Enterococcus

59,176views

Enterococcus

Heme & Onc

Heme & Onc

Blood groups and transfusions
Platelet plug formation (primary hemostasis)
Coagulation (secondary hemostasis)
Role of Vitamin K in coagulation
Clot retraction and fibrinolysis
Hemophilia
Vitamin K deficiency
Bernard-Soulier syndrome
Glanzmann's thrombasthenia
Hemolytic-uremic syndrome
Immune thrombocytopenia
Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
Von Willebrand disease
Disseminated intravascular coagulation
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
Antithrombin III deficiency
Factor V Leiden
Protein C deficiency
Protein S deficiency
Antiphospholipid syndrome
Anticoagulants: Heparin
Anticoagulants: Warfarin
Anticoagulants: Direct factor inhibitors
Antiplatelet medications
Thrombolytics
Blood histology
Erythropoietin
Iron deficiency anemia
Anemia of chronic disease
Sideroblastic anemia
Megaloblastic anemia
Aplastic anemia
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
Autoimmune hemolytic anemia
Fanconi anemia
Hemolytic disease of the newborn
Hereditary spherocytosis
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
Pyruvate kinase deficiency
Sickle cell disease (NORD)
Beta-thalassemia
Alpha-thalassemia
Lead poisoning
Folate (Vitamin B9) deficiency
Vitamin B12 deficiency
Diamond-Blackfan anemia
Acute intermittent porphyria
Porphyria cutanea tarda
Hodgkin lymphoma
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Chronic leukemia
Acute leukemia
Myelodysplastic syndromes
Polycythemia vera (NORD)
Myelofibrosis (NORD)
Essential thrombocythemia (NORD)
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
Mastocytosis (NORD)
Multiple myeloma
Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance
Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia
Leukemoid reaction
Microcytic anemia: Pathology review
Non-hemolytic normocytic anemia: Pathology review
Intrinsic hemolytic normocytic anemia: Pathology review
Extrinsic hemolytic normocytic anemia: Pathology review
Macrocytic anemia: Pathology review
Heme synthesis disorders: Pathology review
Coagulation disorders: Pathology review
Platelet disorders: Pathology review
Mixed platelet and coagulation disorders: Pathology review
Thrombosis syndromes (hypercoagulability): Pathology review
Lymphomas: Pathology review
Leukemias: Pathology review
Plasma cell disorders: Pathology review
Myeloproliferative disorders: Pathology review
Hematopoietic medications
Ribonucleotide reductase inhibitors
Topoisomerase inhibitors
Platinum containing medications
Anti-tumor antibiotics
Microtubule inhibitors
DNA alkylating medications
Monoclonal antibodies
Antimetabolites for cancer treatment
Ehrlichia and Anaplasma
Escherichia coli
Rickettsia rickettsii (Rocky Mountain spotted fever) and other Rickettsia species
Plasmodium species (Malaria)
HIV (AIDS)
HIV and AIDS: Pathology review
Measles virus
Viral hepatitis: Pathology review
Viral hepatitis
Hepatitis C virus
Hepatitis medications
Dengue virus
Yellow fever virus
Cytomegalovirus
Epstein-Barr virus (Infectious mononucleosis)
Bleeding disorders: Clinical
Clostridium perfringens
Staphylococcus epidermidis
Staphylococcus aureus
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Streptococcus pyogenes (Group A Strep)
Enterococcus
Salmonella (non-typhoidal)
Salmonella typhi (typhoid fever)
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Serratia marcescens
Nocardia
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Legionella pneumophila (Legionnaires disease and Pontiac fever)
Neisseria meningitidis
Brucella
Haemophilus influenzae
Mycobacterium avium complex (NORD)
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Tuberculosis)
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Borrelia species (Relapsing fever)
Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease)
Varicella zoster virus
Human herpesvirus 8 (Kaposi sarcoma)
Herpes simplex virus
Adenovirus
Parvovirus B19
Human papillomavirus
JC virus (Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy)
Human T-lymphotropic virus
Candida
Pneumocystis jirovecii (Pneumocystis pneumonia)
Coccidioidomycosis and paracoccidioidomycosis
Histoplasmosis
Aspergillus fumigatus
Mucormycosis
Cryptococcus neoformans
Babesia
Cryptosporidium
Toxoplasma gondii (Toxoplasmosis)
Leishmania
Strongyloides stercoralis
Diphyllobothrium latum
Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus

Transcript

Watch video only

With Enterococcus, entero- refers to the intestines, while -coccus means round shape.

So Enterococcus is a genus of round bacteria that commonly colonizes the gut of humans and animals.

Enterococcus is also called Group D streptococcus in Lancefield classification developed by an American microbiologist Rebecca Lancefield.

There are two species that can cause infections in humans and these are Enterococcus faecalis, amounting for the majority of infections, and Enterococcus faecium, which causes disease more rarely.

Now, looking at an individual bacterium, Enterococcus has a thick peptidoglycan cell wall, which takes in purple dye when Gram stained - so this is a gram-positive bacteria.

When there’s more of them, Enterococci grow in short chains, usually in pairs.

They’re non-spore forming, facultative anaerobes, meaning that they can survive in both aerobic and anaerobic environments and catalase negative, which means they don’t produce an enzyme called catalase.

Enterococci also can tolerate extreme environmental conditions including high sodium chloride concentrations, high pH and even high temperatures.

They can survive at 60 degrees Celsius for up to 30 minutes!

Ok, now, enterococcus is pyrrolidonyl arylamidase positive, because it makes an enzyme called L-pyrrolidonyl arylamidase.

To test for this, a small sample is taken from a suspected bacterial colony, and then inoculated to a disk pad that’s embedded with pyrrolidonyl beta naphthylamide - another joy of a word.

With Enterococcus, pyrrolidonyl arylamidase hydrolyzes pyrrolidonyl beta-naphthylamide to produce beta-naphthylamide.

Try saying that 3 times fast! Finally, another reagent called N-methylamino-cinnamaldehyde is added to the disk, and it reacts with beta-naphthylamide, resulting in a bright red color that confirms Enterococcus is pyrrolidonyl arylamidase positive.

Now, most commonly, Enterococci are gamma hemolytic which means that when cultivated on blood agar they don’t induce hemolysis, so the agar under and around the colony remains unchanged.

But sometimes, they can induce alpha hemolysis, also called partial hemolysis, which means that the agar under the colony turns dark and greenish.

Finally, it can grow on bile salts, which is very useful to differentiate Enterococci from non-enterococcus group D streptococci.

This can be demonstrated with the Bile-Esculin test, that can be done on tubes or plates and uses a medium that contains peptone, beef extract, bile, esculin, ferric citrate and agar.

So, in the presence of bile, Enterococcus can hydrolyze esculin into glucose and esculetin.

Then, esculetin reacts with the ferric ions supplied by ferric citrate and form a black diffusible complex.

So, after 24 to 48 hours, Enterococci cause a diffuse blackening of more than half of the tube or black halos around colonies on plates.

Now, Enterococci are opportunistic pathogens which causes a wide variety of hospital-acquired infections, particularly in people with underlying cardiovascular conditions, or in people with immunosuppressive conditions, like an HIV infection.

They also cause disease in people who have been hospitalized for long periods of time and received multiple antibiotic treatments, or in people with indwelling medical devices such as central venous catheters or urinary catheters.

Under these circumstances, Enterococcus mainly causes infective endocarditis - in fact, Enterococcus is the second most common cause of infective endocarditis overall.

Enterococcus can get in the bloodstream one of two ways.

First, it can be inoculated directly into the blood through a blood vessel catheter.