Bacteria wk 8-10

  1. Fusobacterium necrophorum (skin and wound)
    • gram negative obligate anaerobic bacilli or filaments
    • commensal of mm
    • in wounds (persistent soaking on wet ground, or stony ground)
    • cattle, horses (thrush in horses)
  2. Dichelobacter nodosus
    • gram negative obligate anaerobe bacillus
    • foot rot of sheep and goats, secondary after fusobacterium necroforum (but does more damage)
    • damage to interdigital from persistent soaking, causes separation of hoof & dermal tissue ("underrunning").  Lameness with foul-smelling lesions
  3. staphylococcus pseudintermedius
    • gram positive facultative anaerobe coccus
    • commensal of skin, mm, skin diseases predispose (ectoparasites, allergies, seborrhea, etc)
    • Pyoderma (pyogenic bacterial infection of skin, papules to pustules to folliculitis)
    • usually dogs
  4. staphylococcus hyicus
    • gram positive facultative anaerobic coccus (clusters)
    • commensal of skin, mm
    • GREASY PIG DISEASE
    • reddish or copper skin, thin brown scales, peel off in scabs.  ADR, dehydration.  
    • newborns colonized by dam.  Avoids clearance via antiphagocytic capsule, IgG binding protein (inhibits opsonization by abs).  Exfoliative toxin (blisters, separation in stratum granulosum, sloughing), inflammation, lose fluids through skin, dehydration.
  5. streptococcus canis
    • gram positive aerotolerant coccus, chains
    • commensal of mm of URT, GI, lower genital
    • DOGS, associated with trauma
    • necrotizing fasciitis (flesh-eating bacteria), toxic shock-like syndrome (cellulitis, exudate, pain)
  6. Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
    • gram positive, facultative anaerobe, slender bacillus, causes erysipelas
    • reportable
    • commensal of GI, lymph
    • Pigs: (ingestion) Diamond skin disease, acute septicemic disease (vomiting, skin lesions), chronic (arthritis, vegetative endocarditis)
    • Turkeys, Sheep: acquire through wounds.  acute = unsteady, purple turgid snoods (turkeys).  Chronic = arthritis, endocarditis (sheep)
    • zoonotic
  7. Erysipelothrix tonsillarum
    • gram positive facultative anaerobe slender bacillus
    • dogs: ingest organism, endocarditis, arthritis
    • zoonotic
  8. Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
    • gram positive facultative anaerobe diphtheroid, variably acid-fast, facultative intracellular of macrophages
    • caseous lymphadenitis in sheep and goats - multilayered abscesses in LN, healthy otherwise (goats), vs "thin ewe syndrome"
    • Ulcerative ympnangitis of horses, cattle.  Ascends lymphatics causing nodules/abscesses
    • Pigeon Fever in horses, abscesses in pectoral
  9. caseous lymphadenitis
    • corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
    • gram positive facultative anaerobe diphtheroid, variably acid-fast, facultative intracellular of macrophages
    • Multilayered abscesses in LN, otherwise healthy.  Can cause "thin ewe syndrome"
    • Goats and sheep
  10. ulcerative lymphangitis
    • corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
    • gram positive facultative anaerobe diphtheroid, variably acid-fast, facultative intracellular of macrophages
    • horses, cows
    • ascends lymphatics, nodules/absesses
  11. Pigeon fever
    • corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis
    • gram positive facultative anaerobe diphtheroid, variably acid-fast, facultative intracellular of macrophages
    • horses
    • abscesses in pectoral region (puffed out chest)
  12. Clostridium septicum
    • gram positive spore-forming bacilli, strict anaerobe
    • natural inhabitant of soil
    • malignant edema, gangrenous dermatitis in chickens
    • causes necrotizing cellulitis, hemorrhage, edema, swollen painful warm lesions, later cold and crepitant.
