Species |
Transmission |
Diseases |
Treatment |
Prevention |
laboratory diagnosis |
Bacillus anthracis |
- Contact with sheep, goats and horses
- Inhalation or skin penetration through abrasions of spore-contaminated dust
|
|
In early infection:
|
|
- Large, grayish, nonhemolytic colonies with irregular borders on blood agar
- Direct immunofluorescence
|
Bordetella pertussis |
- Contact with respiratory droplets expelled by infected human hosts.
|
Complications:
|
Macrolide antibiotics
|
|
|
Borrelia burgdorferi |
Ixodes ticks
reservoir in deer, mice and other rodents |
|
- Early stages:
- If arthritic symptoms have appeared:
- Longer courses of antibiotics
|
|
|
|
- Direct contact with infected animal
- Oral, by ingestion of unpasteurized milk or milk products
|
|
Combination therapy of:
|
- |
|
Campylobacter jejuni |
- Fecal/oral from animals (mammals and fowl)
- Contaminated meat (especially poultry)
- Contaminated water
|
|
- Symptomatically by fluid and electrolyte replacement
- Ciprofloxacin in severe cases
|
No available vaccine
- Good hygiene
- Avoiding contaminated water
- Pasteurizing milk and milk products
- Cooking meat (especially poultry)
|
- Finding campylobacter in feces
|
Chlamydia pneumoniae |
|
Community-acquired respiratory infection |
|
None |
None for routine use |
Chlamydia trachomatis |
- Sexual (NGU, LGV)
- Direct or contaminated surfaces and flies (trachoma)
- Passage through birth canal (ICN)
|
|
|
No vaccine
- Erythromycin or silver nitrate in newborn's eyes
- Safe sex
|
|
Chlamydophila psittaci |
Inhalation of dust with secretions or feces from birds (e.g. parrots) |
Psittacosis |
|
- |
- Rise in antibody titre
- Complement fixation
- indirect immunofluorescence
|
Clostridium botulinum |
Spores from soil and aquatic sediments contaminating vegetables, meat and fish |
|
|
- Proper food preservation techniques
|
- Mouse inoculation detects toxin from food, intestinal contents or serum
- Culture in standard aerobic culture
|
Clostridium difficile |
- Spores both indoors and outdoors
- Human flora, overgrowing when other flora is depleted
|
|
|
None |
|
Clostridium perfringens |
|
|
Gas gangrene:
Food poisoning:
- Self-limiting; Supportive care is sufficient
|
Appropriate food handling |
- Microscopically
- Blood agar culture, forming double-zone β-hemolysis
- Sugar fermentation
- Organic acid production
|
Clostridium tetani |
- Spores in soil infecting puncture wounds, severe burns or surgery
|
|
|
|
(difficult) |
Corynebacterium diphtheriae |
- Respiratory droplets
- Part of human flora
|
|
|
|
(no rapid)
|
Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium |
- Part of human flora, opportunistic or entering through GI tract or urinary system wounds
|
|
|
No vaccine
|
- Culture in 6.5% NaCl
- Can hydrolyze esculin in presence of bile
|
Escherichia coli (generally) |
- Part of gut flora, spreading extraintestinally or proliferating in the GI tract
|
|
UTI:
(resistance-tests are required first)
Meningitis:
Diarrhea:
- Antibiotics above shorten duration
- Electrolyte and fluid replacement
|
(no vaccine or preventive drug)
- Food and water preparation
- Cooking ground beef and pasteurizing milk against O157:H7
- Hand washing and disinfection
|
- Culture on MacConkey agar and study carbohydrate fermentation patterns:
- Lactose fermentation (most E. coli strains)
- Gas production in glucose fermentation
- Mannitol fermentation
|
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) |
- Fecal-oral through food and water
- Direct physical contact
|
|
Enteropathogenic E. coli |
|
|
E. coli O157:H7 |
|
|
Francisella tularensis |
- vector-borne by arthropods
- Infected wild or domestic animals, birds or house pets
|
|
|
- Avoiding insect vectors
- Precautions when handling wild animals or animal products
|
(rarely cultured)
|
Haemophilus influenzae |
- Droplet contact
- Human flora of e.g. upper respiratory tract
|
|
Meningitis:
(resistance-tests are required first)
|
|
|
Helicobacter pylori |
- Colonizing stomach
- Unclear person-to-person transmission
|
|
|
(No vaccine or preventive drug) |
- Microscopically
- Urease-positivity by radioactively labeled urea
- Serology by ELISA
|
Legionella pneumophila |
|
|
|
(no vaccine or preventive drug)
Heating water
|
- Culture from respiratory secretions on buffered charcoal yeast extract enriched with L-cysteine, iron and α-ketoglutarate
- Serology, including direct immunofluorescence and radioimmunoassay for antigen in urine
- Hybridization to ribosomal RNA using DNA probe
|
Leptospira interrogans |
- Food and water contaminated by e.g. urine from wild or domestic animals. Leptospira survives for weeks in stagnant water.
