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Typhoid/ Enteric fever Dr. Jyotsna Agarwal Professor, Dept. Microbiology KGMU 1 Salmonella • Salmonella is Gram-negative, rod-shaped • Facultative anaerobe in family Enterobacteriaceae • Motile, Non lactose fermenting • Over 2400 serotypes 2 Faeco-oral transmission Refrigeration does not kill bacteria, Heat at 600C destroys 3 Clinical Syndromes of Salmonella Salmonellosis = Generic term for disease Enteritis (acute gastroenteritis) Enteric fever (prototype is typhoid fever and less severe paratyphoid fever) Septicemia (particularly S. choleraesuis, S. typhi, and S. paratyphi) Asymptomatic carriage (gall bladder is the reservoir for Salmonella typhi) 4 Enteritis( Food Poisoning) Most common form of salmonellosis with foodborne outbreaks and sporadic disease High infectious dose (108 CFU) Poultry, eggs, etc. are sources of infection 6-48h incubation period Nausea, vomiting, nonbloody diarrhea, fever, cramps, myalgia and headache common Many species of salmonella can cause this (eg. S. typhimurium) except S. typhi 5 Pathogenesis Bacteria penetrates intestinal cell in ileocaecal region Inflammatory response to bacterial multiplication in the cell Prostaglandins secreted Increase in C-AMP 6 Clinical Syndromes- Enteric fever S. typhi causes typhoid fever S. paratyphi A, B and C cause milder form of enteric fever called paratyphoid fever Infectious dose large = 106 CFU Fecal-oral route of transmission Person-to-person spread by chronic carrier Fecally-contaminated food or water Food handlers contaminate food 10-14 day incubation period 7 Virtually non existent in developed world In developing countries endemic Typhoid more common than paratyphoid 8 Pathogenesis of Enteric fever M cells on Peyers patches Invade intestinal lining cells bloodstream (primary bacteremia) Phagocytosis Transported (R E system), continue to replicate 9 Pathogenesis contd… Second week: re-enter bloodstream (secondary bacteremia) endotoxemia Second to third week: gallbladder, secreted in bile, re-infect intestinal tract 10 Complications: Intestinal haemorrhage, perforation, cholecystitis Less commonly: Bronchopneumonia, arthritis, osteomyelitis 11 Epidemiology & Clinical Syndromes Asymptomatic Carriage Chronic carriage in 1-5% of cases following S. typhi or S. paratyphi infection (Temporary carrier>12 months shedding) Gall bladder usually the reservoir Chronic carriage with other Salmonella spp. occurs in <<1% of cases and does not play a role in human disease transmission 12 Early 1900- Mary Mallon 13 Virulence factor •Encapsulation , antigenic mimicry, masking •Evasion or incapacitation of phagocytosis • Mechanisms enabling an invading microorganism to resist being ingested and lysed by lysosomes intracellular survival and multiplication •Endotoxin 14 Diagnosis of Typhoid Fever 1. 2. 3. 4. Clinical: For Lab diagnosis, specimen & diagnostic tests according to duration of fever: Blood for Culture WIDAL Stool culture Urine culture 15 Blood Culture In blood culture bottle Repeated cultures may be required Subculture on MacConkey medium (NLF colony) Clot culture- put clot in blood culture bottle, lyse it with streptokinase in B/C bottle Use serum for WIDAL 16 Selective media for subculture from blood culture bottle: MacConkey, Wilson Blair, Tellurite blood agar Enrichment broth for culture of stool/urine: Selenite F broth, Tetrathionate broth 17 Serological test- WIDAL 1. 2. For detecting antibody Agglutination test Endemic titre Paired sera For carriers - antibody against Vi antigen Rapid test- Typhi dot 18 Treatment, prevention & control of salmonella infections Enteritis: Antibiotics not recommended for enteritis because prolong duration Control by proper preparation of poultry & eggs Enteric fever: Antibiotics- Chloramphenicol, cipriflox, Ceftriaxone Identify & treat carriers of S. typhi & S. paratyphi Vaccination can reduce risk of disease for travellers in endemic areas 19 Salmonella vaccines TAB: Salmonella typhi, paratyphi A &B, killed whole cell Oral Ty21-A: Live attenuated, Salmonella typhi vaccine Vi capsular polysaccharide vaccine 20 Summary- Enteric fever S. typhi / S. paratyphi Mode of spread /Pathogenesis Clinical features / Complications Laboratory diagnosis Treatment/vaccines 21