BACTERIAL INFECTION ON
RESPIRATION TRACT
   Ike Irmawati P.A, MSi Med
      Mikrobiologi FK Yarsi
   Infections of the Respiratory tract
• Most common entry point for
  infections
• Upper respiratory tract
   →nose, nasal cavity, sinuses,
    mouth, throat (pharynx)
• Lower respiratory tract
   →Trachea, bronchi,
    bronchioles, & alveoli in
     the lungs                           2
  Upper & Lower Respiratory Tract
            Infection
• Type microorganism:
  - restricted to surface epithelium
  - spread through body
• Two groups of microbes can distinguished :
  “professional” & “secondary” invaders
                                               3
      Protective Mechanisms
Normal flora : Commensal organisms
• Limited to the upper tract
• Mostly Gram positive or anaeorbic
• Microbial antagonist (competition)
                                       4
        Protective Mechanisms
 Clearance of particles & organisms from the
 respiratory tract
For the upper respiratory tract :
❖ The mucociliary system →
  in the nasopharynx
❖ The flushing action of
 saliva → in the oropharynk
                                               5
          Bacterial Infections
❖Specific areas of the upper respiratory
 system can become infected → pharyngitis,
 laryngitis, tonsillitis, sinusitis, & epiglotitis.
❖May be caused by several
 bacteria and viruses, often in combination.
Streptococcal infection on
    Respiratory Tract
                    Streptococci
• Characters of Streptococci
   –   Gram positive cocci
   –   Φ 1µm
   –   Chains or pairs
   –   Usually capsulated
   –   Non motile
   –   Non spore forming
   –   Facultative anaerobes
   –   Require CO2
   –   Catalase negative
   –   Of these organism considered in this chapter:
       S.pyogenes, S.pneumoniae, S .viridans
Classification of Streptococci
• Streptococci can be classified according to:
  – Oxygen requirements
     • Anaerobic (Peptostreptococcus)
     • Aerobic or facultative anaerobic (Streptococcus)
  – Serology (Lanciefield Classification)
  – Hemolysis on Blood Agar
            Serology: Lanciefield Classification
                                                           Streptococci
                              Lanciefield classification
       Group A          Group B                               Group C         Group D      Other groups
     S. pyogenes     S. agalactiae                         S. equisimitis   Enterococcus      (E-U)
•   Streptococci classified into many groups from A-K & H-V
•   One or more species per group
•   Classification based on C- carbohydrate antigen of cell wall
     – Groupable streptococci
          • A, B and D (more frequent)
          • C, G and F (Less frequent)
     – Non-groupable streptococci
          • S. pneumoniae (pneumonia)
          • viridans streptococci
               – e.g. S. mutans
          Classification of Streptococci
        Based on Hemolysis on Blood Agar
Hemolysis on BA
– -hemolysis
     Partial hemolysis
     Green discoloration around the colonies
     non-groupable streptococci (S. pneumoniae & S.
     viridans)
– -hemolysis
     Complete hemolysis
     Clear zone of hemolysis around the colonies
     Group A & B (S. pyogenes & S. agalactiae)
– -hemolysis
     No lysis
     Group D (Enterococcus spp)
       Hemolysis on Blood agar
-hemolysis
-hemolysis
-hemolysis
Hemolysis patterns on blood agar
                                   13
https://www.cdc.gov/streplab/groupa-strep/index.html
Figure . Cell surface structure of Streptococcus pyogenes
       and secreted products involved in virulence.
S.pyogenes   ❖Protein F & lipoteichoic acid : mediates    Pharyngitis,pneumonia,
             epithelial cell attachment & adhesion           Rheumatic fever
             ❖M protein as antiphagositic
              →The M protein has many antigenic
             varieties and thus, different strain of
             S.pyogenes cause repeat infections
             ❖Hyaluronic acid capsule, which acts to
             camouflage the bacteria
             ❖Produce enzyme and hemolysins
             →contribute tissue invasion and
             destructions,i.e: streptolysin O,S,
             streptokinase, DNAse B & hyaluronidase
             ❖Streptococcal Pyrogenic exotoxins that              scarlet
             stimulate macrophages and helper T cells    fever,Streptococcal toxic
             to release cytokines                             shock syndrome
           Pathogenesis S.pyogenes
Pathogenesis of group A streptococci
❖ Adherence to the epithelial cells;
  >10 adhesion molecules
❖ invasion into the epithelial cells;
  mediated by M protein and F protein
  important for persistent infections and invasion into deep tissues
❖ avoiding opsonization and phagocytosis;
  M protein, M-like proteins, and C5a peptidase
❖ producing enzymes and toxins
   Complication that result from S. pyogenes
     infection (poststreptococcal disease)
– Rheumatic fever
▪ most commonly preceded by infection of the respiratory tract.
▪ Life threatening inflammatory disease that leads to damage of heart
  valves muscle
▪ Inflammation of heart (pancarditis), joints, blood vessels, and
  subcutaneous tissue. Results from cross reactivity of anti-M protein Ab
  and the human heart tissue. This disease can be reactivated by recurrent
  streptococcal infections
– Glomerulonephritis
 Deposition of antibody-streptococcal Ag complexes in kidneys results in
damagee to glomeruli
https://www.cdc.gov/streplab/pneumococcus/index.html
 S. pneumoniae
    Morphology and Physiology
▪ Gram-positive lancet-shaped diplococci
▪ alpha-hemolytic
▪ Growth is enhanced by 5-10% CO2
▪ These organism may harmlessly inhabit the upper
  respiratory tract
▪ Pneumococcal infections → spread from person to person
  via droplets/aerosols
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3685878/
                          S. pneumoniae
Pathogenesis and Immunity
Pneumococci produce disease →ability to multiply in the tissues
(invasiveness).