|
|
|
(no vaccine)
Prevention of exposure
|
|
Listeria monocytogenes |
- Dairy products, ground meats, poultry
- Vertical to newborn or fetus
|
|
|
(no vaccine)
- Proper food preparation and handling
|
Isolation from e.g. blood and CSF
- Beta-hemolysis and catalase production on blood agar
- Microscopy for morphology and motility
|
Mycobacterium leprae |
- Prolonged human-human contact, e.g. through exudates from skin lesions to abrasion of other person
|
|
Tuberculoid form:
Lepromatous form:
|
|
Tuberculoid form:
- Hard to isolate (diagnosis on clinical findings and histology of biopsies)
Lepromatous form:
|
Mycobacterium tuberculosis |
|
|
(difficult, see Tuberculosis treatment for more details)
Standard "short" course:
- First 2 months, combination:
- Further 4 months, combination:
|
|
|
Mycoplasma pneumoniae |
- Human flora
- Droplet contact
|
|
|
|
(difficult to culture)
|
Neisseria gonorrhoeae |
|
|
Uncomplicated gonorrhea:
Ophthalmia neonatorum:
|
(No vaccine)
|
|
Neisseria meningitidis |
|
|
|
|
- Microscopy showing gram-negative diplococci, often with PMNs
- Culture on chocolate agar, giving positive oxidase test and fermentation of glucose and maltose in 5% CO2 in air
|
Pseudomonas aeruginosa |
Infects damaged tissues or people with reduced immunity. |
Localized to eye, ear, skin, urinary, respiratory or
gastrointestinal tract or CNS, or systemic with bacteremia, secondary
pneumonia bone and joint infections, endocarditis, skin, soft tissue or
CNS infections.
|
|
(no vaccine)
|
|
Rickettsia rickettsii |
|
|
|
(no preventive drug or approved vaccine)
- Vector control, such as clothing
- Prompt removal of attached ticks
|
|
Salmonella typhi |
Human-human
- Fecal-oral through food or water
|
|
|
- Ty21a and ViCPS vaccines
- Hygiene and food preparation
|
- Isolation from blood, feces, bone marrow, urine or rose spots on skin
- Colorless, non-lactose fermenting colonies on MacConkey agar
- Serology for antibodies against O antigen
|
Salmonella typhimurium |
- Fecal-oral
- Food contaminated by fowl (e.g. eggs), pets and other animals
|
|
- Fluid and electrolyte replacement for severe diarrhea
- Antibiotics (in immunocompromised to prevent systemic spread)
|
(No vaccine or preventive drug)
- Proper sewage disposal
- Food preparation
- Good personal hygiene
|
|
Shigella sonnei |
- Fecal-oral
- Flies
- Contaminated food or water
|
|
|
- Protection of water and food supplies
- Vaccines are in trial stage[16]
|
- Culture on Hektoen agar or other media for intestinal pathogens
|
Staphylococcus aureus |
- Human flora on mucosae in e.g. anterior nares and vagina, entering through wound
|
Coagulase-positive staphylococcal infections:
|
|
(no vaccine or preventive drug)
- Barrier precautions, washing hands and fomite disinfection in hospitals
|
|
Staphylococcus epidermidis |
Human flora in skin and anterior nares |
- Infections of implanted prostheses, e.g. heart valves and catheters
|
|
None |
|
Staphylococcus saprophyticus |
Part of normal vaginal flora |
|
|
None |
Streptococcus agalactiae |
Human flora in vagina or urethral mucous membranes, rectum
|
|
|
None |
|
Streptococcus pneumoniae |
- Respiratory droplets
- Often human flora in nasopharynx (spreading in immunocompromised)
|
|
|
- 23-serotype vaccine for adults (PPV)
- Heptavalent conjugated vaccine for children (PCV)
|
|
Streptococcus pyogenes |
- Respiratory droplets
- Direct physical contact with impetigo lesions
|
|
|
No vaccine
- Rapid antibiotic treatment helps prevent rheumatic fever
|
|
Treponema pallidum |
|
|
|
No preventive drug or vaccine
- Safe sex
- Antibiotics to pregnant women at risk of transmitting congenital syphilis
|
Cannot be cultured or viewed in gram-stained smear
|
Vibrio cholerae |
- Contaminated water and food, especially raw seafood
|
|
- Fluid and electrolyte replacement
- e.g. doxycycline to shorten duration
|
- Preventing fecal contamination of water supplies and food
- Adequate food preparation
|
|
Yersinia pestis |
- Fleas from animals
- Ingestion of animal tissues
- Respiratory droplets
|
Plague:
|
|
|
|