    • spores in tissues germinate under anaerobic conditions, produce membrane-damaging toxins that cause myonecrosis and increased capillary permeability, death
  13. Malignant edema
    • clostridium septicum, gram positive spore-forming bacilli, strict anaerobe
    • natural inhabitant of soil
    • causes necrotizing cellulitis, hemorrhage, edema, swollen painful warm lesions, later cold and crepitant.spores in tissues germinate under anaerobic conditions, produce membrane-damaging toxins that cause myonecrosis and increased capillary permeability, death
  14. gangrenous dermatitis
    • chickens
    • clostridium septicum, gram positive spore-forming bacilli, strict anaerobe
    • natural inhabitant of soil
    • causes necrotizing cellulitis, hemorrhage, edema, swollen painful warm lesions, later cold and crepitant.spores in tissues germinate under anaerobic conditions, produce membrane-damaging toxins that cause myonecrosis and increased capillary permeability, death
  15. Clostridium novyi type A
    • bighead in rams
    • edema in head, neck, cranial thorax (B is Black disease, D is Redwater)
    • gram positive spore forming bacilli, strict anaerobe, inhabitant of soil.
    • spores innoculated into wounds caused by head butting, produce toxins that contribute to edema and rapid death
  16. bighead
    • clostridium novyi type A
    • edema in head, neck, cranial thorax (B is Black disease, D is Redwater)
    • gram positive spore forming bacilli, strict anaerobe, inhabitant of soil.
    • spores innoculated into wounds caused by head butting, produce toxins that contribute to edema and rapid death
  17. clostridium chauvoei
    • Blackleg
    • gram positive spore forming bacilli, strict anaerobe, inhabitant of soil
    • edematous, hemorrhagic, necrotic lesions, ADR, lameness.  Start warm and painful, turn cold and crepitus (like c. septicum)
    • Systemic, NOT WOUND ASSOCIATED (but anaerobic so can "outbreak" when many animals get bruises)
    • toxins cause myonecrosis, increased permeability, damage and death
  18. Blackleg
    • clostridium chauvoei
    • gram positive spore forming bacilli, strict anaerobe, inhabitant of soil
    • edematous, hemorrhagic, necrotic lesions, ADR, lameness.  Start warm and painful, turn cold and crepitus (like c. septicum)
    • Systemic, NOT WOUND ASSOCIATED (but anaerobic so can "outbreak" when many animals get bruises)
    • toxins cause myonecrosis, increased permeability, damage and death
  19. clostridium sordellii
    • associated with other clostridium in wound infections, comes in to cause fatal myositis, hepatic disease in ruminants and horses.
    • gram positive spore forming bacillus, strict anaerobe, inhabitant of soil
  20. mycobacterium lepraemurium
    • gram positive acid fast aerobic bacillus, mycolic acid, facultative intracellular of macrophages
    • Feline leprosy
    • single or multiple nodules on skin, painless, move freely, intact or ulcerated.  Surgical removal.  
    • Other species (M. fortiuitum, chelonae, smegmatis) similar but grow faster - atypical mycobacterium
  21. feline leprosy
    • mycobacterium lepraemurium
    • gram positive acid fast aerobic bacillus, mycolic acid, facultative intracellular of macrophages
    • single or multiple nodules on skin, painless, move freely, intact or ulcerated.  Surgical removal.  
