1 / 26

Legionella

Medical Microbiology. Legionella. BIOL 533 Lecture 14. History. American Legion Convention in 1976 in Philadelphia hotel Respiratory distress and fever 200 affected 34 died . History. Six months after outbreak, CDC isolated bacteria from post-mortum lung tissue

diella
Télécharger la présentation

Legionella

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Microbiology Legionella BIOL 533 Lecture 14

  2. History • American Legion Convention in 1976 in Philadelphia hotel • Respiratory distress and fever • 200 affected • 34 died

  3. History • Six months after outbreak, CDC isolated bacteria from post-mortum lung tissue • Inoculated lung tissue into peritoneal cavity of guinea pigs • After animal became ill, removed its spleen and injected tissue into fertilized chicken eggs (rickettsial methodology)

  4. History • Organism was thought to be unique, given new genus and species name: Legionella pneumophila • Epidemiological search revealed outbreak in same hotel two years earlier • Culture problems because organisms: • Do not grow on common laboratory media • Do not readily stain

  5. Microbial Physiology and Structure • Family Legionellaceae • One genus: Legionella • 25 species and 42 serotypes • Legionella pneumophila responsible for 85% of infections (serotype 1 most common)

  6. Microbial Physiology and Structure • Species can be differentiated by: • DNA homology • Cell wall fatty acids • Biochemical testing • Immunological serotyping

  7. Microbial Physiology and Structure • Morphology • Gram— rods (pleomorphic on artificial media) • Do not stain well except with special silver stain • Culture: do not grow in ordinary lab media, even though they are aerobic organisms • Require high concentration of cysteine and are inhibited by sodium ions and aromatic compounds

  8. Microbial Physiology and Structure • Media developed have: • Charcoal to absorb aromatic compounds • Non-sodium ion buffer • Antibiotics to suppress other organisms • Dyes to make colonies visible on solid media

  9. Pathogenesis • Encounter: aquatic; found in lakes and streams • Large numbers in polluted water around power stations • Can live in chlorinated drinking water • Normally found in hot water tanks of buildings • Get into pipes and multiply in sediment and accumulate over period of years • Do not spread from person to person • Sediment provides shelter as well as nutrition for other bacteria that can supply cysteine

  10. Pathogenesis • Entry, spread, and multiplication • Entry: inhalation of organisms • Incubation period: 2-10 days • Initial host response: acute inflammatory response of aveoli and then bronchioles (similar to pneumococcal infection) • Neutrophils accumulate followed by macrophage

  11. Pathogenesis • Different from pneumococcal infection • Organisms located inside of macrophage • Inhibit lysosomal fusion and acidification of phagocyte

  12. Damage • Organism possesses several exotoxins • Proteases, hemolysins, and other cytotoxins • One inhibits oxidative killing of neutrophils • May also damage tissue directly • Spread rapidly in lung tissue • Symptoms resulting from inflammatory disease in lung • Cough, chest pains, abnormal breathing sounds, and fever

  13. Damage • Other target sites: heart, kidney, lymph nodes, spleen, liver, and brain • Neurological symptoms and diffuse metabolic abnormalities result from bloodstream invasion: confusion, delirium • Some patients have gastrointestinal symptoms, including diarrhea

  14. Disease Syndromes • In general, healthy people rarely get disease • Immunosuppressed patients and heavy smokers with a history of respiratory problems

  15. Disease Syndromes • Pontiac fever (flu-like illness) • Pontiac, Michigan in 1968 • Symptoms: fever, chills, muscle aches, malaise, headache • Develops over 12-hour period, persists for 2-5 days, then spontaneously resolves • Minimal morbidity and no mortality

  16. Disease Syndromes • Legionaire’s disease • Much more severe, with high mortality unless promptly treated • Overall mortality is 15-20% • Symptoms reviewed in Pathogenesis section

  17. Epidemiology • Incidence is poorly understood because disease documentation is difficult • Pneumonias due to organism: less than 1% to greater than 30% • Estimated that 25,000 to 50,000 cases occur annually

  18. Epidemiology • Time of year • Sporadic infections throughout year • Epidemic infections occur in late summer and fall • Elderly with decreased pulmonary function and cellular immunity are at increased risk

  19. Laboratory Diagnosis • Microscopy • Difficult because of • lack of staining • intracellular nature • Require large number of organisms to detect • Best test: direct fluorescent antibody • Test is very specific • False positives observed rarely with Pseudomonas, Bacteriodes, and other organisms

  20. Laboratory Diagnosis • Culture: buffered charcoal yeast extract (BCYE) • Grow after 3-5 days • Appear as small colonies with ground glass appearance

  21. Laboratory Diagnosis • Detection of Ag in respiratory secretions or urine • Can be detected immunologically or by hybridization • Excretion in urine can occur for as long as a year

  22. Laboratory Diagnosis • Serology: indirect fluorescent antibody test • Four-fold or greater increase in antibody titer • Response can be delayed as long as eight weeks

  23. Laboratory Diagnosis • Identification • Demonstration of typical morphology and growth requirements • Gram— bacteria (pleomorphic and weakly straining) • Growth on BCYE with cysteine but no BCYE • Confirmation by fluorescent antibody

  24. Treatment • Erythromycin is antibiotic of choice • Can penetrate white blood cells • Most strains possess -lactamases

  25. Prevention • Complete elimination of organism from water supplies is almost impossible • Decrease in numbers normally effective • Normally, healthy people not at risk • Hyperchlorination and heating of water frequently employed

  26. Lecture 14 • Questions? • Comments? • Assignments...

More Related