enteric fever associated with travel 
 to developing countries, Yersinia to Northern
 Europe or no travel (acquisition in the United
 States), Campylobacter fetus not associated with
 foreign travel
- Enteric fever with Yersinia and Campylobacter 
 fetus associated with underlying disease
 especially cirrhosis
- Campylobacter fetus has propensity for infection 
 of vascular sites and is associated with
 thrombophlebitis
30Complications of Typhoid Fever
- Intestinal perforation third-fourth week of 
 infection in untreated patients, due to
 hyperplasia, ulceration, and necrosis of
 ileocecal lymphoid tissue (3-10)
- Aerobic and anaerobic bacteremia secondary to 
 intestinal perforation
- Localized infections endocarditis, pericarditis, 
 pneumonia, orchitis, ovarian abscess formation
31Mesenteric Adenitis
- Variant of enteric fever with prominence of 
 mesenteric lymph node infection (mesenteric
 lymphadenitis)
- Fever and right lower quadrant pain mimicking 
 acute appendicitis accompanied by diarrhea
- Most common cause Yersinia enterocolitica and Y. 
 pseudotuberculosis
- More prevalent in Europe (especially Belgium) 
 than the United States
- Self-limited in vast majority of cases 
- Iatrogenic complication inappropriate surgery 
 for acute appendicitis (avoid by helical
 appendiceal CT scan)
32Toxin-Producing Clostridium difficile
- Obligate anaerobic gram-positive bacilli 
- Pathogenic Clostridium difficile produces two 
 exotoxins toxin A (enterotoxin) (MW308-kd) and
 toxin B (cytotoxin) (MW269-kd)
- Toxin A and toxin B inactivate Rho proteins 
 (GTP-binding proteins that regulate the actin
 cytoskeleton) in intestinal epithelial cells
 which results in apoptosis
- Toxin A if infused in ligated loops of rabbit 
 small intestine stimulates fluid accumulation
 with the efficiency of cholera toxin (toxin B
 lacks this activity)
- Stains of C. difficile lacking toxin A 
 demonstrate full potency in producing human
 colitis
33Clostridium difficile Colitis
- Disruption of colonic microbiota (Bacteroides, 
 Prevotella predominant) by antibiotics
 (clindamycin, cephalosporins especially
 third-generation agents, ampicillin and
 amoxicillin, other penicillins, erythromycin and
 other macrolides, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole,
 tetracyclines) or antineoplastic drugs
 doxorubicin, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide,
 5-fluorouracil, chlorambucil, and methotrexate)
- Colonization of colon by toxin-producing strain 
 of Clostridium difficile (exogenous or endogenous
 source)
- Colonic mucosal injury and inflammation 
 (pseudomembranous colitis)
34Clostridium difficile Colitis
- Onset of diarrhea after 5 to 10 days of 
 antibiotic treatment (nosocomial)
- Diarrhea ranges from brief and self-limited to 
 cholera-like with more than 20 stools per day
- Fever (30 to 50) 
- Neutrophilic leukocytosis (50 to 60) (mean 
 count of 15,000-16,000/mm3)
- Abdominal pain or cramping (20 to 33) 
35Complications of Clostridium difficile Colitis
- Toxic megacolon (mortality of 60) 
- Colonic perforation 
- Transverse volvulus 
- Protein-losing enteropathy 
- Recurrent C. difficile associated diarrhea (20)
36Recurrent Clostridium difficile Colitis
- Persistent disruption of colonic microbiota by 
 metronidazole or vancomycin
- Poor antibody response to toxin 
- Lack of antibiotic activity against bacterial 
 spores
37Laboratory Detection of Salmonella and Shigella 
- Sheep blood agar 
- MacConkey or eosin-methylene blue agar 
- Triple-sugar iron slant 
- Xylose-lysine-deoxycholate (XLD), Hektoen 
 enteric, or Salmonella-Shigella agar
- Enrichment broth (selenite or gram-negative) 
38Laboratory Detection of Yersinia
- Same as for Salmonella and Shigella and in 
 addition
- Cold enrichment of stool specimens at 
 refrigerator temperatures
- Use of cefsulodin-irgasan-novobiocin (CIN) agar 
 (Yersinia selective agar) Most enteric organisms
 inhibited (selective), and mannitol fermented by
 Yersinia which forms red bulls eye colonies (pH
 indicator  neutral red) (differential)
39NMH Short Series for Salmonella and Shigella
- Cytochrome oxidase (OXI) 
- Lactose fermentation on MacConkey (MAC) 
- Motility (MOT) 
- Triple sugar iron agar (TSI) 
- Indole (IND) 
- Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) 
- Lysine-iron agar (LYI) 
- Urease (URE) 
- ONPG (ONP)
40NMH Short Series for Clinically Important 
Salmonella Serotypes1
-  OXI MAC MOT TSI IND H2S 
 LYI URE ONP
- Most  nlf  k/a2    
 
