ultimately, severe toxemia and death.
Figure shows C septicum gram stained slide from infected wound
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In gas gangrene (Clostridial myonecrosis), a mixed infection is the rule. In addition to the toxigenic Clostridia,
proteolytic Clostridia and various cocci and gram-negative organisms are also usually present. C perfringens
occurs in the genital tracts of 5% of women.
In contaminated wound (e.g., a compound fracture, postpartum uterus), the infection spreads in 1-3 days to
produce crepitation in the subcutaneous tissue and muscle, foul-smelling discharge, rapidly progressing
necrosis, fever, hemolysis, toxemia, shock, and death.
In the laboratory specimens consist of material from wounds, pus, and tissue. The presence of large grampositive rods in Gram-stained smears suggests gas gangrene Clostridia; spores are not regularly present.
Material is inoculated into chopped meat glucose medium and thioglycolate medium and onto blood agar
plates incubated anaerobically.
After pure cultures have been obtained by selecting colonies from anaerobically incubated blood plates, they
are identified by biochemical reactions (various sugars in thioglycolate, action on milk); hemolysis, and
colony morphology, lecithinase activity is evaluated by the precipitate formed around colonies on egg yolk
media.
Clostridium difficile
Pseudomembranous colitis is diagnosed by detection of one or both C difficile toxins in stool and by
endoscopic observation of pseudomembrane or micro-abscesses in patients who have diarrhea and have been
given antibiotics.
Plaques and micro-abscesses may be localized to one area of the bowel. The diarrhea may be watery or bloody,
and the patient frequently has associated abdominal cramps, leukocytosis, and fever.
Many antibiotics have been associated with pseudomembranous colitis; the most common are ampicillin and
clindamycin and, more recently, the flouroquinilones. The disease is treated by discontinuing administration of
the offending antibiotic and orally giving metronidazole, vancomycin.
Fecal transplantation has become a successful and routine method for recurrent and refractory disease. This
usually involves administration of the feces of a healthy related donor by way of colonoscopy or less commonly
via a nasogastric tube into the gastrointestinal tract of the patient.
Administration of antibiotics results in proliferation of drug-resistant C difficile that produces two toxins:
1- Toxin A is a potent enterotoxin that also has some cytotoxic activity, binds to the brush border
membranes of the gut at receptor sites
2- Toxin B is a potent cytotoxin
Both toxins are usually found in the stools of patients with pseudomembranous colitis. Not all strains of C
difficile produce the toxins, and the toxin genes are found on a large, chromosomal pathogenicity island along
with three other genes that regulate toxin expression.
Diagnosis is made clinically and supported by demonstration of toxin in the stool by a variety of methods that
includes anaerobic toxigenic culture, enzyme immunoassay, and molecular tests that detect the genes that
encode toxins A or Antibiotic associated diarrhea
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The administration of antibiotics frequently leads to a mild to moderate form of diarrhea, termed antibioticassociated diarrhea. This disease is generally less severe than the classic form of pseudomembranous colitis;
25% of cases of antibiotic-associated diarrhea are caused by C difficile infection, other Clostridium species such
as C perfringens and C sordellii have also been implicated; but they are not associated with pseudomembranous
colitis.
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Lecture 12
Spore-forming gram-positive Bacilli: Bacillus and Clostridium Species
These bacilli are ubiquitous, and because they form spores, they can survive in the environment for many years.
Bacillus species are aerobes and the Clostridium species are anaerobes.
Many species of Bacillus and related genera, most do not cause disease and are not well characterized. There
are a few species, however, that cause important diseases in humans. Anthrax, a classical disease in the history
of microbiology, is caused by Bacillus anthracis.
Anthrax remains an important disease of animals and occasionally of humans. Because of its potent toxins, B
anthracis is a major potential agent of bioterrorism and biologic warfare.
Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis cause food poisoning and occasionally eye or other localized
infections.
The genus Clostridium is extremely heterogeneous and more than 200 species have been described.
Clostridia cause several important toxin mediated diseases, including tetanus (Clostridium tetani), botulism
(Clostridium botulinum), and gas gangrene (Clostridium perfringens), and antibiotic-associated diarrhea and
pseudomembranous colitis (Clostridium difficile).
Bacillus species
The genus Bacillus includes large aerobic, gram-positive rods occurring in chains. The members of this genus
are closely related but differ both phenotypically and in terms of pathogenesis.
