Bacteriology PDF
Bacteriology PDF
                      IIA Exhausts air inside the room, Sef-contained, 70% recirculated air
                      IIB Exhausts air outside the building (radioisotopes, chemicals, carcinogen)
              BSC Class III
                  o supply and exhaust air thru HEPA filter
                  o close cabinet – sealed glove ports
                  o process viral pathogens (BSL-4)
Bacterial Characteristics
   1. Prokaryotic
            Nuclear body: no nuclear membrane, nucleoid region of the cytosol
            Cell division: binary fission
            Cell wall: with peptidoglycan except Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma
            Cytoplasmic membrane: fluid phospholipid bilayer with carbohydrate and sterol
            Cell organelles: absent
            Site of energy production: cytoplasmic membrance
            Site of protein synthesis: free ribosome
   2. Has both DNA and RNA
   3. 4 morphology – cocci, bacilli, spiral, comma
   4. Measured in micrometer (um) – average size: 0.4-2um
   5. Biofilms – property of bacteria to attach on solid surface
NUCLEOID
    No nuclear membrane
    Chromosome – dsDNA for reproduction
    Plasmid – extrachromosomal DNA that carries the antibiotic resistant genes; transfer DNA
CELL WALL
    Defines the shape of the bacteria
    Pathogenicity:
    M protein: Streptococcus pyogenes
      Mycolic acid: Mycobacterium spp.
      Peptidoglycan (murein layer) consists of glycan chains of alternating N-acetyl-d-glucosamine (NAG) and
       N-acetyl-d-muramic acid (NAM)
    Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma – lack cell walls, only contains sterol
    Gram positive and gram negative cells can lose their cell walls and grow as L-forms in media supplemented
       with serum or sugar to prevent osmotic rupture of the cell membrane
     Gram positive impermeable to alcohol, thick peptidoglycan, teichoic acid, exotoxin
     Gram negative Permeable to alcohol, Thin peptidoglycan, LPS, Outer membrance, Periplasm, Lipid A,
                      Exotoxin and endotoxin, Somatic (O) Ag – serotyping
CYTOPLASMIC MEMBRANE
    Selectively permeable
    Site of energy production (ATP site)
    Osmotic/permeability barrier
    Regulate transport of nutrients in and out of cell
MESOSOMES
    Point of attachment for chromosome
INCLUSIONS
    Much granules – MTB
    Babes-Ernst/metachromatic/volutin granules as food reserve – C.diptheriae
    Bipolar bodies – Yersinia pestis
RIBOSOMES
    Bacteria: 70s; Fungi: 80s
    For protein synthesis
    Viruses are acellular
ENDOSPORE
    Resting cell, highly resistant to dessication, heat and chemical agents
    Composition: Calcium dipicolinate/Dipicolinic Acid
    Bacterial genera with spores: Bacillus and Clostridium
    Target of sterilization
    Non-reproductive
CAPSULE
    Prevents phagocytosis
    Antigenic; on the basis of serotyping by Quellung reaction
          o Neufeld-Quellung capsular Ag
          o (+) capsular swelling due to Ag-Ab
          o Ex. Strep.pneumoniae, N.meningitides, H. influenza
          o Serotyping:
                   Somatic O Ag – heat stable
                   Vi Ag and K Ag – heat labile
    Demonstration
          o Animal tissues and fluids
          o Media containing milk or serum
    Colonies often slimy/mucoid
    Stains: HISS, India ink/Nigrosin
PILI
    Synonymous to fimbriae
    Common/Ordinary pili – adherence of bacteria to host cell; virulence factor for Neisseria
    Sex pili – bacterial conjugation, gene transfer
FLAGELLA                                                           Tumbling – Listeria
    Atrichous – no flagellum
                                                                   Gliding- Capnocytophaga
    Monotrichous – flagellum on one pole
    Amphitrichous – single flagellum on each pole                 Darting - Campylobacter
    Lophotrichous – tuft of flagella at one or both poles         Cork screw – Spirochetes (Leptospira,
    Peritrichous – flagella all over the organism                    Treponema, Borrelia)
    Periplasmic flagella – endoflagella/axial filaments           Twitching - Kingella
    Motility best seen at 37C
    Tests for motility – semisolid medium and stains
AXIAL FILAMENTS
    Spirochete with cork screw motility
Bacterial Virulence Factors
    Pathogenicity – ability of a microbe to produce disease in a susceptible individual
    Virulence – relative ability of a microorganism to cause disease or the degree of pathogenicity; usually
       measured by the numbers of microorganisms necessary to cause infection in the host
                                    Exotoxin/Enterotoxin                         Endotoxin
        Source               Gram positive bacteria/Gram neg       Gram negative bacteria
        Release              Released by living bacteria           Released when gram-negative
                             Do not require bacterial death for    bacterial cell is destroyed
                             release
        Composition          Peptide and protein                   Lipopolysaccharide portion of cell
                                                                   envelope
        Heat Stability       Heat labile except Staphylococcus     Heat stable
                             enterotoxin
        Immunologic          Converted to toxoid                   Not converted to toxoid
                             Easily neutralized with antitoxin     Not easily neutralized
        Effect               -Kill host cells and help spread      -Disruption of clotting, causing clots
                             bacteria in tissues                   to form throughout the body (DIC)
                             -Destroy or interfere with specific   -Fever
                             intracellular activities              -Activation of complement and
                                                                   immune systems
                                                                   -Circulatory changes that lead to
                                                                   hypotension, shock and death
        Toxicity             High                                  Low
        Lethal dose          Smaller dose                          Higher dose
                             Tetanus, Lock jaw                     UTI, Typhoid
                             E.coli, S.aureus
                             Most potent: Botulinum toxin
Culture Media
Rules
   1. Swab (aerobic)s
          Cotton - toxic to Neisseria, good for virus
