Pathogenic bacteria
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Bacterial infection | |
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Classification and external resources | |
Although the vast majority of bacteria are harmless or beneficial, quite a few bacteria are pathogenic. One of the bacterial diseases with highest disease burden is tuberculosis, caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which kills about 2 million people a year, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. Pathogenic bacteria contribute to other globally important diseases, such as pneumonia, which can be caused by bacteria such as Streptococcus and Pseudomonas, and foodborne illnesses, which can be caused by bacteria such as Shigella, Campylobacter and Salmonella. Pathogenic bacteria also cause infections such as tetanus, typhoid fever, diphtheria, syphilis and leprosy.
Koch's postulates are criteria designed to establish a causal relationship between a causative microbe and a disease.
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[edit] Diseases
Each pathogenic species has a characteristic spectrum of interactions with its human hosts.[edit] Conditionally pathogenic
Conditionally pathogenic bacteria are only pathogenic under certain conditions, such as a wound that allows for entry into the blood, or a decrease in immune function.For example, Staphylococcus or Streptococcus are also part of the normal human flora and usually exist on the skin or in the nose without causing disease, but can potentially cause skin infections, pneumonia, meningitis and even overwhelming sepsis, a systemic inflammatory response producing shock, massive vasodilation and death.[1]
Some species of bacteria, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Burkholderia cenocepacia, and Mycobacterium avium, are opportunistic pathogens and cause disease mainly in people suffering from immunosuppression or cystic fibrosis.[2][3]
[edit] Intracellular
Other organisms invariably cause disease in humans, such as obligate intracellular parasites that are able to grow and reproduce only within the cells of other organisms. Still, infections with intracellular bacteria may be asymptomatic, such as during the incubation period. An example of intracellular bacteria is Rickettsia. One species of Rickettsia causes typhus, while another causes Rocky Mountain spotted fever.Chlamydia, another phylum of obligate intracellular parasites, contains species that can cause pneumonia, or urinary tract infection and may be involved in coronary heart disease.[4]
Mycobacterium and Brucella can exist intracellularly, though they are facultative (not obligate intracellular parasites.)
[edit] By location
Following is a list of bacterial infections classified by location in the body:- Bacterial vaginosis is a disease of the vagina caused by an imbalance of naturally occurring bacterial flora and is often confused with yeast infection (candidiasis), or infection with Trichomonas vaginalis (trichomoniasis), which are not caused by bacteria.[5][6]
- Bacterial meningitis is a bacterial inflammation of the meninges, that is, the protective membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.
- Bacterial pneumonia is a bacterial infection of the lungs.
- Urinary tract infection is almost exclusively caused by bacteria. Symptoms include frequent feeling and/or need to urinate, pain during urination, and cloudy urine.[7] The main causal agent is Escherichia coli. Although urine contains a variety of fluids, salts, and waste products, it does not usually have bacteria in it,[8] but when bacteria get into the bladder or kidney and multiply in the urine, they may cause a UTI.
- Bacterial gastroenteritis is caused by pathogenic enteric bacteria. Such pathogenic enteric bacteria are generally distinguished from the usually harmless bacteria of the normal gut flora, but the distinction is often not fully clear, and Escherichia, for example, can belong to either group.
- Bacterial skin infections include:
- Impetigo is a highly contagious bacterial skin infection most common among pre-school children.[9] It is primarily caused by Staphylococcus aureus, and sometimes by Streptococcus pyogenes.[10]
- Erysipelas is an acute streptococcus bacterial infection[11] of the deep epidermis with lymphatic spread.
- Cellulitis is a diffuse inflammation[12] of connective tissue with severe inflammation of dermal and subcutaneous layers of the skin. Cellulitis can be caused by normal skin flora or by exogenous bacteria, and often occurs where the skin has previously been broken: cracks in the skin, cuts, blisters, burns, insect bites, surgical wounds, intravenous drug injection or sites of intravenous catheter insertion. Skin on the face or lower legs is most commonly affected by this infection, though cellulitis can occur on any part of the body.