    • Other species (M. fortiuitum, chelonae, smegmatis) similar but grow faster - atypical mycobacterium
  22. dermatophilus congolensis
    • gram positive, branching filaments full of cocci (zoospores are NOT endospores)
    • entry via wounds, scabs of keritanized epidermis and neutrophilic exudates pull off
    • horses, cattle: streptothricosis, rain rot
    • sheep: lumpy wool disease, strawberry foot rot
  23. streptothricosis
    • dermaptophilus congolensis 
    • gram positive, branching filaments full of cocci (zoospores are NOT endospores) 
    • entry via wounds, scabs of keritanized epidermis and neutrophilic exudates pull off
  24. rain rot
    • dermatophilus congolensis
    • gram positive, branching filaments full of cocci (zoospores are NOT endospores)
    • entry via wounds, scabs of keritanized epidermis and neutrophilic exudates pull off
  25. lumpy wool disease
    • dermatophilus congolensis
    • gram positive, branching filaments full of cocci (zoospores are NOT endospores)
    • entry via wounds, scabs of keritanized epidermis and neutrophilic exudates pull off
  26. strawberry foot rot
    • dermatophilus congolensis
    • gram positive, branching filaments full of cocci (zoospores are NOT endospores)
    • entry via wounds, scabs of keritanized epidermis and neutrophilic exudates pull off
  27. streptobacillus moniliformis
    • rat bite fever
    • gram negative facultative anaerobe pleomorphic bacillus
    • commensal of rats, transmitted by bites
    • turkeys, mice, humans
    • localizes to joints - synovitis, arthritis
  28. rat bite fever
    • streptobacillus moniliformis
    • gram negative facultative anaerobe pleomorphic bacillus
    • commensal of rats, transmitted by bites
    • turkeys, mice, humans
    • localizes to joints - synovitis, arthritis
  29. bartonella henselae
    • gram negative bacillus
    • cat scratch disease
    • chronic bacteremia with no disease in cat
    • transmitted between cats via flea
    • zoonotic
  30. dermatophytes
    • trochophyton and microsporum
    • molds (macro- and microconidia off aerial hyphae in free-living form, arthroconidia in parasitic form)
    • spread by contact
    • Ringworm!  Lots of dif species
    • conidia germinate in host, mycelium along cornified epithelium.  Ectothrix - arthroconidia along surface of hair.  
    • Superficial lesions, erythema to vesiculopustular, alopecia with scaling and crusting.  
    • ZOONOTIC
    • enter through breaks in skin, produce keratinase and proteases so can colonize keratinized tissues, inflammatory radiates = target/ring lesions.
    • woods lamp, examine in mineral oil or KOH, fungal culture in DTM
  31. Malassezia pachydermatis
    • yeast, lipophilic, commensal
    • dermatitis: after altered environment/immunity
    • pruritis, alopecia, excoriation, seborrhea, lichenification, hyperpigmentation
    • Otitis externa: pruritic, maybe purulent and malodorous
  32. sporothrix schenckii
    • dimorphic fungus (mold in environment, yeast in host)
    • entry via wounds, nodules on lower parts of legs, ulcerate and discharge pus
  33. histoplasma capsulatum variant farciminosum
    • dimorphic fungus (mold in environment, yeast in host)
    • entry via wounds
    • epizootic lymphagnitis in horses, mules, donkeys.  Nodular lesions that ulcerate and heal by scarring
  34. mycetomas
    • fungal tumors
    • localized lesions, granulomatous
    • treated by excision
  35. chromoblastomyosis
    • dark pigmented soil fungi
    • causes nodules under skin
    • treated by excision
  36. phaeohyphomycosis
    • dark pigmented soil fungi
    • causes nodules under skin
    • treated by excision
  37. escherichia coli (urogenital)
    • most common cause of canine (anyone's) UTI.  Gram - facultative anaerobic bacillus, commensal of intestines, in environment, causes ascending infections, cystitis first then pyelonephritis
    • adhere to uroepithelium via type I pili (common) and P/Pap pili (pyelonephritis-associated), form biofilms.  Some produce urease which converts urea to ammonia (raises pH of urine), promotes urolith formation (bacteria trapping), inactivates complement to reduce clearance.
  38. proteus mirabilis (urogenital)
    • canine UTI
    • Gram - facultative anaerobic bacillus, commensal of intestines, in environment, causes ascending infections, cystitis first then pyelonephritis
    • adhere to uroepithelium via type I pili (common) and P/Pap pili (pyelonephritis-associated), form biofilms.  Some produce urease which converts urea to ammonia (raises pH of urine), promotes urolith formation (bacteria trapping), inactivates complement to reduce clearance.
  39. Klebsiella spp (urogenital)
    • canine UTI
    • Gram - facultative anaerobic bacillus, commensal of intestines, in environment, causes ascending infections, cystitis first then pyelonephritis
    • adhere to uroepithelium via type I pili (common) and P/Pap pili (pyelonephritis-associated), form biofilms.  Some produce urease which converts urea to ammonia (raises pH of urine), promotes urolith formation (bacteria trapping), inactivates complement to reduce clearance.
