Summary: Laura's Medische Microbiologie
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1 Introduction to Bacteriology
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1.1 Microbiome vs pathogens
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Microbiome, human-associated microbes
- 4x10^13 microorganisms
- 500 - 1000 different spicies
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What do good bacteria of the microbiome do as a source of health?
- Nutrition and metabolism of food
- breakdown of indigestible polysaccharides
- production of vitamins B and K
- Maturation and instruction of immune system
- Colonization resistance: protection against invaders
- Nutrition and metabolism of food
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What do bad bacteria of the microbiome do as a source of disease?
- Potential disease-causing bacteria among healthy microbiome
- Risk of infection
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Which are the bad bacteria among the microbiome?
- Neisseria meningitidis
- gram-negative diplococcus
- human is the host
- causes meningitis/sepsis
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Group A Streptococcus
Neisseria meningitidis and Streptococcus pneumoniae have a similar clinical picture but are different pathogens causing it. -
What is a carrier?
Host that harbours potential pathogen without disease -
What are the two different clinical pictures Staphylococcus aureus causes?
Scalded skin syndromeExfoliative toxinsA andB Toxin binds to amolecule within thedesmosome and breaks it up so the skin cells become unstuckFood poisoning Enterotoxin A Toxin isresistant toconditions (heattreatment , low pH) that destroy thebacteria that produce them
Thedifferent clinical pictures is due to the way of entry ofStaphylococcus aureus.- barrier of skin
ingested contaminated food
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1.2.1 Porte d'entrée: route of contamination and invasion of the host
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What are the porte d'entrée sites?
- Skin or mucous membranes
- Wound infections, STD (SSSS: bacteria S. Aureus)
- Transcutaneous
- via vectors, insects
- Directly in the bloodstream
- needle drug user, tooth extraction
- Airways
- upper/lower respiratory tract (SSSS)
- Gastrointestinal
- Contaminated food (good poisoning)
- Skin or mucous membranes
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What are the different types of pathogenicity?
Invasiveness (also called tropism) : ability to invade tissuesColonization Bypass host defenseToxigenesis : ability to produce toxinsExotoxins Endotoxins
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1.2.2 Properties of microorganism
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What is the course of infection determined by? Which are those?
Virulence factors- Adhesins
- Invasins
- Capsule
- Toxins
- Enzymes
- Pill
- enhances bacteria's ability to bind to body tissues, which increases replication rate
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What are the virulence factors of S. Aureus?
Toxins- Cytolytic toxins
- tissue destruction / abscess formation
- Entrotoxins (A-E)
- toxicity
- Exfoliative toxin
- blistering: loss of desmosomes
Enzymes- Coagulase
- conversion fibrinogen to fibrine
- Hyaluronidase, lipase, fibrinolysis
- distribution in tissues
- Catalase
- protection against oxygen radicals
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