          Calcium alginate – toxic to virus, good for Neisseria
   2. Needle aspiration: aerobic and anaerobic
   3. Catheterization: aspirate from catheter tube
          Foley Catheter – urine
          IV catheter - blood
Storage
Clinical Specimen
    1. Blood
            Iodophore (betadine) and opposite arms
            Collect before height of fever (at 37.5 or 37.8 bacteria are dead)
            TSB, BHIB with 0.025% SPS, 1% gelatin
                  o (+) cloudy, gas bubbles, hemolysis, pellicle
            Blood to broth rati = 1:10 – critical
                  o Adult = 1:5 to 1:10 (1:5 more preferred)
                  o Children = 1:10 to 1:20 (1:10 more preferred)
            Subculture on BAP, CAP and MAC
                  o TAT: 7 days
                  o 21 days – Brucellosis, Endocarditis, SBE
            Note: 0.025% SPS (liquid) – anticoagulant, anti-complementary, anti-phagocytic, neutralizes
               aminoglycosides and bactericidal effect on serum
                  o SPS inhibits: G.vaginalis, Neisseria, S,monoliforms, P.anaerobius
                  o 1% gelatin: counteracts SPS
            Automation: Uses BACTEC 9120
                  o TAT: 5 days
                  o Medium: BACTEC broth (1:10 ratio) with SPS and ARD
                  o (+) Fluorescence  Subculture on BAP, CAP, and MAC  ID and AST on Vitek
    2. Urine
            Random, catheterized, midstream, suprapubic (anaerobic)
            Centrifuge: collect sediment for culture and GS
            Quantitative: use BAP and MAC
                o   For suspected infection like UTI
                    (E.coli – gram negative; Enterococcus and S.saprophyticus – gram positive)
                o   Colony count in CFU/ml = number of colony x 1000 (if 0.001mL loop)
                o   >100,000CFU/ml = ID and AST of UTI
                o   <10,000 CFU/ml – ID only
3. CSF
            placed on bottle 2, not refrigerated only incubator
            Routine test: India ink and gram stain
            Isolation of: Neisseria and Haemophilus
            Centrifuge: sediment for culture and GS
                 o BAP, CAP (5-10% CO2)
                 o BHIB, MAC (incubator – No CO2)
                 o India ink method (capsule): CSF Latex agglutionation (capsular Ag)
4. Wound
        BAP, MAC, THIO, GS
        Swab collected at edge after NSS – aerobic culture
        Needle aspiration - anaerobic culture
5. Stool
        do not GS
        1-2grams stool on sterile vial
        Rectal swab on Cary Blair
        MAC, BAP, CAP, SSA, TCBS, HEA, XLD
        SELENITE F (SSA), APW (TCBS), CBAP (42C for 48 hours)
        Presumptive: oxidase test, biochemical test
        Confirmatory: Serotyping
6. Respiratory (Sputum, NPS)
        Processing done on BSC
        Gram stain (>25PMN, <10EC)
        Gentamicin BAP – S.pneumoniae
          Bacitracin CAP – H.influenza (5-10% CO2 incubator, MAC 35C incubator)
        Do gram stain and AFS
        Bartlett’s Classification
               Assess the quality of sputum
               Enumerate the number of neutrophils and epithelial cells/LPF
               0 score or less – saliva (no inflammation)
               >1 score – inflammation/infection
7. Throat swab
        Sore throat
        Diptheria
        BAP, MTM, Gram stain
8. Vaginal urethral swab – CAP, MTM, Gram stain
9. TB culture
        1 sputum for GS; 2 sputum for AFS
        GOLD STANDARD: NALC-NaOH
               NALC (n-acetyl-L-cystine): digestant/mucolytic
               2.4% NaOH: decontamination
        Oxalic acid – Pseudomonas contamination (cystic fibrosis)
        Anti-formin: chlorox
        Refrigerated centrifuge for 15 mins at 3000xg (4C)
        Lowenstein-Jensen, Middlebrook 7H11, 7H10
               Reporting:
                  (-) = 37C for 8 weeks of no growth
                  (+) = 2-3 weeks growth seen
        BACTEC = radiometric method
        TAT:
               L-J = 8 weeks (-)                        GX (Gene Expert) = 2-3hours
               Bactec = 2 weeks (-)
Methods of Studying Microorganism
   I.     Living State (Unstained)
          1. Wet mount preparation
          2. Hanging drop preparation
   II.    Fixed State (Stained)
Staining Methods
    1. Simple – 1 dye
    2. Differential – 2 dyes (GS, AFS)
    3. Special – bacterial structures
    4. Indirect/Reflief/Negative – capsule
       a. India ink test/Borris method
       b. Nigrossin method
GRAM STAIN
   1. Chlamydia/Ricketssia – intracellular
   2. Mycoplasma/Ureaplasma – no cell wall
   3. Spirochete – can’t resolve by bright field
Special Stain
      Metachromatic granules – culture on Loeffler’s, Pai medium and stain (Neisser’s, Albert, Ljubinsky, LAMB)
      Spore – culture on Bap and stain (Dorner’s, Acetic acid, Wirtz-Conklina
      Capsule – specimen (Hiss/India Ink)
      Flagella – culture (Gray Leifson, Fischer-Conn)
      Nuclei Acid – Fuelgen method
      Ricketssia – Gimenez, Macchiavelo, Giemsa
      Bacillus anthracis – M’Fadyean
      Spirochetes – Levaditis, Fontana-Tribondeux
      Calcouflour whitet – binds to chitin cell wall (fungi – yellow green fluorescence)
      Acridine orange - stains nuclei acid (fungi – green fluorescence; bacteria-orange/red fluorescence)
      LPCB – Aman stain for fungal structure
Non-staining methods
Types of Microscopy
    Resolution – extent to which detail of the object is maintained (cellular details)
    Resolving power – closest distance the two objects can be distinguished from each other
   1. Bright-Field
           GS, AFS, KOH, most common microscope
           Used for stained and unstained samples
   2. Dark-Field
           Motility of Spirochetes
           Also used for Fluorescent stains
           Higher resolving power than bright field
   3. Phase Contrast
           Inclusion bodies seen on virus and Chlaymydia, living cells/natural state, Microlymphocytotoxicity
             test for HLA
           Good for KOH mount
   4. Fluorescent
           Requires fluorescent stain (Calcofluor white, acridine orange)
           UVL – provided by mercury arc lamp
           Substitute: Dark Field microscopy
      a. Electron Microscopy – viral morphology
      b. Transmission Electron Microscopy – internal structure
      c. Scanning Electron Microscopy – external structure
Sterilization
     Sterilization – sporocidal, all organisms are killed
     Prions – no nuclei acid, most resistant to sterilization, CJD, agent,
     Envelope virus – most sensitive to sterilization, most easily destroyed
     Killing of MTB in sputum
            o Boiling - 10 minutes
