The GENUS Clostridium
The GENUS Clostridium
The GENUS Clostridium
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The human pathogens in genus Clostridium may be categorized as follows: 1. The gas gangrene group, the most important of which is Clostridium perfringens. 2. Clostridium botulinum, the cause of botulism.
3. Clostridium difficile, the cause of toxic enterocolitis. 4. Clostridium tetani, the cause of tetanus.
Grampositive, straight and slender rods with rounded ends. Round terminal spores are formed after 2-4 days of incubation. C. tetani is flagellated and motile. It has numerous peritrichous flagella. Capsules are not formed.
C. tetani requires strict anaerobic conditions. Because of its motility, it spreads over the surface of anaerobic blood agar in a thin veil of growth.
All C. tetani strains share a common somatic (O) antigen. The 10 types of C. tetani can be distinquished by specific flagellar (H) antigens. Antigenic types I and III most often cause tetanus in humans. However, this serotyping has not a significance for epidemiological practise.
C. tetani spores remain viable in soil for many years. The spores are heat-stable. The spores of some strains are resistant to boiling in water for up to 3 hours. They are killed by autoclaving at 121 C for 15 minutes. They may resist to 5% phenol for 10 hours or more. Vegetative cells of C. tetani are heat-labile.
C. tetani produces an oxygen-labile hemolysin tetanolysin. This toxin has only a negligible significance for the pathogenesis of tetanus. The most important product of C. tetani is neurotoxic exotoxin tetanospasmin. The tetanospasmin production appears to be under control of plasmid gene. Vegetative cells produce tetanospasmin during the stationary phase and release it mainly when they lyse.
Tetanospasmin is a heat-labile antigenic protein rapidly destroyed at 65 C and by intestinal proteases. It is toxic to man and various animals when injected parenterally, but it is not toxic by the oral route.
The LD50 of the toxin for mice is 0.0001 g, less than 1 g is lethal to humans.
C. tetani is not an invasive microorganism. The infection remains strictly localized in the area of devitalized tissue, into which the spores have been introduced. Germination of the spores and development of vegetative organisms that produce toxin are aided by: necrotic tissue, calcium salts, associated pyogenic infections.
Tetanospamin acts by blocking the release of neurotransmitters (glycine and GABA "gammaaminobutyric acid") on the level of the postsynaptic neuron junctions of the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord. Incubation: approximatelly 5 to 15 days.
Symptoms of tetanus
Sudden difficulties with mastication due to rigidity of masticatory muscles. Elevated temperature. The patient cannot open his mouth, this effect is named as trismus. Risus sardonicus is another sign in which trismus is combined with facial spasm. In severe cases, spasms of the back muscles produce the opisthotonus. The patients are fully conscious, and pain may be very intensive.
Symptoms of tetanus
In a later stage of the disease, high temperature is usually present. Tachycardia. Generalized tonic spasms are more and more frequent, prolonged and intensive. Breathlesness and cyanosis are expressed when the respiratory muscles are affected by spasms. Laryngospasmus can be also present. In fatal cases death results from exhaustion and respiratory or circulatory failures. Tetanus of newborns follows infections of the umbilical stump. Others.
Localized tetanus is another form of C. tetani disease. It remains confined to the muscles at the site of primary wound and infection. This form has a good prognosis. Another variant of localized tetanus is so called cephalic tetanus. The incubation of this variant is very short and its prognosis is considerably poor.
The most often C. tetani infection in humans is of a descendent type which spreads through lymphatic and blood routes to nerve fibres. It begins with spactic symptoms on the face. This type has a shorter incubation and worse prognosis.
The less frequent form is an ascendent type of tetanus. Spasm begin in the environment of a wound. This type has a longer incubation and better prognosis.
The tetanus
The mortality caused by the generalized disease represents more than 50%. Mortality is the highest in the neonates, elders and in the patients with cardiac diseases. Tetanus of newborns has the highest mortality, even more than 90%.
Surgical wound treatment is vitally important because it removes the necrotic tissue that is essential for proliferation of the C. tetani strains.
The tetanus
Epidemiology: Sources: exogenous, endogenous.
Transmission:
Direct contact of wound with sources. Perforation of the intestinal wall after injuries,
Clostridium botulinum
C. botulinum is a strictly anaerobic grampositive bacillus. It is motile with peritrichous flagella. Its spores are oval and subterminal. It is a widely distributed saprophyte occuring in soil, vegetables, fruits, and others. The widespread occurrence of C. botulinum in nature, its ability to produce a potent neurotoxin in food, and the resistance of its spores to inactivation combine to make it a formidable pathogen of man and range of animals and birds.
Clostridium botulinum
Botulinal toxins are among the most poisonous natural substances known.
Seven main types of C. botulinum designated A-G produce antigenically distinct toxins with pharmacologically identical actions.
Clostridium botulinum
Botulism is a severe, often fatal, form of food poisoning characterized by pronounced neurotoxic efects.
The preformed toxin in the food is absorbed from the intestinal tract. Although it is protein, it is not inactivated by the intestinal proteolytic enzymes.
The toxin primarly affects the cholinergic system and seems to block release of acetylcholine, chiefly at points in the peripheral nervous system.
Clinical presentation
Descending symmetrical paralysis beginning with cranial nerve involvement, induced by botulinum toxin. Onset begins with blurry vision, followed by ocular muscle paralysis, difficulty speaking and inability to swalow. Respiratory paralysis may occur in severe cases. Mental status in unaffected.
Usual incubation period is 10 12 hours. Incubation is shortest for type E strain (hours), longest for type A strains (up to 10 days), and is inversely proportional to the quantity of toxin consumed (food botulism). Wound botulism (types A or B) may follow C. botulinum entry into IV drug abuser injection site, surgical or traumatic wounds. Infant (less then 1 year) botulism (most commonly type A or B) is acquired from C. botulinum containing honey.
Therapy of botulism
Application of antitoxin
Antitoxin neutralizes only free toxin, and does not
reverse toxin-induced paralysis. Botulism is toxic-mediated infection and antibiotic therapy (wound botulism) is adjunctive.
Prognosis:
Good if treated early, before respiratory paralysis.
Many different toxin-producing clostridia can produce invasive infections (including myonecrosis and gas gangrene) if introduced into damaged tissue.
About 30 species of clostridia may produce such an effect, but the most common in invasive disease is Clostridium perfringens (90%).
Clostridium difficile
This organism has a direct relationship with pseudomembranous colitis, usually is association with broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy.
Pseudomembranous colitis is diagnosed by endoscopic observation of pseudomembranes or microabscesses in patients who have diarrhea and have been given antibiotics. The diarrhea may be watery or bloody, and the patient frequently has associated abdominal cramps, leukocytosis, and fewer.
Administration of antibiotics results in proliferation of drug-resistant C. difficile, that produce two toxins (toxin A, toxin B). Both toxins are found in the stools of patients with pseudomembranous colitis.
Treatment: Metronidazol 3-4 x 250-500 mg p.os Vancomycin 2x1 g p.os