Brucella, Haemophilus, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus
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Transcript Brucella, Haemophilus, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus
BRUCELLA
MAIN SPECIES
Brucella melintensis
Brucella abortus
Brucella suis
NORMAL HABITAT
Obligate intracellular pathogens of animals
B. melitensis mainly found in goat and sheep
B. abotus infects cattle
B. suis found in pigs and occasionally in goat
Other animal including horse, camel, eland and
wild rodents
ROUTES OF INFECTION
Mosquitoes helps in transfer Brucella from
animal to human
Also by ingesting unpastuerized milk or milk
products, enter damaged skin or eyes, inhaled in
airborne particles or aerosols.
LABORATORY DIAGNOSTICS
MICROSCOPIC OBSERVATION
Non-motile
Gram negative
Coccobacili
Show bipolar staining
Rarely found in direct smear from uncultured
specimen
On Gram stain they appear as dense clumps of
Gram-negative coccobacilli and are exceedingly
difficult to see.
CULTURE CHARACTERISTICS
Mostly cultured from blood of high fever
patient(Brucellosis)
Isolation is extremely rare in chronic brucellosis
In all blood culture, they need carbon dioxide
Blood culture should be kept in 4 – 6 weeks
before result as no organisms isolated
To reduce the risk of contamination, use the
diphasic medium such as Castaneda or tryptic
soy broth or agar
Brucellae are aerobic with enriched of carbon
dioxide
BIOCHEMICAL TESTS SEROLOGY TESTS
Urease and hydrogen
sulphide production
All brucella strains
are catalase positive
Possess two antigens
called A and M
Famous test serum:
Rapid slide
agglutination test
Tube agglutination
titration test
SEROLOGY TEST
It is crucial to be able to differentiate Brucella
from Salmonella which could also be isolated
from blood cultures and are Gram-negative.
Testing for urease would successfully accomplish
the task; as it is positive for the Brucella and
negative for the Salmonella.
HAEMOPHILUS
MEDICAL IMPORTANT SPECIES
Haemophilus influenzae
Haemophilus aegyptius
Haemophilus ducreyi
NORMAL HABITAT
H.influenzae (mostly non-capsulated strains), H.
parainfluenzae and H.aegyptius is normal flora of
the upper respiratory tract
Infections causing:
1. Pyogenic meningitis
2. Acute epiglottitis
3. Cellulitis, middle ear infection,etc
CONJUCTIVITIS
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS
MICROSCOPY
Small, non-motile, Gram negative rods or
coccobacili
Long thread-like form in old csf culture
MICROSCOPIC OBSERVATION
CULTURE OF H.INFLUNZAE
H.influenzae grows better in aerobically compare
to anaerobically
The optimum temperature for growth 35 – 37oC
The are X and V factor
Both represent in blood agar and permit the
culture to grow
H.influenzae and H.aegyptius need X and V
factor, H. parainfluenzae need V factor and
H.ducreyi need X factor
BIOCHEMICAL TESTS
Not usually used to identify hemophilus
6 biovars of H.influenzae are recognized based on
the indole, urease and ornithine decarboxylase
(ODC) reactions of the diff strains
SEROLOGY
Consist of 1 – f serotypes
Mostly causing meningitis belong to serogroup b
Most strains that cause chronic bronchial disease
are non-capsulated
Antimicrobial sensitivity
Resistant towards chloramphenicol, ampicilin,
tetracycline, erythromycin and cotrimoxazole
H. ducreyi is sensitive to sulphonamides
Ampicillin resistant are common
STAPHYLOCOCCUS &
STREPTOCOCCUS
STAPHYLOCOCCUS
Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcus epidermidis
Staphylococcus saprophyticus
INTRODUCTION
Are microbial flora of the skin, upper respiratory
tract and intestinal tract
S.aureus usually cause abscesses, boils,
conjuctivitis, pneumonia, septicemia, food
poisoning and scalded skin syndrome
S. epidermidis causing bacteraemia
S. saprophyticus causing cystitis and acute
urethritis
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS
Microscopy
Non-motile
Non capsulate
Gram positive cocci
Arrangement single or in pair
Size 1 µm diameter
CULTURE
Grow well in aerobically and also in present of
carbon dioxide
Temperature between 10 – 420C, optimum
temperature are between 35 - 370C
S.AUREUS
Produce yellow to cream in blood and chocolate
agar (heated agar)
Occationally produce white 1-2 mm in diameter
colonies
Some strain produce beta-hemolytic when grown
aerobically
Colonies are slightly raised and easily emulsified
on a slide
Non- lactose fermenter in MacConkey agar
Mannitol salt agar is a useful differential and
selective agar to identify S.aureus
ON BLOOD AGAR
S.EPIDERMIDIS
Colony is white
Non hemolytic in blood agar
S. saprophyticus
Maybe white or yellow
There are non-hemolytic in BA
Not grow anaerobically
No growth in MacConkey agar
BIOCHEMICAL REACTIONS
S.aureus
DNAse test will be positive for S.aureus but
negative in other species
Catalase test will be positive in all
staphylococcus but negative in all streptococcus
S. epidermidis and S. saprophyticus
Coagulase negative
DNAse negative
Catalase positive
ANTIMICROBIAL SENSITIVITY
Erythromycin
Clindamysin
Fucidin
Vancomycin
Many strains of S.aureus are penicillin-resistant
S.epidermidis are more resistant than S.aureus
to antibiotics
S. saprophyticus less resistant to antibiotics than
S.aureus and S.epidermidis
STREPTOCOCCUS
Streptococcus pyogenes
Streptococcus agalactiae
Enterococci
TO BE CONTINUE..
Explain what happens in the following
biochemical tests:
i) Indole test
ii) Methyl red test
8 marks)
b) Write the scientific name of a bacterium that
gave positive results for both tests.
(2 marks)
QUESTION
State all group of gram positive and
gram negative bacteria.