Pathogenic species possess virulence plasmids. Most members of this genus are saprophytic organisms
prevalent in soil, water, and air, and on vegetation (e.g., Bacillus subtilis).
Some are insect pathogens, such as B thuringiensis. This organism is also capable of causing disease in
humans. B cereus can grow in foods and cause food poisoning by producing either an enterotoxin (diarrhea) or
an emetic toxin (vomiting). Both B cereus and B thuringiensis may occasionally produce disease in
immunocompromised humans (e.g., meningitis, endocarditis, endophthalmitis, conjunctivitis, or acute
gastroenteritis). B anthracis, which causes anthrax, is the principal pathogen of the genus.
The typical cells, measuring 3–4 μm, have square ends and are arranged in long chains; spores are located in
the center of the bacilli
Colonies of B anthracis are round and have a “cut glass” appearance in transmitted light. Hemolysis is
uncommon with B anthracis but common with B cereus and the saprophytic bacilli. Gelatin is liquefied, and
growth in gelatin stabs resembles an inverted fir tree.
Bacillus anthracis
Anthrax is primarily a disease of herbivores goats, sheep, cattle, horses, and so on; other animals (e.g., rats) are
relatively resistant to the infection.
Humans become infected incidentally by contact with infected animals or their products. In animals, the portal
of entry is the mouth and the gastrointestinal tract. Spores from contaminated soil find easy access when
ingested with spiny or irritating vegetation. In humans, the infection is usually acquired by the entry of spores
through injured skin (cutaneous anthrax) or rarely the mucous membranes (gastrointestinal anthrax) or by
inhalation of spores into the lung (inhalation anthrax). A fourth category of the disease, injection anthrax, has
caused outbreaks among persons who inject heroin that has been contaminated with anthrax spores. The spores
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germinate in the tissue at the site of entry, and growth of the vegetative organisms results in formation of a
gelatinous edema and congestion. Bacilli spread via lymphatics to the bloodstream, and they multiply freely in
the blood and tissues shortly before and after the animal’s death.
Anthrax toxins are made up of three proteins, protective antigen (PA), edema factor (EF), and lethal factor
(LF). PA is a protein that binds to specific cell receptors, and after proteolytic activation, it forms a membrane
channel that mediates entry of EF and LF into the cell. EF is an adenylate cyclase; with PA, it forms a toxin
known as edema toxin. Edema toxin is responsible for cell and tissue edema. LF plus PA form lethal toxin,
which is a major virulence factor and cause of death in infected animals and humans.
When injected into laboratory animals (e.g., rats), the lethal toxin can quickly kill the animals by impairing both
innate and adaptive immunity, allowing organism proliferation and cell death.
In inhalation anthrax (woolsorters’ disease), the spores from the dust of wool, hair, or hides are inhaled;
phagocytosed in the lungs; and transported by the lymphatic drainage to the mediastinal lymph nodes, where
germination occurs. This is followed by toxin production and the development of hemorrhagic mediastinitis and
sepsis.
Figure shows Bacillus anthracis in broth culture
In humans, approximately 95% of cases are cutaneous anthrax, and 5% are inhalation. Gastrointestinal anthrax
is very rare; it has been reported from Africa, Asia, and the United States when people have eaten meat from
infected animals. The bioterrorism events in the fall of 2001 resulted in 22 cases of anthrax 11 inhalation and
11 cutaneous. Five of the patients with inhalation anthrax died.
Cutaneous anthrax generally occurs on exposed surfaces of the arms or hands followed in frequency by the face
and neck. A pruritic papule develops 1–7 days after entry of the organisms or spores through a scratch. Initially,
it resembles an insect bite. The papule rapidly changes into a vesicle or small ring of vesicles that coalesce, and
a necrotic ulcer develops. The lesions typically are 1–3 cm in diameter and have a characteristic central black
eschar. Marked edema occurs. Lymphangitis, lymphadenopathy, and systemic signs and symptoms of fever,
malaise, and headache may occur.
After 7–10 days, the eschar is fully developed. Eventually, it dries, loosens, and separates; healing is by
granulation and leaves a scar. It may take many weeks for the lesion to heal and the edema to subside.
Antibiotic therapy does not appear to change the natural progression of the disease but prevents dissemination.
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In as many as 20% of patients, cutaneous anthrax can lead to sepsis, the consequences of systemic infection
including meningitis and death.
