1 / 12

SHIGELLA

SHIGELLA. Dr. Neha Haswani Assistant professor, Dept. of microbiology. A highly infectious organism. Causative agent for dsentery frequent passage of blood stained mucopurulent stools. 10-100 bacilli can cause disease. Can survive for upto 30 days in milk, eggs, cheese or shrimps.

willaf
Télécharger la présentation

SHIGELLA

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. SHIGELLA Dr. Neha Haswani Assistant professor, Dept. of microbiology

  2. A highly infectious organism • Causative agent for dsentery • frequent passage of blood stained mucopurulent stools. • 10-100 bacilli can cause disease. • Can survive for upto 30 days in milk, eggs, cheese or shrimps. • Infection occurs mostly after ingestion of food or water contaminated with human fecal matter.

  3. Definition • Belongs to family enterobacteriaceae • Gram negative bacilli • Aerobic • Non motile, non sporing • Non acid fast

  4. Classification • Basd on biochemical and serological reactions there are 4 serogroups/species: • Shigelladysenteriae(15) • Shigellaflexneri(8) • Shigellaboydii(19) • Shigellasonnei(26)

  5. Classification • On the basis of mannitol fermentation • Mannitol Non fermentor • Shigelladysenteriae • Mannitolfermentor • Shigellaflexneri • Shigellasonnei • Shigellaboydii

  6. Pathogenicity & Epidemiology • Causes bacillary dysentery • Source-human being • Route of infection- ingestion • Modes of transmission • Direct • Fomites • Contaminated food and water • Flies • Sexual- seen in young male homosexuals • Infective dose---10-100 bacilli.

  7. In countries where sanitation is good, shigellosis seen in young children • Shigellasonnei is commonly associated • In countries where environmental sanitation is poor, disease is endemic and occurs in all age groups. • In India, Shigellaflexneri is common species.

  8. Pathogenesis • Resembles EIEC • Binds to the M cells • Invades lamina propria • Grows in the enterocyte • Induce actin polymerisation • Invades the neighbouring enterocytes • Cause cell death and inflammation • Necrosis of patches of epithelium. • Transverse superficial ulcers. • Bacteraemia may occur in malnourished or HIV

  9. Clinical features • Short incubation period (1-7 days) • Onset and clinical course determined by virulence of infecting starin. • Frequent passage of loose scanty feces with blood and mucus • Abdominal cramps • Tenesmus • Fever and vomiting

  10. Complications • More common with Shigelladysenteriae type I • Arthritis • Neuritis • Conjunctivitis • Parotitis • Intusseception • Hemolyticuraemic syndrome

  11. Laboratory diagnosis • Specimen • Enrichment media/Transport media • Microscopy: plenty of pus cells, RBC, nonmotile bacilli • Culture:Mucus flakes are best samples to inoculate • MacConkey and DCA and XLD • Shigella salmonella agar • Hektoen agar • Biochemical reactions • Serology

  12. Treatment & Control • Uncomplicated shigellosis is a self limiting. • Treat dehydration in appropriately in infant and young children. • Routinely, antibiotic treatment not given. • MDR common now a days. It is plasmid mediated. • Improve personal and environmental conditions • No vaccine available • Antibiotics not used for prophylaxis

More Related