            o Direct sunlight – 20-30 hours
            o Dried sputum 0 6-8 months
            o 5% phenol – 24 hours
        121’C 15lbs psi for 15 minutes   Best sterilization and waste disposal
                                         Sterilize bacteriologic media (gauze)
        121’C at 15psi for 60 minutes    Sterilize most contaminated microbiological material
        132’C for 30 to 60 minutes       Infectious medical waste
   2.   Inspissation
             Sterilize CHON containing medium (L-J, Loeffler’s)
             75-80’C for 2 hours on 3 days
   3.   Tyndallization – 100’C for 30 minutes on 3 days
   4.   Boiling
             100’C for 30 minutes
             Non-sporocidal (disinfection)
   5.   Pasteurization
             for milk
             Phosphatase - test for success of pasteurization, phosphatase should be negative
             Grade A milk – 75,000 before pasteurization  15,000 after pasteurization
             Bacteria seen on unpasteurized milk: Listeria, Brucella, Y.enterocolitica, M.bovis
        a. Low Temperature Holding (LTH) – 62’C for 30 minutes
        b. High Temperature Short Time (HTST) – 72’C for 15 seconds
Disinfection/Antiseptic
     Disinfection – non-sporocidal, some organisms are killed, kills pathogen
     Disinfection for living things, Antiseptic for non-living things
Note:
              Standard precautions - Blood and body fluids precautions must be observed for all patient’s blood and
               body fluid specimen
              Universal precautions – all human blood and all other body fluids that contain visible blood
               precautions must be observed
Antimicrobial Agents
    Antagonistic = 1>2 (single drug)
    Synergistic = 2>1 (combined drugs)
    Minimum Bactericidal Concentration or Minumum Lethal Concentration
    Antibiotics – derived from bacteria or fungi, not used for viruses
          o Eg. Penicillin, Cephalosporin, Streptomycin
          o Streptomyces – fungus like bacteria, common source of antiobiotics (Ex. Streptomyces, Nystatin)
    Chemotherapeutics – chemically synthesized (SXT)
    Broad spectrum – wide range of bacteria (Tetracyline- for gram pos and gram neg)
    Narrow spectrum - limited number of bacteria (Van – for gram pos only, not sensitive for gram neg)
    Bactericidal – Penicillin, Vancomycin, Aminoglycoside, Quinilnes, Metronidazole, TB drugs (RIZES) –
      Rifampin, Isoniazid, Pza, Ethambutol, Streptomycin
    Bacteriostatic – Chloramphenicol, Tetracyclin, Erythromycin, Clindamycin, SXT
      Cations effect
           o Increased Ca and Mg ions – False resistant to aminoglycoside in P.aeruginosa
           o Increase thymidine or thymin – False resustatn to SXT in Enterococci
Kirby Bauer Disk Diffusion – disk agar diffusion, aerobes/facultative, use of filter paper disk
 Standard inoculum                                       1.5 x 108 organisms/mL
 Medium                                                  Mueller-Hinton Agar
 pH                                                      7.2-7.4
 Depth                                                   4mm
 Condition                                               Aerobic, no CO2
 Temperature                                             35-37’C (MRSA – 35’C)
 Incubation time                                         16-18 hours
 Standard                                                McFarland Std (1% H2SO4 & 1.175% BaCl2)
                                                         0.5 concentration for bacteria
                                                         1.0 concentration for fungi
 Antiobiotic Disk                                        6mm
 Bacterial count method                                  Petroff-Hausser
                                                    AST Media
General AST media                                        Mueller-Hinton Agar
MRSA                                                     MHA + 2% NaCl
S.pneumoniae and N.meningitides                          MHA + 5% Sheep’s Blood
Haemophilus                                              Haemophilus Test Medium
Neisseria                                                GC Agar
Mycobacteria                                             Middlebrook 7H10
Anaerobes                                                Wilkins-Chalgren broth and agar
Notes to remember:
   1. Disc elution
   2. Bactec (RIA) and MGIT (IFA) – AST and Rapid culture system
   3. Gene Expert – ID and AST
   1.   Vitek 1 and 2
   2.   Vitek-MS
   3.   MALDI-TOF
   4.   MicroScan WalkAway system
   5.   BD Phoenix – nephelometry
             BacT/Alert – culture system only
Quality Control
    Quality Control                                               Quality Assurance
           o routine (internal QC)                                        o External QC, annually
           o use ATCC, CLSO                                               o Check performance of MT – done by
           o check validity of test                                           DOH-RITM
           o must have +/- controls
    Quality Control Frequency
       Daily                       Oxidase, catalase, gram stain, refrigerator, incubator
       Weekly                      Antibiotic disks, autoclave, reagents
       Semi-annual                 Centrifuge rpm
       Annual                      BSC airflow, analytical balances (Accuracy)
       Monthly                     Rheostat control, BSC
       Each use                    Gas Pak jar, ONPG
       Stock culture storage
       Working culture storage
       *Note: New drugs r reagents must first undergo 30 days QC before reducing it to weekly
Family Micrococcaceae
    Genera: Staphylococcus, Micrococcus, Planococcus, Stomatococcus
Laboratory Procedures
Staphylococcus aureus
                                                              Staphylococcus species
Virulence Factors/Enzyme                                          SBAP, MAC, CAP
                                                                  Gram stain: gram positive in clusters
      Protein A – cell wall, anti-phagocytic, virulence          BAP: pin-head, opaque, cream, yellow, white
      Enterotoxin (Exotoxin) – food poisoning                    Screen: Catalase
      Beta hemolysin – synergistic to CAMP factor of             Confirmatory: Coagulase
       group B streptococci
      Leukocidin-Panton Valentine                                        Yellow-orange colony due to lipochrome
      Exfoliatin (epidermolysin) – Skin scalded syndrome                 Catalase (+)
       (Ritter’s disease)                                                 Coagulase (+)