The incubation period in inhalation anthrax may be as long as 6 weeks. The early clinical manifestations are
associated with marked hemorrhagic necrosis and edema of the mediastinum. Substernal pain may be
prominent, and there is pronounced mediastinal widening visible on chest radiographs. Hemorrhagic pleural
effusions follow involvement of the pleura; cough is secondary to the effects on the trachea.
Sepsis occurs, and there may be hematogenous spread to the gastrointestinal tract, causing bowel ulceration, or
to the meninges, causing hemorrhagic meningitis. The fatality rate in inhalation anthrax is high in the setting of
known exposure; it is higher when the diagnosis is not initially suspected.
Animals acquire anthrax through ingestion of spores and spread of the organisms from the intestinal tract. This
is rare in humans, and gastrointestinal anthrax is extremely uncommon. Abdominal pain, vomiting, and bloody
diarrhea are clinical signs.
Injection anthrax is characterized by extensive, painless, subcutaneous edema and the notable absence of the
eschar characteristic of cutaneous anthrax. Patients may progress to hemodynamic instability due to septicemia.
Laboratory Diagnosis
Specimens to be examined are fluid or pus from a local lesion, blood, pleural fluid, and cerebrospinal fluid in
inhalational anthrax associated with sepsis and stool or other intestinal contents in the case of gastrointestinal
anthrax. Stained smears from the local lesion or of blood from dead animals often show chains of large grampositive rods. Anthrax can be identified in dried smears by immunofluorescence staining techniques.
When grown on blood agar plates, the organisms produce nonhemolytic gray to white, tenacious colonies with
a rough texture and a ground-glass appearance. Comma-shaped outgrowths (Medusa head, “curled hair”) may
project from the colony. Demonstration of capsule requires growth on bicarbonate- containing medium in 5–7%
carbon dioxide. Gram stain shows large gram-positive rods. Carbohydrate fermentation is not useful. In
semisolid medium, anthrax bacilli are always nonmotile, but related organisms (e.g., B cereus) exhibit motility
by “swarming.”
Definitive identification requires lysis by a specific anthrax γ-bacteriophage, detection of the capsule by
fluorescent antibody, or identification of toxin genes by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). These tests are
available in most public health laboratories. A rapid enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) that measures total
antibody to PA, but the test result is not positive early in disease.
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Lecture 13
Mycobacterium
Mycobacteria are slender rods with lipid-rich cell walls that are resistant to penetration by chemical dyes such as
those used in the Gram stain.
They stain poorly but, once stained, cannot be easily decolorized by treatment with acidified organic solvents.
Therefore, they are termed “acid-fast”. Mycobacteria survive and replicate intracellularly. Mycobacteria infections
generally result in the formation of slow-growing granulomatous lesions that are responsible for major tissue
destruction.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes tuberculosis, the principal chronic bacterial disease in humans and a leading
cause worldwide of death from infection. This organism has increasingly become a cause for special concern in
immunocompromised patients.
Members of the genus Mycobacterium also cause leprosy as well as several tuberculosis-like human infections. This
genus belongs to the order of organisms (Actinomycetales) that also includes the genera Actinomyces and Nocardia.
These organisms all cause granulomatous lesions with various clinical presentations.
Mycobacteria are nonmotile and do not form spores. Mycobacteria cell walls are unusual in that they are
approximately 60 % lipid, including a unique class of very
Long-chain (75-90 carbons), β-hydroxylated fatty acids (mycolic acids).
These complexes with a variety of polysaccharides and peptides, creating a waxy cell surface that makes
Mycobacteria strongly hydrophobic and accounts for their acid-fast staining characteristic. Their unusual cell walls
make Mycobacteria impervious to many chemical disinfectants and convey resistance to the corrosive action of
strong acids or alkalis, so decontaminating clinical specimens, such as sputum, in which non-Mycobacteria
organisms are digested by such treatments. Mycobacteria are also resistant to drying but not to heat or ultraviolet
irradiation. Mycobacteria are strictly aerobic. Most species grow slowly with generation times of 8 to 24 hours.
It is currently estimated that about one third of the world’s population is infected with M. tuberculosis (tubercle
bacillus), with 30 million people having active disease.
Figure shows Mycobacterium tuberculosis
(Acid-fast stain of sputum from a
patient with tuberculosis)
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Patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis shed large numbers of organisms by coughing, creating aerosol
droplet nuclei. Because of resistance to desiccation, the organisms can remain viable as droplet nuclei
suspended in room air for at least
30 minutes. The principal mode of contagion is person-to-person transmission by inhalation of the aerosol.