40-70% of humans are at sometimes carrier of virulent pneumococci.
→ host defense mechanisms: ciliated cells of respiratory tract and spleen
   The normal respiratory tract has natural resistance to the pneumococcus.
Loss of natural resistance may be due to:
   1. Abnormalities of the respiratory tract (e.g. viral RT infections)
   2. Alcohol or drug intoxication; abnormal circulatory dynamics.
   3. Patients undergone renal transplant; chronic renal diseases.
   4. Malnutrition, general debility, sickle cell anemia, hyposplenism
      or splenectomy, nephrosis or complement deficiency.
   5. Young children and the elderly.
Pneumonia: Common Invasion Strategy
• As bacteria enter the lower respiratory
  tract, the initiation of pneumonia requires
  escape from mucous defenses and
  bacterial migration into the alveolus.
• Adherence of bacteria to the alveolar
  epithelium → replication → initiation of
  host damage responses lead to the classic
  evolution of lobar pneumonia.
• The interaction of secreted products and cell
  surface-anchored bacterial components with the
  alveolar epithelium and innate immune defenses
  drives this process.
• The pore-forming toxin pneumolysin and
  hydrogen peroxide released in copious amounts
  by the bacteria disrupt the alveolar epithelium
  and edema fluid accumulates in the alveolar
  space
 Clinical diseases
Sudden onset with fever, chills and sharp
chest pain. Bloody, rusty sputum. Empyema is
a rare but significant complication.
Complications caused by spreading of
pneumococci to other organs: sinusitis,
meningitis, endocarditis, septic arthritis,
middle ear infection.
              Prevention
• The widespread use of pneumococcal
  conjugate vaccines (PCVs) has reduced
  invasive disease of sero-types with the
  capsular polysaccharide (CPS) types that
  are included in the vaccine
         Streptococcus viridans
• Alpha hemolytic or nonhemolytic
• Non-groupable
• S.viridans colonizes in the oropharynx, GI tract, urinary tract, and
  rareli on skin surface.
• Generally considered to be of low virulence
• Production of extracellular complex polysacarides (such as glucans
  & dextrans) enhance attachment to host cell surface,
  such as cardiac endothelial cells & tooth surface → dental caries
• Disease:
❖ Sub acut bacterial endocarditis (particularly patients with previosly
  damaged heart valves)
❖ Intra abdominal infection
❖ caries dentis
    Diagnosis of streptococcal
             disease
                Clinical diagnosis
                Depend on signs &
                    symtoms          Antigen detection
Streptococcal                              test
   disease
                                      Antibody detection
                   Laboratory              methode
                    diagnosis
                                        Culture
                                       Identification
  Laboratory diagnosis S. pyogenes
• Antigen detection methode:
✓ Antigen detection tests: commercial kits for rapid detection of
  group A streptococcal antigen from throat swabs, using latex
  agglutination,coagglutination & Elisa tecnology.
  →Latex agglutination able to detect Capsuler pollysacharide
   antigen of pneumococcus
• Serological test/antibody detection methode:
✓ ASO titration for respiratory infections.
✓ Anti-DNase B and antihyaluronidase titration for skin infections.
✓ Antistreptokinase; anti-M type-specific antibodies.
• Culture: Specimens are cultured on blood agar plates in air.
• Identification
      Laboratory diagnosis S. pneumoniae
Examination of sputum
  Stained smears of sputum: a rapid diagnosis.
  Quellung test with multivalent anticapsular antibodies.
Culture
  Specimen: sputum, aspirates from sinus or middle ear, CSF.
  cultured on blood agar plate in 5-10% CO2.
Identification: bile solubility, optochin sensitivity, etc. for
differentiation    from     other   a-hemolytic   streptococci.
Additional biochemical, serologic or molecular diagnostic tests
for a definitive identification.
Antigen detection: detect capsular polysaccharide in body
fluids.
 Outline of differentiation between Gram-
               Positive cocci
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Differentiation between -hemolytic Streptococci
                Hemolysis       Bacitracin              CAMP test
                                sensitivity
S. pyogenes                   Susceptible              Negative
S. agalactiae                  Resistant                Positive
 Differentiation between -hemolytic Streptococci
                 Hemolysis    Optochin         Bile       Inulin
                             sensitivity    solubility Fermentation
S. pneumoniae               Sensitive (≥     Soluble        ferment
                               14 mm)
  S. viridans                Resistant     Insoluble      Not Ferment
                              (≤13 mm)
           Prevention and Control
Most streptococci are normal flora of the human body
Source of S. pyogenes and S. agalactiae is a person harboring these
organisms (carrier).
Control:
   1. Prompt eradication of streptococci from early infections.
   2. Prophylactic antibiotic treatment for rheumatic fever
      patients.
   3. Eradication of S. pyogenes from carriers.
   4. Dust control, ventilation, air filtration, UV irradiation and
      aerosol mists are of doubtful efficacy.
   5. Intrapartum penicillin to mother at risk of giving birth to an
      infant with invasive group B disease.
                 Reference
• Baley & Scott’s. 2007. Diagnostic Microbiology.
  Twelfth edition. Mosby Elseiver.
• Goering RV, Dockrell, Zuckerman M, Chiodini PL.
  2019. Mims Medical Microbiology and Immunology.
  Sixth Edition. Elsevier. China. Page 189-213.
• Todar online textbook