- Typhi  nlf  k/a3  
 4
- Para A  nlf  k/a2   
 
- 1R/O Salmonella  indole,  ONPT 
- 2Gas production 
- 3No gas production 
- 4Whisp of H2S below the slant 
41 Series for Shigella and Other Enteric Pathogens1
-  OXI MAC MOT 
 TSI IND H2S LYI URE ONP
- Shigella    k/a4 
 /6    /7
- Yersinia2   3 
 a/a4 /
- Vibrio    
 a/a4
- Aeromonas    
 a/a5   /
- Plesiomonas    k/a4 
 
- 1R/O Shigella  motility, a/a TSI,  lysine,  
 H2S,  urea
-  R/O Yersinia  lysine,  H2S 
- 2Y. enterocolitica 
- 3At 37oC motile at 25oC 
- 4No gas production 
- 5Gas production 
- 6Serogroup A-C  (25-500, serogroup D ) 
- 7Serogroup A-C , serogroup D 
42Laboratory Detection of Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
- Same as for Salmonella and Shigella and in 
 addition
- Sorbitol-containing MacConkey agar (SMAC) for 
 detection of colorless sorbitol-negative colonies
 of Escherichia coli O157H7
- Latex agglutination testing of colorless colonies 
 (SMAC) for the somatic antigen O157
- Direct immunoassay of stool specimens for Shiga 
 toxin 1 and 2
43Laboratory Detection of Campylobacter jejuni
- Selective media containing antimicrobial agents 
 to inhibit enteric bacterial flora
 (cefoperazone-containing media)
- Microaerophilic ambient gas for incubation (5 
 O2, 10 CO2, 85 N2)
- Incubation temperature (42o C) for thermophilic 
 growth
44Laboratory Detection of Toxigenic Clostridium 
difficile
- Direct testing of stool specimens for presence of 
 toxin A and toxin B (fibroblast cell-culture for
 cytotoxin, EIA for toxin A and B)
- CCFA (cycloserine-cefoxitin-fructose agar) for 
 detection for colonies with a yellow color
 (oxidative decarboxylation of peptones results in
 an alkaline pH, C. difficile non-fermentative for
 fructose, neutral red the pH indicator)
 (cycloserine inhibits gram-negatives especially
 E. coli, cefoxitin has broad activity against
 gram-negatives and gram-positives)
- Testing of broth supernatant for presence of 
 toxin A and B
45Guidelines for Laboratory Evaluation of 
Infectious Diarrhea
- Community-acquired or travelers diarrhea 
- Nosocomial diarrhea (onset gt3 days after 
 hospitalization)
- Persistent diarrhea (gt7 days) 
- Immunocompromised patient (especially if HIV ) 
- Thielman and Guerrant, Acute Infectious Diarrhea, 
 New England Journal of Medicine,35038-47 (2004)
46Community-acquired or travelers diarrhea
- Culture for Salmonella, Shigella, and 
 Campylobacter  (if history of bloody diarrhea or
 hemolytic-uremic syndrome)
- Culture for E. coli O157H7 and test for Shiga 
 toxin  (if recent antibiotics, chemotherapy, or
 hospitalization)
- Culture and/or test for Clostridium difficile 
 toxins A and B
47Nosocomial diarrhea (onset gt3 days after 
hospitalization)
- Culture and/or test for C. difficile toxins A and 
 B  (if hospital outbreak of diarrhea or patient
 gt65 yr of age with coexisting conditions,
 immunocompromise, or neutropenia, or if systemic
 infection suscpeted) culture for Salmonella,
 Shigella, and Campylobacter (with blood cultures
 if systemic infection suspected)  (if bloody
 diarrhea) culture for E. coli O157H7 and test
 for Shiga toxins
48Persistent diarrhea (gt7 days)
- Consider protozoa 
- Giardia 
- Cryptosporidium 
- Cyclospora 
- Isospora bell
49Immunocompromised patient (especially if HIV )
- Add 
- Microsporidium 
- Mycobacterium avium complex 
- Cytomegalovirus
50Recommended Reading
- Mandell, G.L., Bennett, J.E., and Dolin, R. 
- (Eds.). Mandell, Douglas, and Bennetts 
- Principles and Practice of Infectious 
- Diseases, Sixth Edition, Elsevier Churchill 
- Livingstone, 2005 
- Guerrant, R.L., and Steiner, T.S. Chapter 89. 
 Gastrointestinal Infections and Food Poisoning.
- Thielman, N.M., and Wilson, K.H. Chapter 92. 
 Antibiotic-Associated Colitis.
- Guerrant, R.L., and Lima, A. A. M. Chapter 93. 
 Inflammatory Enteritides.
- Thielman, N.M., and Guerrant, R.L. Chapter 94. 
 Enteric Fever and Other Causes of Abdominal
 Symptoms With Fever.