86 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2017
    1. It is involved in attachment and adherence to host cells as well as natural competence of L. pneumophila.

      pilli

    1. Severalreports stress that inappropriate antibiotics at this stagecould seriously compromise clinical outcome

      not all antibiotics equal

    1. eptococci can be isolated from the blood, blisterfluid and from cultures of the infe

      isolate

    2. acteraemia is regu-larly seen in patients with necrotizing fascii

      bacteraemia

    1. Despite the overall low virulence, they may cause infective endocarditis, contribute to polymicrobic abscess, and invade the bloodstream during the state of neutropenia.

      virulence

    2. Viridans streptococci represent a group of 24 currently described Streptococcus species that are nutritionally fastidious

      fastidious

  2. Apr 2017
    1. no enzymatic or toxigenic effect has ever been documented as a by-product of alpha hemolysis.

      No toxicity

    2. VGS; S. anginosus, S. mutans, and S. sanguinis

      These are all VGS species

    3. bile solubility testing

      biochemical test

    4. They differ from pneumococci in that they are optochin resistant and are not bile soluble.

      different from pneumococci, even though we are not comparing to that.

    5. chaining morphology

      morphology

    6. as many species do not produce any hemolysis on blood agar.

      blood agar plate can't be the only test

    1. Alpha-hemolytic Streptococcus species “Viridans group” streptococci, including species such as the Streptococcus mutans, mitis, and salivarius groups display alpha hemolysis.

      TSA

    1. Lincosamide for treatment of serious skin and soft-tissue staphylococcal infections

      Effective for soft tissue infections ***

    2. Resistance is obtained as part of a cassette of genetic information, or a transposon, that encodes resistance to multiple antibiotics.

      Mechanism of resistance

    1. Transposon transfer is thought to be the most likely mechanism in S pneumoniae , although point mutations also occur.

      Mechanism of action

    2. Even cefotaxime and ceftriaxone resistance has been documented

      Antibiotic resistance of S. pneumoniae

    3. The capsule of S pneumoniae renders it resistant to phagocytosis

      Virulence: persistence, immune evasion

    4. cariogenic

      causing tooth decay

    5. Treatment is usually with penicillin. However, strains resistant to penicillin and multiple antibiotics are rapidly emerging. A vaccine is available.

      moving away from penicillin

    6. Pneumococci are distinguished from viridans streptococci by the quellung (capsular swelling) reaction, bile solubility, and optochin inhibition.

      pneumococci differentiation- why can't we use gram negative vs positive?

    1. Binding to platelets, binding to fibrin, exopolysaccharide production, and binding to fibronectin have been identified as factors associated with virulence of viridans streptococci.

      Virulence factors

    1. neumolysin is produced as a 52 kDa soluble protein that oligomerizes in the membrane of target cells to form a large ring-shaped transmembrane pore. The pore is 260 Å in diameter and is composed of approximately 40 monomer subunits. During its conversion from a soluble monomer to a membrane-inserted oligomer, pneumolysin undergoes a series of spectacular structural changes42. The oligomers are thought to be responsible for the cytolytic activity of the toxin and the plethora of cell-modulatory activities that are evident at sub-lytic con-centrations. These activities include: inhibition of ciliary beating on respiratory epithelium and brain ependyma; inhibition of the phagocyte respiratory burst; and induc-tion of cytokine synthesis and CD4+ T-cell activation and chemotaxis43,44. Site-directed mutagenesis has shown that pneumolysin activates the classical complement pathway independently of its cell-modulatory activity45

      possible mechanism of protein virulence

    2. lmost all pneumococcal CPSs are negatively charged, which could increase their repulsion of the sialic acid-rich mucopolysaccharides that are found in mucus12
    3. The pneumococcus resides on the mucosal surface of the upper respiratory tract
    4. one of the common forms of pneumococcal disease, however, promote pneumococcal transmission, which implies that the virulence characteristics of the pneumococcus are prob-ably adaptations that increase its persistence within a host during colonization
    5. Although colonization at this site seems to be asymptomatic, if the organism gains access to the normally sterile parts of the airway a rapid inflamma-tory response ensues that results in disease.
    1. t also has a unique mode of action inhibiting the second stage of cell wall synthesis of susceptible bacteria. There is also evidence that vancomycin alters the permeability of the cell membrane and selectively inhibits ribonucleic acid synthesis.

      mechanism of action of vancomycin antibiotic

    1. Briefly, the organism was plated on blood Mueller-Hinton agar and incubated at 35°C in ambient air (preferred), or with CO2 if required for growth, for 20 to 24 h.

      Culture growth requirements

    2. All 50 strains were susceptible to vancomycin

      effective antibiotic

    3. based on alpha-hemolysis, gram-positive reaction, coccus morphology in chains, negative catalase test, and exclusions of pneumococci and enterococci by routine biochemical tests (optochin test, bile solubility, and PYR [N,N-dimethylaminocinnamaldehyde] test).

      Identification of VGS in lab

    4. nutritionally fastidious and mainly alpha-hemolytic on sheep blood agar

      Lab media

    5. Sequencing analysis of the 16S rRNA gene has become an essential part of bacterial taxonomy

      Additional lab tests

    1. Colonies of viridans streptococci on blood agar surroundend by a wide zone of alpha-hemolysis.

      colony morphology

    1. One hundred thirty-eight strains(33.6%) were resistant to penicillin

      penicillin resistance

    1. The susceptibility rates for S. sanguis were: penicillin, 74%; amoxicillin, 84%; ceftriaxone, 94%; clindamycin, 87%, and vancomycin, 100%. The susceptibility rates for S. mitis were: penicillin, 42%; amoxicillin, 67%; ceftriaxone, 58%; clindamycin, 100%; and vancomycin, 100%. The susceptibility rates for S. milleri were: penicillin, 100%, amoxicillin. 100%; ceftriaxone, 100%, clindamycin, 100%; and vancomycin, 100%.

      different antimicrobials that stop different species within the viridans streptococci group.

