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Case Study Pathogenic Bacteriology 2009 Case #3 Mamadou Diallo Anne Roberts Case Summary       Patient is 16 year old female Complaints of ongoing abdominal pain for days and vaginal bleeding No nausea or vomiting and denies urinary tract infection symptoms, chills or fever Abdominal pain increased 24 hours before being admitted to the emergency room Upon examination, exquisite tenderness in the upper right and lower left quadrants of the abdomen, and had a fever of 38.3°C (101 °F) Cervical motion tenderness present upon pelvic examination as well as right and left adnexal (ovary) tenderness Key Information Pointing to Diagnosis PHYSICAL EXAMINATION  Fever of 38.5°C or greater  Abnormal vaginal discharge  Lower abdominal tenderness when felt  Tenderness when cervix is moved  Tenderness in female organs Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) believed to be the cause of the symptoms. 2 organisms known to cause PID: Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis LABORATORY EXAMINATION  Endocervical swab obtained from patient used to inoculate McCoy cells. After incubation, cells were stained and showed the presence of inclusions. The Diagnosis for Case #3  After results from the physical examination and a laboratory examination that determined the presence of elementary and reticulate body inclusions in inoculated cells it was established that Chlamydia trachomatis was the infectious agent. Classification,Gram Stain Results, and Microscopic Appearance of Chlamydia trachomatis Chlamydia trachomatis  Gram indeterminate – cannot be stained with Gram stain (no peptidoglycan), structurally organism is Gram negative (outer / inner membrane & LPS)   Family: Chlamydiaceae   Genus: Chlamydia   Species: C. trachomatis Diseases and Pathogenesis of Disease – C. trachomatis  Chlamydia is a STD. It is an OBLIGATE intracellular bacteria.  Alternate between two development stages with different functions:  1. Elementary Bodies (EB) – Infectious form  Spore-like to permit survival outside of host cell  Metabolically inert , Dense, compacted chromosomes  Infect non-ciliated, epithelial cells by phagocytosis  2. Reticulate Bodies (RB) – Non-infectious form  Active metabolism, and divides rapidly  To complete the cycle, the RB must develop into EB before exiting the host.  Cell will lyse and release the EB DISEASES CAUSED BY Chlamydia  Eye infections - Infant conjunctivitis and Trachoma (Chronic eye infection)  Lymphogranuloma Venereum (STD where organism disseminate to lymph nodes and result in buboes)  Urethritis, epididymitis, prostatitis, cervicitis Methods to Isolate/Identification/Detect C.trachomatis MOST SENSITIVE / SPECIFIC • Culture organism in tissue/cells where Giemsa stain is used • Considered the “gold standard” for specificity / sensitivity OTHER METHODS • DIRECT FLUORESCENT ANTIBODY • • • ENZYME IMMUNOASSAY • • • Detects outer membrane LPS chlamydial antigen Significantly less sensitive than culture, but high in specificity ANTIBODY DETECTION • • • Mainly used for Trachoma / Conjunctivitis Highly sensitive/specific but technically demanding Least sensitive and specific – Individuals have antibodies from previous infection Used as a complementary diagnostic tool in certain scenarios NUCLEIC ACID AMPLIFICATION TESTS (NAATS) • • Detect organism specific DNA/RNA sequences Used more today due to higher sensitivity than the other non culture methods Therapy, Prevention and Prognosis of Patient Infected with C.trachomatis  LONG TERM THERAPY NECESSARY!  Doxycycline, Azithromycin, Erythromycin and Tetracycline used  Beta Lactam drugs are… NOT effective for treatment   No peptidoglycan in the organism!!! Beta Lactam drugs can be used in addition to the antibiotics above to treat patient for concomitant infection with Neisseria gonorrhoeae Primary Research Article – C. trachomatis Kevin Hybiske and Richard Stephens. Mechanisms of Host Cell Exit by the Intracellular Bacterium Chlamydia. PNAS. Vol. 104: 11430-11435. 2007.  EXPERIMENTAL  HeLa cells generated to express cytosolic GFP gene. HeLa cells infected with C.trachmatis. Visualization of real-time inclusion dynamics by fluorescence microscopy took place to determine mechanism of host cell exit.   WHAT WAS FOUND  2 mutually exclusive pathways of release take place in the inclusion:   Lysis – rupture of membrane, destructive mode of release mediated by Ca+2 activated proteases. Extrusion – packaged elementary bodies released, no conclusive results as to how mediated Conclusion  Rate of inclusion release was reduced when cells treated with protease inhibitors  Rate of lysis duration was increased when host cells placed in Ca2+ free conditions  Deciphering the cellular exit mechanisms of C. trachomatis will be of fundamental importance to understanding Chlamydia pathogenesis. This is because cellular release directly affects its ability to infect new cells and transmit to new hosts Take Home Message          PID often involves infection with Chlamydia trachomatis… Typical symptoms fever, severe abdominal tenderness, cervical/ovary tenderness, vaginal bleeding/discharge Pathogen is an OBLIGATE INTRACELLULAR ORGANISM with a complex life cycle Diagnostics include culture in cells, enzyme immunoassays, direct fluorescent antibody test, NAATs Therapy is based on long term antibiotic treatment Prognosis is based on patient symptoms and inclusions of organism within host cells Prevention of organism is through use of condoms, talking openly with sexual partners, etc. Transmission is via sexual contact or through infected mothers to their babies Threats associated with this disease include ectopic pregnancy, infertility, blindness References CDC – Chlamydia Factsheet. <http://www.cdc.gov/std/Chlamydia/STDFactChlamydia.htm> Department of Health and Human Services. Dec 20, 2007. March 1, 2009. Hybiske, Kevin and Richard Stephens. Mechanisms of Host Cell Exit by the Intracellular Bacterium Chlamydia. PNAS. Vol. 104: 11430-11435. 2007. Mahon, Connie, Donald Lehman, George Manuselis. Textbook of Diagnostic Microbiology. 3rd Edition. Saunders-Elsevier, St. Louis, Missouri, 2007. University of South Carolina School of Medicine – Microbiology / Immunology Online. http://pathmicro.med.sc.edu/mayer/chlamyd.htm The Board of Trustees of the University of South Carolina. April 11, 2007. March 8, 2009.