  40. pseudomonas aeruginosa (urogenital)
    • canine UTI
    • Gram - facultative anaerobic bacillus, commensal of intestines, in environment, causes ascending infections, cystitis first then pyelonephritis
    • adhere to uroepithelium via type I pili (common) and P/Pap pili (pyelonephritis-associated), form biofilms.  Some produce urease which converts urea to ammonia (raises pH of urine), promotes urolith formation (bacteria trapping), inactivates complement to reduce clearance.
  41. enterococcus spp (urogenital)
    • canine UTI
    • Gram + facultative anaerobic coccus, commensal of intestines, in environment, causes ascending infections, cystitis first then pyelonephritis
    • adhere to uroepithelium via type I pili (common) and P/Pap pili (pyelonephritis-associated), form biofilms.  Some produce urease which converts urea to ammonia (raises pH of urine), promotes urolith formation (bacteria trapping), inactivates complement to reduce clearance.
  42. coagulase + staphylococcus spp (urogenital)
    • canine UTI
    • Gram + coccus, commensal of intestines, in environment, causes ascending infections, cystitis first then pyelonephritis
    • adhere to uroepithelium via type I pili (common) and P/Pap pili (pyelonephritis-associated), form biofilms.  Some produce urease which converts urea to ammonia (raises pH of urine), promotes urolith formation (bacteria trapping), inactivates complement to reduce clearance.
  43. Corynebacterium spp
    • gram positive facultative anaerobic diphtheroid (C. renale complex = C. renale, C. cystitidis, C. pilosum).  
    • COmmensal of lower urogenital in ruminants.  
    • Cattle: ascending infections esp in cows near parturition.  Frequent urination, blood in urine, abdominal pain.
    • Sheep/goats: infections in males, necrotizing inflammation of prepuce and adjacent tissues. ("pizzle rot")
    • causes high pH
  44. Actinobacillus suis (urogenital)
    • gram + obligate anaerobic diphtheroid
    • commensal of genital tract of boars
    • venereal transmission.  Causes cystitis (frequent urination, blood and pus in urine), acute renal failure in some (suddenly ill, down, depressed, dead).
  45. Campylobacter spp
    • gram negative curved bacillus, microaerophile
    • diagnostic hepatic target lesions in aborted fetus
    • Bovine: c. fetus ssp venerealis (REPORTABLE). Prepuce of bulls, vagina of cows, venereal transmission, causes endometritis, salpingitis, failure to implant fetus, abortions.
    • goats/sheep: in GI tract, placentitis, abortion.
  46. brucellosis abortus
    • gram negative aerobic coccobacillus of cattle (and other species)
    • ingestion, penetration of skin, venereal, inhalation.
    • replicates in LN, systemic to uterus, epididymis, LYMPHOID TISSUE.  
    • abortion in females, epididymitis and orchitis in males
    • zoonotic (undulant fever), reportable, bioterrorism, agroterrorism
    • eradicated from domestic herds in US
  47. brucellosis melitensis
    • gram negative aerobic coccobacillus of sheep and goats (and other species).  THE WORST of brucella
    • ingestion, penetration of skin, venereal, inhalation.
    • replicates in LN, systemic to uterus, epididymis, LYMPHOID TISSUE.
    • abortion in females, epididymitis and orchitis in males
    • zoonotic (undulant fever), reportable, bioterrorism, agroterrorism
  48. brucella ovis
    • gram negative aerobic coccobacillus of sheep (and other species)
    • ingestion, penetration of skin, venereal, inhalation.
    • replicates in LN, systemic to uterus, epididymis, LYMPHOID TISSUE.
    • abortion in females, epididymitis and orchitis in males
    • zoonotic (undulant fever), reportable, bioterrorism, agroterrorism
  49. brucella suis
    • gram negative aerobic coccobacillus of swine (and other species)
    • ingestion, penetration of skin, venereal, inhalation.