    1. omorbidity was diabetes mellitus

      because these need a suppressed immune system and diabetes patients don't clot up quick enough

    1. viridans streptococcus  any of a group of streptococci with no defined Lancefield group antigens but not Streptococcus pneumoniae, usually α-hemolytic; part of the normal flora of the respiratory tract but also causing dental caries, bacterial endocarditis, and other disorders in immunocompromised hosts

      important way to distinguish viridans from others- no Lancefield antigens and usually a-hemolytic other than pneumoniae but gram stain should be able to differentiate because of gram-positive

    1. Morphology: cocci in Chains

      for all streptococci? so morphology wouldn't really help us differentiate?

    2. Penicillins, but resistance reported among beta hemolytic streptococci

      treatment, other than for Strep B. but is it the first line drug?

    1. Shows key test in the differentiation of the virdidans streptoco

      key tests per type

    2. A,C,G, F, none

      antibody test

    3. Viridans streptococci: most strains are α-hemolytic on blood agar media, are usually neither susceptible to optochin or bile soluble.

      tests

    4. all viridans species are PYR negative

      PYR negative

    5. all strains of viridans streptococci have been sensitive to vancomycin

      antibiotic to use

    6. 10% of viridans streptococci are bile-esculin positive

      not all strains bile-esculin positive

    7. Viridans streptococci, mutans group Streptococcus mutans (human plaque) Streptococcus cricetus (rodent plaque, human) Streptococcus downei (monkey plaque) Streptococcus ferus(rodent plaque) Streptococcus macaccae (monkey plaque) Streptococcus ratti(rodent, human plaque) Streptococcus sobrinus(human plaque) Viridans streptococci, oral groupStreptococcus salivarius (human) Streptococcus vestibularius(human) Streptococcus sanguinis(human) Streptococcus parasanguinis(human) Streptococcus gordonii(human) Streptococcus anginosus(human) Streptococcus constellatus(human) Streptococcus intermedius(human) Streptococcus mitis(human) Streptococcus oralis(human) Streptococcus crista(human) Streptococcus infantis(human) Streptococcus perois (human)

      many species

    8. viridans Streptococcus, or of unknown identity (basically includes all cultures other than pneumococci, ß-hemolytic streptococci, and nutritionally variant streptococci), inoculate the following media. Inoculate a trypticase soy 5% sheep blood agar plate by streaking a heavy inoculum onto one-fourth of the plate and streak the remaining portion for isolated colonies. Place a vancomycin disk on the heaviest part of the inoculum, and put the plate into a candle extinction jar or a CO2 incubator for 18 to 24 h at 35C.

      growing conditions

    1. biotic usage drives resistance holds true for VGS, and there are numerous studies that have shown direct correlations between both penicillin and macrolide usage and the development of resistance in VGS.

      antibiotic resistance

    2. pyrrolidonylarylamidase negative, and do not grow in 6.5% NaCl, and almost all species are negative for growth on bile esculin agar.

      biochem tests

    3. eucine aminopeptidase positive

      biochemical test

    4. catalase-negative,

      This is a test to differentiate staphylococci from streptococci. Possibly doesn't use oxygen, anaerobe Possibly just capable of not using oxygen if needed (also could use oxygen though)

    5. heterogeneous group of organisms that can be both commensal flora and pathogens in humans

      Resevoir

    6. GS, the rates and patterns of antimicrobial resistance vary greatly depending upon the species identification and the patient populatio

      Varying antibiotic resistance

    7. The VGS are a group of catalase-negative, Gram-positive cocci with a chaining morphology on microscopic examination.

      Gram + cocci, chaining morphology

    8. commensal flora

      Definition: consists of those micro-organisms, which are present on body surfaces covered by epithelial cells and are exposed to the external environment (gastrointestinal and respiratory tract, vagina, skin, etc.).

    9. VGS can cause invasive disease, such as endocarditis, intra-abdominal infection, and shock.

      What VGS can cause in certain patient populations

    1. Conventional tests cannot identify most species of the viridans streptococci.

      so what tests can identify them then?

    2. These bacteria can be found in the mouth, gastrointestinal tract and vagina of healthy humans,

      natural reservoirs

    3. Alpha-hemolytic streptococci cause a partial or “greening” hemolysis around the colony, associated with the reduction of red cell hemoglobin.

      will help identify viridans from other streptococci groups because of the green colonies on blood agar plates

    1. Viridans streptococci are usually organisms of low virulence

      Pathogenesis

    2. Although little is known about the transmission of viridans streptococci, studies of S. mutans passage within families indicates that intra-family transmission is common

      Transmission of Viridans Streptococci

    3. Viridans streptococci are the predominant species of the human oral flora and commonly inhabit other areas of the upper respiratory, gastrointestinal, and female genital tracts. Viridans streptococci are occasionally found in the skin flora.

      Environment found

    4. Streptococci are Gram-positive spherical or ovoid bacteria

      Microbiology

    5. oral mucosa is the most common portal of entry

      Most common portal of entry