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5 general features of Clostridium?
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1. Gram + rod
2. Anaerobes 3. Ubiquitous 4. Normal flora of GI - humans and animals 5. ENDOSPORES formed |
4 types of Clostridium
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1. Tetani
2. Botulinum 3. Perfringes - rarely produce spores 4. Difficile |
Epidemilogy of Clostridium tetani
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1. Spores introduced to wound via contaminated items or soil contact
2. wounds involve puncture with LOW oxygen 3. Most cases in less developed areas -vaccine not used -poor sterilization during medical procedures -umbilical stump contamination -less than 40 cases b/c of vaccine 4. Spores germinate IN body to give vegetative cells that muptiply and produce tetanospasmin at low levels Levels are too low to start antibody response Still get symptoms |
What are the 2 virulence factors for Clostridium tetani?
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1. Tetanospasmin
2. Tetanolysin |
What is Tetanospasmin?
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Virulence factor for Clostridium tetani
Plasmid encoded Very potent exotoxin (neurotoxin) - 1 of 3 most potent A/B subunits - expressed as 1, gets modified and becomes 2 units A/B bind to cell surface receptors - taken in by endocytosis Conformational change of toxin structure once internalized Vaccine made with Formalin to treate tetanospasmin - gives nontoxic toxoid, toxoid has antigenicity while non-toxic 1 microgram is lethal |
What is Tetanolysin for Clostridium tetani?
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Not understood
Inhibited by oxygen and serum cholesterol Oxygen Labile Enotoxin - expressed invivo Minor contributor to virulence |
Pathology of Clostridium tetani
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Multiply locally and no direct tissue damage
Tetanospasmin produced ONLY when organism in stationary growth phase Toxin is released - it binds to specific host cell receptors -occurs at neuromuscular junction - 2 receptors - glycolipid and glycoprotein - must bind to both receptors - toxin binding is NOT reversible - receptors and toxin move into cell - endocytosis - A subunit interferes with NT transport and release, degrades protein synaptobrevin. Causes motor message to NOT be inhibited, does MOST damage - B subunit used mostly for binding Results - SPASTIC PARALYSIS - contractions so tight they break bones Toxin moves up and down spinal cord --> total body spasms Ability to recover depends on - ability to regenerate new nerve endings where toxin NOT bound |
How do you diagnose Clostridium tetani?
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Looks at symptoms because hard to culture
30% show + results |
Is it localized or systemic?
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Can have localized
Systemic more common |
Incubation of Clostridium tetani
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4 days - weeks
Depends on distance from wound to CNS and # of spores |
What are the first muscle to be affected in Clostridium tetani?
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Masseter muscles = Lockjaw
Trimus - contractions that dont break Risus sardonicus - sustained contraction of facial muscles Sweating, drooling, irritability |
What other areas does Clostridium tetani affect other than Masseter?
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Can spread
Involve large areas Eventually muscle of respiration, swallowing, etc. Symptoms for years in survivors |
Deaths from Clostridium tetani
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Treatment - 30%
Untreated - 100% |
How long do symptoms persist?
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Months - years
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Is immunity acquired from surviving Clostridium tetani?
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No immunity provided
Amount of tetanospasmin is too small for immune response |