A single infected person can pass the organism to numerous people in an exposed group, such as a family,
classroom, or hospital ward without proper isolation.
After being inhaled, Mycobacteria reach the alveoli, where they multiply in the pulmonary epithelium or
macrophages. Within 2-4 weeks, many bacilli are destroyed by the immune system, but some survive and are
spread by the blood to extra - pulmonary sites.
The virulence of M. tuberculosis rests with its ability to survive and grow within host cells. Although the
organism produces no demonstrable toxins, when engulfed by macrophages, bacterial sulfolipids inhibit the
fusion of phagocytic vesicles with lysosomes. The ability of M. tuberculosis to grow even in immunologically
activated macrophages and to remain viable within the host for decades is a unique characteristic of the
pathogen.
M. tuberculosis stimulates both a humoral and a cell mediated immune response. Although circulating
antibodies appear, they do not convey resistance to the organism. Instead, cellular immunity (CD4+ T cells) and
the accompanying delayed hypersensitivity directed against a number of bacterial protein antigens develop in
the course of infection and contribute to both the pathology of and immunity to the disease.
Primary tuberculosis occurs in a person who has had no previous contact with the organism. For the majority
of cases (95%), the infection becomes arrested, and most people are unaware of this initial encounter.
The only evidence of tuberculosis may be a positive tuberculin test; the course of tuberculosis infection either
remaining dormant or progressing to clinical disease.
About 10 % of those with an arrested primary infection develop clinical tuberculosis at some later time in their
lives.
As primary tuberculosis is usually acquired by the respiratory tract, the initial lesion occurs in a small
bronchiole or alveolus in the mid lung periphery. The organisms are engulfed by local mononuclear
phagocytes, and their presence initiates an inflammatory reaction. The tubercle bacilli grow well in phagocytic
cells; the bacteria proliferate and are carried by lymphatic drainage to the lymph nodes and beyond to set up
additional foci.
This initial phase of the infection is usually mild or asymptomatic and results in exudative lesions in which
fluid and polymorphonuclear leukocytes accumulate around the bacilli. A specific immune response develops
after about 1 month, and this changes the character of the lesions.
Macrophages, activated by specific T lymphocytes, begin to accumulate and destroy the bacilli.
Tubercle formation: The productive (granulomatous) lesion that develops is known as a tubercle. It consists of
a central area of large, multinucleate giant cells (macrophage syncytia) containing tubercle bacilli, a mid-zone
of pale epithelioid cells, and a peripheral collar of fibroblasts and mononuclear cells.
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Tissue damage is produced by the destruction of both bacilli and phagocytes, which results in the release of
degradative enzymes and reactive oxygen species such as superoxide radicals. The center of the tubercle
develops a characteristic expanding, caseous (cheesy) necrosis.
Primary tuberculosis follows one of two courses:
1- If the lesion arrests, the tubercle undergoes fibrosis and calcification, although viable but non-proliferating
organisms may persist.
2- If the lesion breaks down, the caseous material is discharged, and a cavity is created that can facilitate
spread of the infection. The organisms are dispersed by the lymph and the bloodstream and can seeds the
lungs; regional lymph nodes; or various distant tissues, such as liver, spleen, kidneys, bone, or meninges.
In progressive disease, one or more of the resulting tubercles may expand, leading to destruction of tissue
and clinical illness of (chronic pneumonitis, tuberculous osteomyelitis, and tuberculous meningitis). In
the extreme instance, active tubercles develop throughout the body, a serious condition known as miliary
(disseminated) tuberculosis.
Secondary disease reactivation:
It caused by M. tuberculosis that has survived in a dormant primary tubercle lesion. Any of the preexisting
tubercles maybe involved, but pulmonary sites are most common, particularly the lung apices where high
oxygen tension favors Mycobacteria growth. The resulting pathology is known as ((caseation necrosis)).
Destruction of the lung tissue leads to air-filled cavities where the bacteria replicate actively. Bacterial
populations in such lesions often become quite large, and many organisms are shed (in sputum). The patient
again becomes capable of exposing others to the disease.
Reactivation is apparently caused by impairment in immune status, often associated with:
a. Malnutrition
b. Alcoholism
c. Advanced age
d. Severe stress
e. Immune-suppressive medication
f. Diseases (such as diabetes and, particularly, AIDS)
Tuberculin reaction
The tuberculin reaction test is a manifestation of delayed hypersensitivity to protein antigens of M. tuberculosis.