[edit] Treatment
Main article: Antibiotics
- See also overview list below
[edit] List of pathogenic bacteria by basic laboratory characteristics
Following are the genera that contain the most important human pathogenic bacteria species:[15]Genus | Important species | Gram staining | Shape | Capsulation | Bonding tendency | Motility | Respiration | Growth medium | Intra/Extracellular |
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Bordetella | Gram-negative | Small coccobacilli | Encapsulated | singly or in pairs | aerobic | Regan-Lowe agar | extracellular | ||
Borrelia | Gram-negative, but stains poorly | spirochete | Long, slender, flexible, spiral- or corkscrew-shaped rods | highly motile | anaerobic | (difficult to culture) | extracellular | ||
Brucella | Gram-negative | Small coccobacilli | Unencapsulated | singly or in pairs | non-motile | aerobic | Blood agar | intracellular | |
Campylobacter | Gram-negative | Curved, spiral, or S-shaped bacilli with single, polar flagellum |
Unencapsulated | Singly | characteristic darting motion | microaerophilic | Blood agar inhibiting other fecal flora | extracellular | |
Chlamydia and Chlamydophila | (not Gram-stained) | Small, round, ovoid | Unencapsulated | motile | Facultative or strictly aerobic | Obligate intracellular | |||
Clostridium | Gram-positive | Large, blunt-ended rods | Normally encapsulated | mostly motile | Obligate anaerobic | Anaerobic blood agar | extracellular | ||
Corynebacterium | Gram-positive (unevenly) | Small, slender, pleomorphic rods | Unencapsulated | clumps looking like Chinese characters or a picket fence | nonmotile | Mostly facultative anaerobic | Aerobically on Tinsdale agar | extracellular | |
Enterococcus | Gram-positive | Round to ovoid (cocci) | pairs or chains | Non-motile | Facultative Anaerobic | 6.5% NaCl, bile-esculin agar | extracellular | ||
Escherichia | Gram-negative | Short rods (bacilli) | Encapsulated and Unencapsulated | Normally motile | Facultative anaerobic | MacConkey agar | extracellular | ||
Francisella | Gram-negative | Small, pleomorphic coccobacillus | Encapsulated | Non-motile | strictly aerobic | (rarely cultured) | Facultative intracellular | ||
Haemophilus | Gram-negative | Ranging from small coccobacillus to long, slender filaments | Encapsulated or Unencapsulated | Non-motile | Chocolate agar with hemin and NAD+ | extracellular | |||
Helicobacter | Gram-negative | Curved or spiral rods pultiple polar flagella |
rapid, corkscrew motility | Microaerophile | Medium containing antibiotics against other fecal flora | extracellular | |||
Legionella | Gram-negative, but stains poorly | Slender rod in nature, cocobacillary in laboratory. monotrichious flagella |
unencapsulated | motile | aerobic | Specialized medium | facultative intracellular | ||
Leptospira | Gram-negative, but stains poorly | Long, very slender, flexible, spiral- or corkscrew-shaped rods | Highly motile | stricktly aerobic | Specialized medium | extracellular | |||
Listeria | Gram-positive, darkly | Slender, short rods | diplobacilli or short chains | Distinct tumbling motility in liquid medium | Facultative Anaerobic | enriched medium | intracellular | ||
Mycobacterium | (none) | Long, slender rods | Unencapsulated | nonmotile | aerobic | M. tuberculosis: Lowenstein-Jensen agar M. leprae: (none) |
extracellular | ||
Mycoplasma | (none) | Plastic, pleomorphic | Encapsulated | singly or in pairs | Mostly facultative anaerobic; M.pneumoniae strictly aerobic | (rarely cultured) | extracellular | ||
Neisseria | Gram-negative | Kidney bean-shaped | Encapsulated or Unencapsulated | diplococci | Non-motile | aerobic | Thayer-Martin agar | Gonococcus: facultative intracellular N. meningitidis: extracellular |
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Pseudomonas | Gram-negative | rods | encapsulated | motile | Obligate aerobic | MacConkey agar | extracellular | ||
Rickettsia | Gram-negative, but stains poorly | Small, rod-like coccobacillary | Slime/microcapsule | Non-motile | Aerobic | (rarely cultured) | Obligate intracellular | ||
Salmonella | Gram-negative | Bacilli | Encapsulated | Normally motile | Facultative anaerobic | MacConkey agar | Facultative intracellular | ||
Shigella | Gram-negative | rods | Unencapsulated | Non-motile | Facultative anaerobic | Hektoen agar | extracellular | ||
Staphylococcus | Gram-positive, darkly | Round cocci | Encapsulated or Unencapsulated | in bunches like grapes | Non-motile | Facultative anaerobic | enriched medium (broth and/or blood) | extracellular | |
Streptococcus | Gram-positive | ovoid to spherical | Encapsulated or Unencapsulated | pairs or chains | nonmotile | Facultative anaerobic | blood agar | extracellular | |
Treponema | Gram-negative, but stains poorly | Long, slender, flexible, spiral- or corkscrew-shaped rods | highly motile | Aerobic | none | extracellular | |||
Vibrio | Gram-negative | Short, curved, rod-shaped with single polar flagellum | Unencapsulated | rapidly motile | Facultative anaerobic | blood- or MacConkey agar. Stimulated by NaCl | extracellular | ||
Yersinia | Gram-negative, stains bipolarly | Small rods | encapsulated | nonmotile | Facultative Anaerobe | MacConkey or CIN agar | Intracellular |
[edit] List of pathogenic bacteria by clinical characteristics
This is a rather clinical description of the species presented in the previous section, containing the main examples of transmission, diseases, treatment, prevention and laboratory diagnosis, which all can differ substantially among the species of the same genus.Species | Transmission | Diseases | Treatment | Prevention | laboratory diagnosis |
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Bacillus anthracis |
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In early infection: |
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Bordetella pertussis |
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Complications:
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Macrolide antibiotics |
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Borrelia burgdorferi | Ixodes ticks reservoir in deer, mice and other rodents |