      Beta-lactamase – MRSA drug resistance                              Nitrate and VP (+)
      DNAse                                                              Gelatin (+)
      Staphylokinase – dissolve clot                                     PYR (-)
Laboratory Diagnosis
   1. Staphylococcus epidermis
           Skin flora, blood culture contaminant, bacteremia
           Prostethic valve endocarditis
           Novobiocin senstitive
   2. Staphylococcus saprophyticus
           UTI
           Novobiocin resistant
   B. Lancefield Classification
      1. Group A = S.pyogenes
      2. Group B = S.agalactiae
      3. Group C = S.equisimilis, S.zooepidemicus, S.equi, S.dysgalactiae, S.equisimilis
      4. Group D
              Enterococci = E.faecalis, E.faecium, E.durans, E.avium
              Non-Enterococci = S.bovis, S.equinus
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Characteristics                                      Diseases
 Kidney/coffee bean shaped in PMN                    Gonorrhea (Clap)            Epididymis
 Virulence – “pili”                                  Opthalmia neonatorium       Arthritis, PID
                                                      Salphingitis                Fitz-Hugh Curtis
Laboratory Diagnosis
   1. Ferments glucose (dextrose)
   2. PPNG (Penicillinase producing N.gonorrhoeae)
   3. Gram stain and culture on BAP and CAP
   4. Selective media
           TMA – CAP-VCN                                 Martin Lewis – CAP-VCAnT
           M.TMA – CAP-VCNT                              NYCA – yeast extract with VCAmT
   5. Oxidase/Taxo N
           Screening (+) purple
           Rgt: 1% tetramethyl-p-phenylenediaminedihydrochloride
           Taxo N ------cytochrome oxidase---- Indophenol blue (+) purple
           (+) Neisseria, Moraxella, Aeromonas, Pseudomonas
   6. Superoxol Catalase Test
           30% H2O2
           (+) Neisseria gonorrhoeae
   7. CHO Utilization/Fermentation Test
           Confirmatory                                  Non-CO2 incubator
           Ferments glucose                              Media: Cysteine Trypticase Agar + phenol red
           Definitive test and speciates Neisseria       Ferments glucose only – yellow color
   8. Beta lactamase test
           Held on primary culture because plasmid is lost on subculture
           Done on bacteria resistant to penicillin
           Best substrate: Nitrocefin
           (+) color change
          a. Chromogenic cephalosphorin test                 (+) pink/red    (-) yellow
          b. Iodometric test – iodine + Pen                  (+) colorless   (-) purple
          c. Acidimetric test – phenol red + Pen             (+) yellow      (-) red
Moraxella catarrhalis
Mycobacteria
    Acid fast bacilli due to mycolic acid – acid alcohol resistant
    Slow growers expect M.fortuitum and M.chelonei
    “Much granules”
    Aerobic, non-sporeformer, non-motile
Three groups
                                                  M.tuberculosis        M.bovis
                             Niacin                     +                  -
                             Nitrate                    +                  -
                             TCH                        R                  S
                             Catalase                   -                  V
AFB Grading National Standard (DSSM)           DOTS – Directly Observed Treatment Strategy
0 = No AFB/300 fields                          DSSM – Direct Sputum Smear Microscopy
+n = 1-9 AFB/100 fields                        SPOT-AM-SPOT (DOH 2013 = 2 sputum) – 1 morning, 1 random Sx
1+ = 10-99 AFB/100 fields                      2x3cm ideal size of the smear
2+ = 1-10 AFB/in at least 50 fields            Dry prior to heat fix to prevent aerosol
3+ = >10 AFB/in at least 20 fields             70% alcohol with sand – used loop
                                               Detection rate of 70% and cure rate of 85%
                                               300 fields examined before negative result
                                               Accdg to DSSM, salivary sample is acceptable
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
      Obligate aerobe
      Require 5% CO2 for growth
      Virulence:
           o cord factor – responsible for clumping of cells seen in smear/culture
           o sulfatides
Laboratory Diagnosis
 Based on: Photoreactivity, Pigment production, Rate of Growth and biochemical test
                                                                Fluorometric based
                                                                Middlebrook 7H9
Other Mycobacteria
Nocardia spp
Characteristics                  Diseases           Laboratory Diagnosis
 Partially acid fast             Pneumonia         Sx: Tissue, sputum
1. Nocardia asteroides                               Modified acid fast – 1%H2SO4, no heat
2. Nocardia brasiliensis                             Urease (+)
                                                     Gram positive branching rod – fungus-like bacteria
                                                     Casein hydrolysis
                    Nocardia     Actinomyces            o N.asteroides (+)
Oxygen               Aerobic        Anaerobic           o N.brasiliensis (-)
Acid fast              AFO          Non-AFO          Sensitive to antibiotics – should be placed on media
Catalse                 +               -              without antibiotics
Urease                  +               -
Sulfur granules        +/-             +
Corynebacteria
Characteristics                            Laboratory Diagnosis
 NON-acid fast                             BAP – raised, translucent, gray colonies
 “Diphteroids’ – normal flora              Catalase positive
 Club shape, chinese letters, palisade,                       Listeria       Corynebacteria
 X and V letters shape                     Motility                +                 -
 Babes-Ernst Metachromatic granules        Esculin HOH             +                 -
 NON-motile, NO spore, NO capsule          Salicin                 +                 -
 Pleomorphic gram (+) rods                 CAMP                    +
Corynebacterium diptheriae
Laboratory Diagnosis (Sx: oropharyngeal swab, nasopharyngeal swab, skin swab, throat swab)
   1. Culture
           BAP
           Loefller’s serum agar                               Potassium tellurite - gray to black colonies
           Pao coagulated egg                                  Cystine tellurite BAP - gun metal gray colony)