Although such tests can be used to document contact with the tubercle bacillus, they do not confirm that the
patient currently
has active disease.
In the Mantoux test, purified protein derivative (PPD) is prepared from culture filtrates of the organism and
biologically standardized. Activity is expressed in tuberculin units. In the routine procedure (Mantoux test), a
measured amount of PPD is injected intradermally in the forearm. It is read 48-72 hours later for the presence
and size of an area of induration (hardening) at the site of injection, which must be observed for the test to be
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positive. A positive reaction usually develops 4 to 6 weeks after initial contact with the organism. It remains
positive for life, although it may wane after some years or in the presence of immune-suppression by
medications or disease.
Laboratory Identification
A microscopic approach for acid-fast bacilli using techniques such as the Ziehl-Neelsen stain is the most rapid
test for Mycobacteria. However, M. tuberculosis cannot be reliably distinguished on morphologic grounds from
other pathogens in the genus, from some saprophytic Mycobacteria species that may contaminate glassware and
reagents in the laboratory, or from those Mycobacteria that may be part of the normal flora. Therefore, a
definitive identification of M. tuberculosis can only be obtained by culturing the organism or by using one of
the molecular methods. The conventional methods often require 6–8 weeks for identification.
Specimens consist of fresh sputum, gastric washings, urine, pleural fluid, cerebrospinal fluid, joint fluid,
biopsy material, blood, or other suspected material.
Decontamination and concentration of specimens from sputum and other non-sterile sites should be liquefied
with NaOH (kills many other bacteria and fungi), neutralized with buffer, and concentrated by centrifugation.
Specimens processed in this way can be used for acid-fast stains and for culture. Specimens from sterile sites,
such as cerebrospinal fluid, do not need the decontamination procedure but can be directly centrifuged,
examined, and cultured.
Smears Sputum, exudates, or other material is examined for acid-fast bacilli by staining. Stains of gastric
washings and urine generally are not recommended because saprophytic Mycobacteria may be present and
yield a positive stain. Fluorescence microscopy with auramine-rhodamine stain is more sensitive than
traditional acid-fast stains, such as Ziehl-Neelsen, and is the preferred method for clinical material. If acid-fast
organisms are found in an appropriate specimen, this is presumptive evidence of Mycobacteria infection.
Culture, identification, and susceptibility testing processed specimens from non-sterile sites and centrifuged
specimens from sterile sites can be cultured directly onto selective media. The selective broth culture often is
the most sensitive method and provides results most rapidly. A selective agar media (e.g., Löwenstein-Jensen
or Middle brook 7H10/7H11 biplate with antibiotics) should be inoculated in parallel with broth media
cultures.
Incubation is at 35-37°C in 5-10% CO2 for up to 8 weeks. If culture results are negative in the setting of a
positive acid-fast stain, then a set of inoculated media should be incubated at a lower temperature (e.g., 24-
33°C) and both sets incubated for 12 weeks.
Blood for culture of Mycobacteria should be anticoagulated and processed by one of two methods:
(1) Commercially available lysis centrifugation system
(2) Inoculation into commercially available broth media specifically designed for blood cultures
Conventional methods for identification of Mycobacteria include observation of:
1. Rate of growth
2. Colony morphology
3. Pigmentation
4. Biochemical profiles
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Nucleic acid amplification by molecular techniques is increasingly important in the diagnosis of tuberculosis
because they have the potential to shorten the time required to detect and identify M. tuberculosis in clinical
specimens. The amplified M. tuberculosis direct test uses enzymes that rapidly make copies of M. tuberculosis
16S ribosomal RNA, which can be detected using genetic probes. The sensitivity of the test ranges from 75-100
%, with a specificity of 95-100 %, and it is used for patients whose clinical smears are positive for acid-fast
bacilli and whose cultures are in progress.
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR), amplifies a small portion of a predetermined target region of the M.
tuberculosis DNA. Using human sputum, commercial PCR kits can confirm the diagnosis of tuberculosis
within 8 hours, with a sensitivity and specificity that rivals culture techniques.
