Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive...

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Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng

Transcript of Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive...

Page 1: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.

Staphylococcus

Dr Julian Ng

Page 2: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.

General• About 40 known Staphylococcus spp.• Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm-

1.5µm• usu. arranged in grape-like clusters but may

also be seen as pairs/tetrads or short chain

Page 3: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.

• All except S. saccharolyticus and S. aureus subsp. anaerobius are facultative anaerobes

• Grows readily in most culture media and can grow in the presence of 10% NaCl

• Generally, they are catalase positive (rare exceptions)

Page 4: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.

Clinical Significance

• Most are opportunists• Can colonize skin and mucous membranes• Breaks in the epithelial barrier may allow

them to becomes pathogenic

Page 5: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.

S. aureus

• Clinically most important species• Can cause a wide variety of human diseases• Possess many virulence factors• Up to 35% of humans are persistent nasal

carriers• Easily transferrable from human to human via

skin contact– Importance in infection control esp. in Methicillin-

resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)

Page 6: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.

• Most common cause of nosocomial pneumonia and skin and soft tissue infections

• 2nd most common staphylococcal spp. to cause primary bacteraemia in hospitals

• Typical colony: Pigmented (cream yellow to orange), haemolytic on blood agars

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• Biochemical characteristics: Catalase positive, Coagulase positive, slide agglutination (clumping factor) positive

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Key Test

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Clinical spectrum

• Any localised infection may become invasive and can lead to bacteraemia

• Systemic infections such as primary or secondary bacteraemia, endocarditis, meningitis can occur

• Toxin-mediated diseases includes staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome, staphylococcal food poisoning, staphylococcal scaled skin syndrome

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Localised infections• Very common cause of infection by

staphylooccal spp.• Often results in pus formation• Can result in skin, soft tissue infection or deep

abscesses

Impetigo

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Boil (Furuncle)

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Carbuncle

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Stye

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Surgical wound infections: many causes including S. aureus

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Oral infections

• Acute parotitis• Angular cheilitis• Mucositis• Etc

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Acute parotitis: various causes

Including bacteria …

Alpha-haemolytic strepsS. aureus

Haemophilus sppAnaerobes

And many more

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Angular cheilitis: multifactorial including …

Candida spp, S. aureus, beta haemolytic streps

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Staphylococcal mucositis

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Local staphlococcal infectionsinside oral cavity

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Toxin-mediated

• Toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST-1) is a super-antigen capable of activating large number of T cells

• Was associated with use of tampons but is also known to be associated with postoperative wound or soft tissue infections

Page 21: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.
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• Preformed, heat-resistant enterotoxin mediates staphylococcal food poisoning (symptoms in 2-6 hours; usu self-limiting)

• Exfoliative toxins A and B results in staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome; usu in infants and neonates

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• Panton-Valentine Leukocidin (PVL) consists of 2 components S and F, together with γ exotoxin lyses WBC resulting in massive release of inflammatory mediators responsible for necrosis and severe inflamation

• PVL is an important virulence factor in MRSA infections

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MRSA

• Methicillin-resistant S. aureus• Resistant to all penicillins, cephalosporins, and

penems• Usually multiply-resistant• Vancomycin resistance is very rare – so far• Hospital-acquired• Community-acquired cases now (CA MRSA)

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Coagulase-negative staphylococcal spp (CoNS)

• S. epidermidis – most frequently isolated staphylococcal spp.

• Colonises moist body areas such as auxillae, inguinal and perianal areas, anterior nares and toe webs

• Important cause of nosocomial infection esp. S. epidermidis

• Usu causes nosocomial infections in patients with predisposing factors such as immunodeficiency/ immunocompromised or presence of foreign bodies

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• Ability to form biofilm is most important factor in foreign body infections by CoNS– Important to remove/ replace foreign body in

treatment

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• S. saprophyticus frequently isolated in rectum and genitourinary tract of young women

• Can be causative agent in UTI in young healthy women

• 2nd most common urinary pathogen (other than E. coli) in uncomplicated cystitis in young women

• Colony counts of ≥ 105 CFU/ml usu. indicative of significant bacteriuria

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Line-related sepsis

• Frequently staphylococcal

• CNS common

• S. aureus particularly serious

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Line-related sepsis with S. aureus = get help from Infectious Disease

physician

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Antimicrobial susceptibility• MRSA can be due to 3 different resistance mechanisms

– Production of penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP2a) encoded by mecA gene

– Production of beta-lactamase– Production of modified intrinsic PBPs

• Resistance due to mecA can be detected via cefoxitin disk diffusion or dilution methods according to CLSI breakpoints (≤ 21mm – resistant, ≥ 8µg/ml – resistant, respectively)

• Resistance due to beta-lactamase production can be detected via the use of beta-lactamase inhibitor such as clavulanic acid which would result in an increase in zone size (disk diffusion method) or decrease of 2 dilutions

Page 31: Staphylococcus Dr Julian Ng. General About 40 known Staphylococcus spp. Gram Stain: Gram positive coccus; 0.5µm- 1.5µm usu. arranged in grape-like clusters.

• Vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (VISA) is thought to be due to changes in cell wall

• S. aureus with vancomycin minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 4-8µg/ml are VISA according to CLSI guidelines

• VRSA due to acquisition of vanA gene was first reported in 2002 in US

• Vancomycin MIC ≥ 16µg/ml = VRSA

VRSA uncommon

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Treatment

• Drain pus, remove foreign material and dead tissue

• Methicillin – cloxacillin• (Erythromycin, clindamycin)• Vancomycin• Topical agents: e.g. mupirocin

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References

• Manual of Clinical Microbiology 10th Ed. Chap 19 pp 308-330

• Jawetz, Melnick, Adelberg’s Medical Microbilogy 25th Ed. Chap 13 pp 185-190