           Clauberg                                            Potassium tellurite inhibits normal flora
           MacLeod’s Tinsdale – black colony
              with brown halo
   2.   Gram Stain – gram positive bacilli in V, X, or chinese letter
   3.   LAMB stain – metachromatic granules
   4.   POSITIVE: catalase and DNAse
   5.   NEGATIVE: urease
   6.   CHO fermentation test
   7.   ELEK test
   8.   Schick test
   9.   Culture similar to C.pseudotuberculosis and C.ulcerans
             C.ulcerans - closely resembles diphteriae which produces diphtheria like illness
             C.pseudotuberculosis - horses, goat, sheep
Corynecbacterium spp
Diptheroids
Bacillus anthracis
Bacillus cereus
Characteristics                                      Diseases
 Fried rice bacillus (spores on rice grain)          Food poisoning /gastroenteritis
 Virulence: exotoxin (cholera like toxin)            Blood bank contamination at RT
Bacillus subtilis
Characteristics                                      Diseases
 Quality control for sterilization                   Eye infection in heroin addicts
 Gram positive rod in chain
 Central spore
 Common laboratory contaminant
Bacillus stearothermophilus
Characteristics                                      Diseases
 New name: Geobacillus                               Flat sour spoilage in canned goods
 No gas but with acid
                                                                   3 types of Clostridium
Clostridium
      Obligate anaerobe, gram positive, With endospore             Neurotoxic = C.tetani and C.botulinum (most severe)
      Habitat: human and animal                                    Histotoxic = C. perfringens and C.septicum
      Saccharolytic except C. tetani and C. septicum               Enteric = C.difficile
Clostridium perfringens/Clostridium welchii
Clostridium botulinum
Characteristics                                       Diseases
 Canned good bacillus (home made)                     Flaccid paralysis
 Virulence: botulinum toxin which block the           Wound botulism – spore on wound
   release of acetylcholine  flaccid paralysis        Infant botulism – honey bee, floppy baby syndrome
 Botulinim, a neutoxin and the most potent            SIDS – sudden infant death syndrome, crib death
   exotoxin
Clostridium tetani
Clostriudium difficile
Anaerobic Bacteriology
    Collection: needle aspiration (never swab)
    Media: (note: reduced media – O2 is reduced)
          o Shaedler
          o Lombard Dowell Agar (LD)
          o Wilkins-Chalgren broth and agar – AST media for anaerobes
          o Anaerobic PEA – gram positive anaerobes
          o THIO – enriched broth with hemin and Vit K to enhance growth of anaerobes
          o Bacteroides Bile Esculin (BBB) – B.fragilis, (+) blackening due to bile and esculin
          o Anaerobic Kanamycin Vancomycin Blood Agar – gram negative anaerobes
    Methods to promote anearobiosis
          o Gas Pak Jar or Mcintosh Fildes Jar, Brewer, Torbal Jar
          o Cooked meat medium/Chopped cooked meat medium
          o Anaerobic glove boc and chamber
          o Pre-reduced Anaerobically Sterilized (PRAS)
          o Thioglyollate = for aerobic, anaerobic and microaerophilic
                  Resazurin (pink)
                  Boil for 10 minutes – to drive off oxygen
                  Storage: RT
    Gas Liquid Chromatography – definitive test for anaerobes used for acid analysis
Enteric Media
Generalities
 Gram negative enteric coccobacilli, short, plump          All are motile (peritrichous) at 37’C except SKY
   bacilli                                                         o Klebsiella, Shigella, Yersinia pestis
 Non-sporeformers                                                 o Yersinia – motile at 25’C
 Facultattive anaerobes                                    All are AEROGENIC except Salmonella typi, Yersinia,
 Antigenic                                                    Shigella and Providencia (ProSSY)
       o cell wall (O) – somatic, heat stable               All are CATALASE POSITIVE except S.dysenteriae
       o flagella (H) – flagellar, heat labile              All are CYTOCHROME OXIDASE NEGATIVE except
       o capsule (K) – capsular, heat labile                   Plesiomonas
               K1 – E.cloi; Vi – S.typhi                   All are NITRATE REDUCERS except Photorabdus
 BAP/CAP: large moist gray colonies                           and Xenorabdus
 All are gamma hemolytic except E.coli                     Most are commensal flora of the intestinal tract
 All are non-encapsulated except Klebsiella and               except Salmonella, Shigella and Yersinia
   Enterobacter
 All are GLUCOSE FERMENTERS
  Rapid Lactose (18-24 hours)                Late Lactose (>48 hours)                      Non-Lactose
EKE                                   CHYSSS                                   SPEMPSY
Escherichia                           Citrobacter                              Salmonella except Sal. enteritica
Klebsiella                            Hafnia                                   subsp. Arizonae
Enterobacter                          Yersinia                                 Providencia
                                      Salmonella enteritica subsp. arizonae Edwardsiella
                                      Shigella sonnei                          Morganella
                                      Serratia                                 Proteus
                                                                               Shigella except S.sonnei
                                                                               Yersinia except Y.enterocolitica
Escherichia coli
           E.coli   Shigella
MAC         LF        NLF
Acetate      +         -
Motility     +         -
Klebsiella pneumonia
                                 TSI          LIA          I              M            V            C               U
Escherichia coli              A/A + gas      K/K           +              +            -            -               -
Klebsiella pneumonia          A/A + gas      K/K           -              -            +            +               +
Enterobacter aerogenes        A/A + gas      K/K           -              -            +            +               -
Enterobacter cloacae          A/A + gas      K/A           -              -            +            +               -
                               TSI             LIA             I          M            V            C               U
Arizona spp              A/A + gas + H2S     K/K + H2S         -          +            -            +               -