Also, PCR analysis facilitates DNA fingerprinting of specific strains, allowing studies of the progress of
epidemics.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis colonies grown on LowensteinJensen medium
The four groups of Mycobacteria (M tuberculosis complex, M avium complex, M kansasii, and M gordonae)
make up 95% or more of clinical isolates of Mycobacteria. For species that cannot be identified by DNA
probes, many laboratories with molecular capabilities have implemented 16S rRNA gene sequencing to rapidly
identify probe-negative species or send such organisms to a reference laboratory with sequencing capability.
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) has been applied to identification of Mycobacteria. The
method is based on development of profiles of mycolic acids, which vary from one species to another.
Several chemotherapeutic agents are effective against M. tuberculosis. Because strains of the organism resistant
to a particular agent emerge during treatment, multiple drug therapy is employed to delay or prevent
emergence. Isoniazid, rifampin, ethambutol, streptomycin, and pyrazinamide are the principal or “first-line”
drugs because of their efficacy and acceptable degree of toxicity.
Mutants resistant to each of these agents have been isolated even prior to drug treatment. Therefore, the
standard procedure is to begin treatment with two or more drugs to prevent outgrowth of resistant strains.
Sensitivity tests, administered as soon as sufficient cultured organisms are available, are an important guide to
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modifying treatment. In most parts of the United States, 8 to 14 % of M. tuberculosis strains are resistant to one
or more of the primary drugs.
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Lecture 14
Central Nervous System Diagnostic Microbiology
Meningitis is an infection of the membranes (meninges) surrounding the brain and spinal cord.
Meningitis is usually of multiple etiologies; bacterial, fungal or viral yet bacteria remain the common
etiological agent.
Meningitis can be acute, with a quick onset of symptoms, or chronic, lasting a month or more, or can be
mild or aseptic.
Bacterial meningitis continues to be a potentially life threatening emergency with significant morbidity
and mortality throughout the world and is an even more significant problem in many other areas of the
world, especially in developing countries
Types of bacteria that cause bacterial meningitis vary by age group. Currently, the average age of
contracting meningitis is above 25 years with Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis and
Haemophilus influenzae being the most common pathogens.
Trauma to the skull gives bacteria the potential to enter the meningeal space. Similarly, individuals with
a cerebral shunt or related device are at increased risk of infection through those devices. In these cases,
infections with Staphylococci, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other gram-negative bacilli are more
likely.
Recurrent bacterial meningitis may be caused by persisting anatomical defects, either congenital or
acquired, or by disorders of the immune system.
Tuberculous meningitis is common in those from countries where tuberculosis is common.
Viral meningitis is generally less severe and clears up without specific treatment. Viral (Aseptic)
meningitis is serious but rarely fatal in people with normal immune systems. Usually, the symptoms last
from 7-10 days and the patient recovers completely. Often, in early stages of viral meningitis and
bacterial meningitis, the symptoms are almost similar
Fungal meningitis is rare, but can be life threatening. Although anyone can get fungal meningitis,
people at higher risk are those who have AIDS, leukemia, or other forms of immunodeficiency.
The most common cause of fungal meningitis in HIV is Cryptococcus spp. In the last two decades,
advancements in transplant procedures and concomitant use of immunosuppressive therapies as well as
the pandemic spread of HIV, have increased the incidence of central nervous system (CNS) fungal
infections. The clinical picture may mimic tuberculous meningitis.
The causes of non infectious meningitis include cancers, systemic lupus erythematosus, drug induced,
head trauma, brain surgery.
Collection, transportation, receipt and storage of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
Direct testing of CSF is the most accurate way to confirm the diagnosis of bacterial meningitis.
CSF should be collected from all the cases with suspected meningitis before the antimicrobial therapy.
Petechial fluid can be another specimen in cases with meningococcal meningitis. Petechial lesions, if
present, may be gently irrigated by injecting 0.2 ml of sterile saline solution using a small syringe with
a fine needle and the fluid collected for smear and culture.
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Early diagnosis is essential and is best established by laboratory examination of CSF. However, therapy
should not be dependent or delayed pending lumbar puncture or laboratory results.
To initiate the definitive identification of a bacterium responsible for meningitis, CSF specimens should
be obtained from patients with clinical signs and symptoms of meningitis and should be transported to
the laboratory without delay.
“N.meningitidis, S.pneumoniae, and H.influenzae are fastidious organisms that may not survive
long transit times”
The processing of a CSF specimen is one of the few clinical microbiology procedures that must be done
immediately.
Laboratorians should always record the date and time a specimen was received. Usually, three or more
tubes of CSF are collected during a lumber puncture procedure .
