İ.Ü. Cerrahpaşa Tıp Fakültesi Mikrobiyoloji ve Klinik Mikrobiyoloji Anabilim Dalı Prof Dr...

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Transcript of İ.Ü. Cerrahpaşa Tıp Fakültesi Mikrobiyoloji ve Klinik Mikrobiyoloji Anabilim Dalı Prof Dr...

İ.Ü. Cerrahpaşa Tıp Fakültesi Mikrobiyoloji ve Klinik Mikrobiyoloji

Anabilim Dalı

Prof Dr Ömer Küçükbasmacı

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus

• H5N1 avian influenza A virus

• Microbial classification sophisticated

• Anton van Leeuwenhoek 1674

• a world of millions of tiny "animalcules

• Danish biologist Otto Müller

• genera and species according to the classification methods of Carolus Linnaeus

• 1840 the German pathologist Friedrich Henle

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Robert Koch and Louis Pasteur

• Anthrax, rabies, plague, cholera, and tuberculosis

• Paul Ehrlich 1910 “salvarsan”

• Alexander Fleming's discovery of penicillin in 1928

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Gerhard Domagk's discovery of sulfanilamide in 1935

• Selman Waksman's discovery of streptomycin in 1943

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Viruses

• The smallest infectious particles

• Diameter from 18 to nearly 300 nanometers

• Twenty-five families with more than 1550 species of viruses

• More than 40 genera implicated in human disease

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• either DNA or RNA

• true parasites

• rapid replication and destruction of the cell

• a long-term chronic relationship

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Relatively simple

• Prokaryotic

• Cell wall: gram-negative or positive

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Fungi

• eukaryotic organisms

• a well-defined nucleus, mitochondria, Golgi bodies, and endoplasmic reticulum

• either in a unicellular form (yeast) that can replicate asexually

• a filamentous form (mold) that can replicate asexually and sexually

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Parasites are the most complex microbes • eukaryotic • unicellular and others are multicellular • range in size from tiny protozoa as small

as 1 to 2 μm in diameter (the size of many bacteria) to arthropods and tapeworms that can measure up to 10 meters in length

• Their life cycles are equally complex

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Relationship between many organisms and their diseases is not simple

• Treponema pallidum, syphilis; poliovirus, polio; Plasmodium species, malaria

• Staphylococcus aureus-endocarditis, pneumonia, wound infections, food poisoning

• Meningitis caused by viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Strict pathogens, rabies virus, Bacillus anthracis, Sporothrix schenckii, Plasmodium species

• exogenous infections and examples include diseases caused by influenza virus, Clostridium tetani, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Coccidioides immitis, and Entamoeba histolytica

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• person's own microbial flora that spread to inappropriate body sites where disease can ensue (endogenous infections).

• The interaction between an organism and the human host is complex

• The virulence of the organism• The site of exposure• The host's ability to respond to the organism

determine the outcome of this interaction

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Quality of the specimen

• The way its sent

• The method used

• The interpretation

Introduction to Medical Microbiology

• Koch's postulates are:• The microorganism must be found in abundance in all

organisms suffering from the disease, but should not be found in healthy animals.

• The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture

• The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism.

• The microorganism must be reisolated from the inoculated, diseased experimental host and identified as being identical to the original specific causative agent.