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Combination therapy of: | - |
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Campylobacter jejuni |
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No available vaccine
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Chlamydia pneumoniae |
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Community-acquired respiratory infection | None | None for routine use | |
Chlamydia trachomatis | No vaccine
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Chlamydophila psittaci | Inhalation of dust with secretions or feces from birds (e.g. parrots) | Psittacosis |
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- |
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Clostridium botulinum | Spores from soil and aquatic sediments contaminating vegetables, meat and fish |
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Clostridium difficile |
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None |
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Clostridium perfringens |
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Gas gangrene:
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Appropriate food handling |
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Clostridium tetani |
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(difficult) | ||
Corynebacterium diphtheriae |
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(no rapid)
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Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium |
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No vaccine
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Escherichia coli (generally) |
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UTI:
(resistance-tests are required first) Meningitis:
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(no vaccine or preventive drug)
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Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) |
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Enteropathogenic E. coli |
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E. coli O157:H7 |
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Francisella tularensis |
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(rarely cultured)
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Haemophilus influenzae |
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Meningitis:
(resistance-tests are required first)
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Helicobacter pylori |
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(No vaccine or preventive drug) | |
Legionella pneumophila |
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(no vaccine or preventive drug)
Heating water |
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Leptospira interrogans |
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(no vaccine)
Prevention of exposure |
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Listeria monocytogenes |
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(no vaccine)
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Isolation from e.g. blood and CSF
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Mycobacterium leprae |
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Tuberculoid form:
Lepromatous form: |
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Tuberculoid form:
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis |
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(difficult, see Tuberculosis treatment for more details) Standard "short" course:
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Mycoplasma pneumoniae |
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(difficult to culture)
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Neisseria gonorrhoeae |
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Uncomplicated gonorrhea:
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(No vaccine)
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Neisseria meningitidis |
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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. |
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(no vaccine)
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Rickettsia rickettsii | (no preventive drug or approved vaccine)
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Salmonella typhi | Human-human
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Salmonella typhimurium |
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(No vaccine or preventive drug)
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Shigella sonnei |
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Staphylococcus aureus | Coagulase-positive staphylococcal infections:
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(no vaccine or preventive drug)
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Staphylococcus epidermidis | Human flora in skin and anterior nares |
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None |
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Staphylococcus saprophyticus | Part of normal vaginal flora |
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None | ||
Streptococcus agalactiae | Human flora in vagina or urethral mucous membranes, rectum
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None |
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Streptococcus pneumoniae |
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Streptococcus pyogenes |
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No vaccine
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Treponema pallidum |
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No preventive drug or vaccine
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Cannot be cultured or viewed in gram-stained smear
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Vibrio cholerae |
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Yersinia pestis |
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Plague: |
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