The tubes should be numbered in sequential order with tube number one containing the first sample of
CSF obtained.
The CSF in tubes 1, 2, and 3 most often are examined for chemistry, microbiology, and cytology .
However, the contamination with skin flora and disinfectant will be ruled out after the first tube of CSF
is collected.
The probabilities of detecting microorganisms by staining and by culturing are related to the volume of
specimen that is concentrated and examined.
CSF volumes of 2 to 3 ml are usually sufficient to detect bacteria, but for mycological and
mycobacterial investigations a minimum of 5 ml (preferably 10 to 15 ml) of CSF is required .
If only a small amount of CSF is received with requests for multiple assays, the order of priority of the
tests is determined after discussion with the physician
“The specimen should not be refrigerated before subjecting to microbiological tests as it may prevent
the recovery of the organisms; fastidious organisms may not survive variations in temperature”
CSF specimens should be stored at room temperature or at 37 °C if they cannot be processed
immediately or till microscopy and bacterial cultures are performed, after which it can be refrigerated
for further use.
Bacterial meningitis is a significant cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide,
neurological outcome and survival depend largely on damage to CNS prior to effective antibacterial
treatment
“Quick diagnosis and effective treatment is the key to success”
The diagnostic dilemma in acute pyogenic meningitis is due to large spectrum of signs and symptoms
Examination of CSF
The CSF should arrive still warm and either be examined immediately or placed in an incubator for
examination within an hour, If delay is anticipated either in transportation to the laboratory or for
examination, CSF should be divided into two tubes: one in a plain tube and the other in a tube having a
few drops of glucose broth.
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In the laboratory, CSF from the plain tube can be used for making smears for staining whereas cultures
are done from tube having CSF in glucose broth
The residual CSF should be preserved frozen for further assessment and evaluation
An examination of CSF involves the following
1.Macroscopic examination
2.Cytological examination
3.Examination of Gram stained smear
4.Culture and antimicrobial susceptibility testing
5.Latex agglutination test for antigen detection
Macroscopic examination
By appearance, the CSF is normally clear like water; cloudy, purulent, bloody or pigmented CSF as per
the disease states
Hazy, cloudy, turbid CSF indicates either metastatic spread of tumors into the CNS; Opalescent CSF
may be suggestive of Cryptococcal meningitis
“The CSF is attributable to both the bacteria and leukocytes present”
In evaluating patients with suspected meningitis or encephalitis, a careful history along with
biochemical and cellular analysis of CSF is required
CSF glucose
CSF glucose concentrations <45 mg/dl are indicative of bacterial meningitis. CSF glucose
concentrations depend on serum concentrations and “should always be tested on paired samples”
A CSF/serum ratio cut-off of <0.4 is helpful in distinguishing between bacterial and aseptic meningitis
with a sensitivity and specificity of 91% and 96%, respectively
CSF protein
Despite typical CSF findings, the spectrum of CSF values in bacterial meningitis is so wide that the
absence of one of more of the typical findings may not affect the diagnosis
In community-acquired bacterial meningitis only 50 % may have CSF glucose above 40 mg/dl, less
than half cases may have a CSF protein below 200 mg/dl, CSF protein measurements of >55 mg/dl are
diagnostic of bacterial, fungal and tubercular meningitis
Cytological examination
In untreated bacterial meningitis, the WBC count is elevated, usually in the range of 1000–5000
cells/mm3
, although this range can be quite broad (<100 to >10, 000 cells/mm3
)
Bacterial meningitis usually leads to a neutrophils predominance in CSF, typically between 80% and
95%; 10% of patients with acute bacterial meningitis present with a lymphocyte predominance (defined
as >50% lymphocytes or monocytes) in CSF.
It is important to note that a false-positive elevation of the CSF WBC can be found after traumatic
lumbar puncture, or in patients with intracerebral or subarachnoid hemorrhage in which both red blood
cells and white blood cells are introduced into the subarachnoid space.
Examination of Gram stained smear
It is preferable to make a smear from CSF at the time of collection itself, for direct
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demonstration of organisms.
The Gram stained smear made either directly from the CSF or from the centrifuged deposit can reveal
not only the Gram character of the causative organism, but can also clinch the diagnosis in some cases.
“Gram stain may not be interpretable in grossly blood stained samples”
Although Gram staining of CSF sediment is a very useful, cheap and fairly rapid method of
identification of organism, the sensitivity in developing countries is only 25-40% when compared to 80-
85% in developed countries.