Citrobacter freundii A/A + gas + H2S         K/A               -          +            -            +               -
Citrobacter diversus A/A + gas               K/A               +          +            -            +               -
*To differentiate: use LIA
                                              Non-Lactose Fermenters
   Proteus, Providencia, Morganella (Group Proteeae) Proteus
   PAD (+), Lysine deamination (+)                            Swarm on BAP and CAP but not on MAC
   Urease (+) exept Providencia alcalifacien                  #2 cause of UTI
   LOA : - - - except Morganella and P. mirabilis (ornithine  Renal stone due to urease virulence factor
    positive)                                                  Cross react with rickettsia
   Indole (+) expcept P. mirabilis                            Species:
                                                                    o P.vulgaris – indole (+), Ox2, Ox19, OxK
                                                                    o P.mirabilis – indole (-), OxK
                                                               Laboratory tests:
                                                                    o TSI: K/A + H2S
                                                                    o PAD (+)
                                                               POSITIVE FOR DIENESS PHENOMENON
                           TSI                            LIA             I              M                 V                 C                U
Proteus vulgaris      K/A + gas + H2S                     R/A             +              +                 -                 +                +
Proteus mirabilis     K/A + gas + H2S                     R/A             -              +                 -                 +                +
Providencia rettgeri    K/A + gas                         R/A             +              +                 -                 +                +
Morganella morganii     K/A + gas                         R/A             +              +                 -                 -                +
*Urease (+) = PAD (+)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Salmonella
Shigella
                                       TSI                  LIA            I             M                 V                 C                U
Salmonella typhi                 K/A + small H2S            K/K            -             +                 -                 -                -
Salmonella enteritidis              K/A + gas               K/K            -             +                 -                 +                -
                                   + large H2S
Shigella dysenteriae                   K/A                  K/A           -               +                -                 -                -
Shigella sonnei                        K/A                  K/A           -               +                -                 -                -
Shigella flexnerii                     K/A                  K/A           +               +                -                 -                -
Shigella boydii                        K/A                  K/A           +               +                -                 -                -
Serratia marcescens                K/A or A/A               K/K           +               -                +                 -                +
Edwardsiella tarda
                                                Characteristics                               Diseases
Yersinia pestis                        Plague bacillus                        Rat flea bite
                                       Stain: Safety pin                      Bubonic, pneumonic, septicemic
                                       Growth pattern: Stalactite              PLAGUE
                                       Bipolar bodies (Wayson)                Black death (bioterrorism in Europe)
                                       V and W antigens
                                       Non-motile
                                       Urease and ornithine (-)
Yersinia enterocolitica                Oxidase (-)                            Seen on unpasteurized milk
                                       Psychrophilic: Motile at 22’C but      Enterocolitis
                                        not at 35’C                            Arthritis
                                     Cold enrichment at 4’C (Listeria)        Erythema nodosum
                                          Yersinia g(-), Listeria g(+)        Appendicitis and blood bag
                                     CIN agar: Bull’s eye colony               contaminant
                                         CIN (+): Yersinia, Aeromonas
                                     Y.enterocolitica Oxidase neg
                                     A.hydrophilia       Oxidase pos
                                     Zoonotic
Yersinia pseudotuberculosis          LOA: - - -                               Acute mesenteric Lymphadenitis
                                     Urease (+)                               Septicemia
                                                                               Pseudotubercles : animal pathogen
Vibrionaceae
                                                                       Classification of Vibrio cholera O1 (VCO1)
      Vibrio, Aeromonas, Plesiomonas                                 *VCO1 El tor – more common, pandemic cholera
      All are oxidase (+), catalase (+), indole (+)                                       agent
      All ferment glucose                                                      Biotype           Classical El Tor
      Polar flagella                                                 Polymixin Susceptibility        S        R
      All are pathogenic                                             Lysis by bacteriophage          +        -
        To differentiate from enterics                               Chicken RBC agglutination       -        +
                 Vibrio oxidase (+)                                  Hemolysis of sheep RBC          -        +
                 Enterics oxidase (-)                                Vogues proskauer test           -        +
Vibrio spp
Laboratory ID of V.cholerae 01
1. Darkfield microscopy                                            3.   Oxidase test
2. Culture                                                         4.   O129 Sensitivity test = SENSITIVE
     TCBS – Thiosulfate Citrate Bile Salt Sucrose                 5.   Polymixin B susceptibility test
