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Streptococcus pneumoniae Staphylococci (Gram positive cocci) Lecture 38 Faculty: Dr. Alvin Fox 1 KEYWORDS • − − − − − − − − • Staphylococcus aureus S. pneumoniae - coagulase (+) diplococci - MRSA (methicillin resistant S. aureus) Pneumococcus - opportunistic diseases autolysin - food poisoning/enterotoxins bile solubility test - toxic shock syndrome/toxic shock toxin optochin susceptibility - exfoliative toxin/scalded skin syndrome - α, β, γ and δ cytotoxins capsule - leucocidin Quellung reaction - lipase Polyvalent vaccine - hyaluronidase - protein A - coagulase (–) - Staphylococcus epidermidis 2 - Staphylococcus saprophyticus S. pneumoniae 3 S. pneumoniae • leading cause of pneumonia – particularly young and old – member normal flora, nasopharynx – replication and spread after damage to upper respiratory tract (e.g. after the flu) • bacteremia • meningitis • middle ear infections (otitis media) - children 4 S. pneumoniae • α hemolytic • pneumolysin – degrades red blood cells under aerobic conditions • grows well on sheep blood agar • no group antigen 5 Diagnosis - spinal fluid • direct Gram staining • detection of capsular antigen 6 Autolysis – identification after growth autolysin lipoteichoic acid Bile teichoic acid -choline peptidoglycan autolysin Cell membrane 7 C polysaccharide • Teichoic acid (C polysaccharide) – precipitates in serum – binds C-reactive protein 8 Identification optochin resistant optochin sensitive 9 Capsule • prominent – virulent strains • anti-phagocytic • carbohydrate antigens – highly variable among strains – numerous serotypes 10 Capsular vaccine • Immunity – serotype specific – to eradicate the organism in normal flora • Vaccine – a few major serotypes (polyvalent) • Vaccination or the susceptible population – young children – elderly • Immunization – major serotypes susceptible to change – population monitoring essential 11 Quellung reaction • using antisera • capsule "fixed" • visible microscopically 12 Pathogenesis • Teichoic acid – complement activation – large numbers of inflammatory cells at infection site 13 Therapy • S. pneumoniae – most strains susceptible to penicillin – resistance is common 14 STAPHYLOCOCCI • • • • • Gram positive Facultative anaerobes Grape like-clusters Catalase positive Major components of normal flora - skin - nares 15 Staphylococcus aureus 16 One of commonest opportunistic infections, both hospital and community acquired: • pneumonia • osteomyelitis • septic arthritis • bacteremia • endocarditis • abscesses/boils • other skin infections 17 Antibiotic therapy • Resistance to penicillin – penicillinase • Resistance to methicillin ‾ modified penicillin binding protein ‾ methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA) • Vancomycin • current drug of choice • resistance observed but uncommon at this time 18 Hospital infection control • MRSA now such a problem – monitoring by PCR of nasal swabs – eradication • antibiotics • whole body antisepsis 19 Food poisoning • not an infection • food contaminated by humans – growth of bacteria – production of enterotoxin • onset and recovery both occur within few hours 20 Food poisoning • • • • Vomiting nausea diarrhea abdominal pain 21 Toxic shock syndrome. 22 Toxic shock syndrome • • • • • fever rash desquamation vomiting diarrhea 23 Toxic shock syndrome • Toxic shock toxin - Dissemination • Organism – no dissemination 24 S. aureus • babies – scalded skin syndrome • exfoliatin 25 Lytic exotoxins: • • • • α toxin β toxin (sphingomyelinase C) γ toxin δ toxins – detergent-like • leucocidins 26 Protein A inhibits phagocytosis Fc receptor immunoglobulin PHAGOCYTE Protein A BACTERIUM 27 Spread • tissue-degrading enzymes – lipase – hyaluronidase 28 Identification • Sheep blood agar – β hemolytic – yellow pigmented (aureus) • mannitol fermentation • coagulase-positive • phage-typing, rarely performed 29 Staphylococcus epidermidis • major member, skin flora • opportunistic infection - less common than S.aureus • nosomial infections - shunts, catheters • artificial heart valves/joints 30 Identification • Sheep blood agar – non-hemolytic – Non-pigmented • Does not ferment mannitol • Coagulase negative 31 Several other coagulase negative staphylococcal species • common on human skin • some species cause opportunistic infection 32 Staphylococcus saprophyticus • urinary tract infections • this coagulase-negative species (and others) – not usually differentiated from S. epidermidis 33 Summary Figure (Identification Scheme) Note: S. viridans is ALPHA hemolytic and negative for all the tests below GRAM POSITIVE COCCI Catalase - + Staphylococcus(Clusters) Coagulase + S. aureus Beta hemolytic mannitol yellow - S. epidermidis Non-hemolytic mannitol white Streptococcus (pairs & chains) Hemolysis/Test BETA: Bacitracin S. pyogenes(group A) + CAMP/ Hippurate + S. agalactiae (group B) ALPHA: Optochin /Bile Solubility + S. pneumoniae GAMMA OR ALPHA: Bile Esculin + 6.5% NaCl Enterococcus + Bile Esculin + 6.5% NaCl Group D Non-Enterococcus Group D - 34