    • replicates in LN, systemic to uterus, epididymis, LYMPHOID TISSUE.
    • abortion in females, epididymitis and orchitis in males, arthritis, posterior paralysis, ataxia
    • zoonotic (undulant fever), reportable, bioterrorism, agroterrorism
    • eradicated from domestic herds in US
  50. brucella canis
    • gram negative aerobic coccobacillus of dogs (and other species)
    • ingestion, penetration of skin, venereal, inhalation.
    • replicates in LN, systemic to uterus, epididymis, LYMPHOID TISSUE.
    • abortion in females, epididymitis and orchitis in males, arthritis, posterior paralysis, ataxia, uveitis
    • zoonotic (undulant fever), reportable, bioterrorism, agroterrorism
  51. Taylorella equigenitalis
    • gram negative FA coccobacillus
    • contagious equine metritis (reportable)
    • genital commensal of equines
    • VD
    • Acute endometritis with odorless mucopurulent d/c, transient infertility
  52. Contagious equine metritis
    • Taylorella equigenitalis
    • gram negative FA coccobacillus
    • reportable
    • genital commensal of equines
    • VD
    • Acute endometritis with odorless mucopurulent d/c, transient infertility
  53. Chlamydia abortus
    • small ground gram - bacterium, obligate intracellular of trophoblasts
    • Reticulate and elementary bodies, commensal of mm
    • abortion in sheep and goats (enzootic abortion of ewes)
    • reportable.
  54. Listeria monocytogenes
    • gram + bacillus, FA
    • transmission via ingestion.  "silage disease". 
    • facilitate own uptake across mucosal epithelium into un-activated macrophages, escape vacuole with membrane-damaging toxin, polymerizes actin with cell surface protein.  REplication within cell causes damage, actin rockets to new cell. Spreads in blood to placenta/fetus.
    • abortion in ruminants (placental retention and endometritis)
    • zoonotic
  55. Listeria ivanovii
    • gram + bacillus, FA
    • transmission via ingestion.  "silage disease". 
    • facilitate own uptake across mucosal epithelium into un-activated macrophages, escape vacuole with membrane-damaging toxin, polymerizes actin with cell surface protein.  REplication within cell causes damage, actin rockets to new cell. Spreads in blood to placenta/fetus.
    • abortion in ruminants, mom is fine
    • zoonotic
  56. Mycoplasma bovigenitalum
    • molliculte, pleiomorphic, stain gram -, no outer membrane or cell wall, cholesterol in membrane
    • Commensal of male cattle genital (VD)
    • vulvovaginitis, endometritis, infertility
  57. ureaplasma diversum
    • Pleiomorphic mollicute, stain gram -, no outer membrane or cell wall, cholesterol in membrane.
    • COmmensal of male cattle genital tract, VD
    • vulvitis
  58. Mycoplasma bovoculi
    • Pleiomorphic, stain gram -, no outer membrane or cell wall, membrane has cholesterol
    • Commensal of mucosa
    • mild conjunctivitis in cattle
  59. Moraxella bovis
    • gram negative aerobic coccobacillus
    • commensal of conjunctivitis, URT of cattle
    • transmitted by flies
    • Pinkeye (infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis) vs conjunctivitis (watery discharge, blepharospasm).  
    • Later, corneal involvement (corneal ulceration, purulent discharge).  UV exacerbates
    • adhere via pili, other ocular damage predisposes.  Membrane damaging toxin to kill phagocytes damages corneal epithelium, inflammation exacerbates.
  60. Chlamydia pecorum
    • small round gram - bacterium, oblibgate intracellular.  
    • Follicular conjunctivitis, corneal ulceration.  Zoonotic
  61. Aspergillus fumigatus
    • fungus, eye infections in horses (mostly)
    • Keratmycosis: ulceration of cornea, opaque and vascularized.
  62. Lepto in horses (ocular)
    moon-blindness with systemic spread of Leptospira serovars (esp pomona).  Deposition of immune complexes
Author
XQWCat
ID
325719
Card Set
Bacteria wk 8-10
Description
skin and wound, urogenital
Updated