     TTGA – Tellurite Taurocholate Gelatin Agar                   6.   Cholera Red Test: Nitroso-Indole Test
     APW – Alkaline Peptone Water (6-8hours)                             NO3 (+) Indole (+)
Vibrio parahaemolyticus
Aeromonas
Plesiomonas
Campylobacter
Helicobater pylori
                                              C.jejuni                                            H.pylori
Oxidase                                           +                                                  +
Catalase                                          +                                                  +
Microaerophilic                                   +                                                  +
Urease                                            -                                                  +
Growth at 42’C                                    +                                                  -
Non-fermentative Organisms
Diagnostic Tests
      Oxidase positive except S.maltophilia                      OF: Yellow (O), Green (F) = oxidizer
      Motile except B.mallei (non-motile)                        Opportunistic infection
      MAC: colorless colony                                      Pyocyanin – blue green
      TSI: K/K or neutral reaction                               Fluorescein – yellow green
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Laboratory of P.aeruginosa
 Cetrimide (+) on selective media
 BAP: gray, spreading, serrated, metallic sheen, mucoid, beta-hemolytic
      o Similar growth with B.anthracis and B.subtilis
      o Mucoid feature differentiates Pseudomonas from B.subtilis
      o PAE – mucoid colony, B.subtilis – dry colony
 MAC: colorless with green pigment
 MHA: bluish-green colonies due to pyocyanin
 (+) NO3, Urease, Gelatin HOH
 LOA: - - +
 Glucose oxidizer
Burkholderia spp
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
Shewanella putrefaciens
 Oxidase (+)
Moraxella lacunata
Eikenella corodens
Kingella spp.
Parvobacteria
    Gram negative bacilli or coccobacilli                        CO2 requiring
    Fastidious                                                   MAC negative
    Aerobic
Haemophilus spp
Haemophilus influenzae
Characteristics                                 Diseases
 Pfeiffer’s bacillus                            Doesn’t cause influenza
 Virulence:                                     3rd cause of bacterial meningitis
 o Capsule type B–Hib vaccine                    Major cause of acute epiglottitis
 o IgA, Protease, LPS. Pili                      Cystic fibrosis
 Satellite around SAU on BAP                    Otitis media, conjunctivitis, pneumonia, sepsis, cellulitis
                                                 Affects both URT and LRT
Laboratory ID of Haemophilus influenzae                Growth Factor tests for Haemophilus
 Horse blood bacitracin agar – selective for          1. Porphyrin test = X factor (ALA) test
   H.influenzae, prevents growth of P.aeruginosa       2. X and V strip test using MHA
 Medium of choice for hemolysis: horse BAP                a. XV growth = HAI
 Sx: blood, CSF, NPS, throat swab, body fluids (RT)          H.influenzae, H.aegypticus, H. haemolyticus
 Swab on Amies transport medium                           b. V and XV growth = H.parainfluenzae
 BAP, CAP, MAC, Bacitracin Chocolate Agar (for            c. X and XV growth = H.ducreyi
   unsterile specimens)                                3. Satellistim = BAP with S.aureus
 GS: gram negative coccobacilli                          (Substitute: C.albicans, S.pneumoniae) as V factor source
 CAP: grayish, dew drop, mousy odor                   4. Beta hemolysis on horse BAP =
 Porphyrin test: negative                                 H.haemolyticus/H.parahaemolyticus
 Satellitism test: growth near S.aureus
                                                       Porphyrin Test (X factor)
 Beta lactamase test: positive - control
                                                       Delta aminolevulenic acid (ALA)  Protoporphyrin
 Screen: oxidase positive
                                                       (Porphyrin-Heme/X factor)
 Confirmatory: growth on X and V disk
                                                       (+) red fluorescens
Haemophilus ducreyi
Haemophilus aegypticus
Characteristics                                   Diseases
 Koch week’s bacillus                             Pink eye conjunctivitis
                                                   Brazilian purpuric fever
                                          X                            V                        Porphyrin
H. influenzae                             +                            +                            -
H. aegypticus                             +                            +                            -
H. haemolyticus                           +                            +                            -
H. parainfluenzae                         -                            +                            +
H. parahaemolyticus                       -                            +                            +
H. paraphrophilus                         -                            +                            +
H. ducreyi                                +                            -                            -
H. aphrophilus                            -                            -                            +
Bordetella pertussis
Characteristics                    Laboratory
 Capsulated                        Sx: nasopharyngeal swab
 Obligate aerobe                   Dacron swab
 Whopping cough bacillus           Best time: Catarrhal, paroxysmal, convalescence
                                    Requires cysteine and methionine for growth
                                    MAC (+) except B.pertusis
Culture Media: (Cough Plate Method)
1. Potato blood glycerol agar or Bordet Gengou = mercury drop/pearl-like
2. Best medium: Regan Lowe/Charcoal Horse Blood with Cephalexin and Amphotericin) – add charcoal to
    detoxify
3. Jones Kendrich – charcoal and yeast extract
4. Charcoal Cephalexin Blood Agar (CCBA)
5. Stainer and Scholte
6. Casamino Broth
                          Motile             Urease            Oxidase           MAC, BAP
B. pertusis                  -                 -                  +                  -      Human patho
B. parapertusis              -                 +                  -                  +         Animal
B. bronchiseptica            +                 +                  +                  +        pathogen
(kennel cough)
Brucella spp.