CSF Gram staining may identify the causative microorganism for patients with suspected bacterial
meningitis.
In 1/3 of the cases with bacterial meningitis defined by CSF parameters may have negative CSF
cultures; around 50% of the CSF culture negative patients have a positive Gram stain with equal percent
of patients being pretreated with antibiotics.
The Gram stain is positive in 10-15 percent of patients who have bacterial meningitis but with negative
CSF culture.
In developing countries among suspected meningitis cases, CSF Gram staining can identify the
causative organisms in 2/3rd, and CSF culture is positive in 1/10th of the pretreated patients.
“Gram staining correctly identifies the pathogen in 69 to 93% of patients with pneumococcal
meningitis”
The reported sensitivities of CSF Gram staining vary considerably for different microorganisms. CSF
Gram staining correctly identifies the organism in 50-65% of children and in 25-33% in adults with H.
influenzae meningitis
The chances of recovery of bacteria in CSF Grams up to 100-fold, can be intensified by replacing
conventional centrifugation with cytospin centrifugation
This increase is comparable to the concentration of 100 ml of CSF to a volume of 1.0 ml by
conventional centrifugation
Cytospin-prepared smears not only increased the positivity of the smears, the morphology of the cells
was well preserved with uniform distribution of the cells
Culture and antimicrobial susceptibility testing
Culture is the gold standard for determining the causative organism in meningitis.
After the receipt, specimen should be cultured at the earliest. CSF should also be inoculated into
“enrichment medium like sodium thioglycollate broth” along with solid media like enriched, selective
or differential media. Incubate in air plus 5-10% carbon dioxide.
Anaerobic culture may be important for post neurosurgical or posttraumatic meningitis or for the
investigation of CSF shunt meningitis.
“Negative or inconclusive culture results may be seen in patients with partially-treated meningitis
and those with atypical bacteria, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis”
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Figure shows Gram stain of N. meningitidis in CSF with associated PMNs
Figure shows Gram stain of S. pneumoniae with WBCs
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Figure shows H. influenzae are small, pleomorphic gram-negative rods or coccobacilli with random
arrangements
Figure shows proper streaking and growth of N. meningitidis on a blood agar plate
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Figure shows proper streaking and growth of S. pneumoniae on a blood agar plate
Figure shows proper streaking and growth of H. influenzae on a chocolate agar plate
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Figure shows H. influenzae colonies on a chocolate agar plate
Figure shows N. meningitidis colonies on a blood agar plate
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Lecture 15
Gastrointestinal Tract Diagnostic Microbiology
1- Food and untreated water borne infectious diseases
A. Salmonella, shigella, cholera
B. Hepatitis A / E, Caliciviruses / Norwalk virus, poliomyelitis
C. Giardia, cryptosporidium, Cyclospora
2- Dairy (unpasteurized)
A- Brucella, Listeria, Salmonella, Shigella
3- Raw or undercooked food
A. Enteric bacteria (Salmonella, Shigella, C. jejuni)
B. Helminths (Ascaris, Trichinella, Taenia)
C. Protozoa (Amoebiasis, Toxoplasma)
Stool cultures are performed to detect enteric pathogens. Routine stool cultures should be examined
for the presence for Salmonella, Shigella, and Campylobacter spp at minimum.
It should be noted that media routinely set to detect these pathogens will also detect Aeromonas
hydrophila and Plesiomonas shigelloides. Vibrio, Yersinia and E. coli O157:H7.
Bloody stool specimens are routinely screened for E. coli O157:H7 or shiga-like producing strains of
E. coli.
Recently, the CDC has recommended routine screening of stool culture for the presence of E. coli
strains that produce a Shiga-like cytotoxin
Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) has been isolated from patients who have hemorrhagic colitis and
hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS).
One virulence trait of all EHEC strains is the ability to produce cytotoxin(s) called Shiga-like toxin
(SLT) or verotoxin (VT)
SLT-I and SLT-II are the two most common toxins and individual EHEC strains have the ability to
produce both or either, in varying quantities. Therefore, SLT production and not individual (O157:H7)
serotype identification is a better diagnostic strategy for the determination of EHEC associated disease
Specimen Collection, Transport and Handling
Feces collected in sterile or non sterile clean container and sent to the laboratory for immediate processing. The
pH of the specimen will begin to drop after collection and this could reduce the quantity of pathogens
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