Francisella tularensis
Pasteurella multocida
Characteristics                                         Diseases
 Obligate intracellular (rabbit’s testicles)s           Syphilis
 Acquired by sexual contact                            1. Primary
 Jarisch-Herxheimer Rxn                                    o Hard chancre
   o Phenomenon where large quantities of toxin are         o painLESS
      released as bacteria dies during treatment        2. Secondary
   o Post (arsenic) treatment reaction                      o Condylomata lata
   o Tx: Penicillin                                         o Skin rash
 Other treponemes caused by skin disease, not STD:         o High Ab titer (highly infectious)
   o T.pertenue = yaws/framboise                        3. Latent – asymptomatic, do serology
   o T.carateum = pinta                                 4. Tertiary
   o T.endemicum = bejel                                    o Gummas, granuloma formation
                                                        5. Congenital syphilis
                                                            o Stillbirth, abortion
Spirochetes                                             Diagnosis       Disease
Treponema – blood RPR (+)                               Serology        Syphilis, Yaws, Pinta, Begel
Leptospira – DAP cell wall                              Culture         Weil’s disease, Infectious jaundice
Borrelia – blood/BM                                     Giemsa,         Lyme, Relapsing fever
                                                        serology
Laboratory
 Non-cultivatable on agar medium
1. Dark Field Microscopy – corkscrew motility
2. Levaditi Silver Impregnation
3. Serology
      a. Screen: VDRL, RPR, TRUST (regain test)
      b. Confirmatory: FTA-ABS, TPHA, MHA-TP, HATTS (Treponemal Ab test)
      c. (+) RPR, (-) TPHA = Biologic false positive, not true syphilis
Chlamydia spp.
Diseases                                                Laboratory
 TRIC agent: Trachoma and Inclusion conjunctivitis      Frie test – skin test for LGV
   = #1 cause of bacterial conjunctivitis                Sensitive to sulfonamide
 #1 nongonococcal urethritis and pelvic                 Transport: 4’C
   inflammatory disease                                  Swab:Dacron/Rayon on sucrose phosphate buffer
 Lyphogranuloma venerium (LGV) – buboes
 Reiter’s syndrome                                     1. Iodine or Giemsa stain of glycogen containing
                                                           inclusion bodies – Halberstaedter prowazeik
                                                               o Iodine: brown; Giemsa: purple
                                                        2. McCoy - best medium, gold standard
                                                        3. Direct Fluorescence Antigen – chlamydia Ag
                                                        4. PCR/NAAT – definitive test
Chlamydia psittaci
Chlamydia pneumoniae
Rickettsia
Ehrlichia
      Transmitted by tick
      Diagnostic: morulae
      Destroys leukocytes – seen inside WBC
      Sennetsu fever
Mycoplasma pneumonia
Diseases                                                   Laboratory
 Post abortal fever                                        Large fried egg colony
 Post partum fever                                         Media: A7/A8, NYCA, SP4 (arginine)
 Pelvic inflammatory disease
Ureaplasma urealyticum
Characteristics                                                    Diseases
 Gram variable bacilli (gram negative or gram positive)            Bacterial vaginosis – grayish, fouls smelling
 Tx: Metronidazole
 Nugen scoring system – used for diagnosis of vaginosis
Laboratory
 Oxidase an catalase (-)
 SPS sensitive
 Hippurate and starch HOH (+)
 Clue cells on cytology exam - are vaginal epithelial cells with gram negative bacilli or coccobacilli
 Best for clue cell demonstration: GS, Pap, Wet mount
 Whiff/Sniff test
   o 10% KOH
   o (+) fishy amin like odor
 Selective media
   o Human blood tween 80 agar (HBTA) – best for demonstration of G.vaginalis hemoysis
   o V agar (vaginalis)
   o Columbia CNA
Streptobacillus monoiformis
Chromobacterium violaceum
Bartonella henselae
Diseases                                                                      Laboratory
 Cat scratch disease                                                          Warthin Starry silver
 Bacillary angiomatosis                                                         impregnation
 Peliosis hepatitis
                                                       MOT                                  Disease
B. bacilliformis                                     Sandfly                  Carrion’s disease
B. Quintana                                         Body louse                Trench fever, endocarditis
B. henselae                                         Cat scratch               Major Cat scratch disease
                                                                              Endocarditis
B. clarridgeiae                                     Cat scratch               Minor Cat scratch disease
                                                                              NO endocarditis
B. elizabethae                                        Fleas                   Endocarditis
Bartonella bacilliformis
Characteristics                    Diseases
 Destroy RBC                       Carrion’s disease
 Vector: sandfly                   Verruga peruana – skin eruption
                                    Oroya fever – anemia
Legionella pneumophila
Listeria monocytogenes
Tropheryma whipplei