Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae...

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Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma

Transcript of Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae...

Page 1: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma

Page 2: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Family: Mycoplasmataceae

• Genus: Mycoplasma– Species: M. pneumoniae– Species: M. hominis– Species: M. genitalium

• Genus: Ureaplasma– Species: U. urealyticum

Page 3: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Organism Disease

M. pneumoniae Upper respiratory tract disease,tracheobronchitis, atypicalpneumonia, (chronic asthma??)

M. hominis Pyleonephritis, pelvicinflammatory disease,postpartum fever

M. genitalium Nongonococcal urethritis

U. urealyticum Nongonococcal urethritis,(pneumonia and chronic lungdisease in premature infants??)

Diseases Caused by Mycoplasma

N.B. Other organisms infect humans but their disease association is not known.

Page 4: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Morphology and Physiology

• Smallest free-living bacteria (0.2 - 0.8 m)

• Small genome size

– Require complex media for growth

• Facultative anaerobes

– Except M. pneumoniae - strict aerobe

• Lack a cell wall

• Grow slowly by binary fission• “Fried egg” colonies

– M. pneumoniae colonies have a granular appearance

Page 5: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

“Fried Egg” Colonies of Mycoplasmas

Page 6: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Morphology and Physiology

• Smallest free-living bacteria

• Small genome size

– Require complex media for growth

• Facultative anaerobes

– Except M.. pneumoniae - strict aerobe

• Lack a cell wall

• Grow slowly by binary fission

• “Fried egg” colonies

• Ureaplasma - T strains

• Require sterols for growth

Page 7: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Differentiation of Species

• M. pneumoniae - glucose

• M. hominis - arginine

• U. urealyticum - urea

• M. genitalium - difficult to culture

Page 8: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Pathogenesis - Mycoplasma• Adherence

– P1 pili (M. pneumoniae)

– Movement of cilia ceases

– Clearance mechanism stops resulting in cough

• Toxic metabolic products– Peroxide and superoxide

– Inhibition of catalase

• Immunopathogenesis– Activate macrophages

– Stimulate cytokine production

• Suprerantigen (M. pneumoniae)

Page 9: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Mycoplasma pneumoniae

• Tracheobronchitis

• Atypical pneumonia (walking pneumonia)

Page 10: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae

• Occurs worldwide

• No seasonal variation– Proportionally

higher in summer and fall

• Epidemics occur every 4-8 year

Page 11: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae• Spread by aerosol route (Confined populations)• Disease of the young (5-20 years), although all ages are at risk

Page 12: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae

• Estimated pneumonia in USA per year – 2 million

• Estimated respiratory disease in USA per year – 20 million

• Non-reportable disease

Page 13: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Clinical Syndrome - M. pneumoniae

• Tracheobronchitis– 70-80% of infections

• Pneumonia– Approximately 10% of infections

• Mild disease but long duration

• “Primary atypical pneumonia”

• “Walking pneumonia”

Page 14: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Clinical Syndrome - M. pneumoniae

• Incubation - 2-3 weeks

• Fever, headache and malaise

• Persistent non-productive cough

• Respiratory symptoms– Radiological signs

precede symptoms

• Organisms persist

• Slow resolution

• Rarely fatal

Page 15: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Immunity - M. pneumoniae

• Complement activation– Alternative pathway

• Phagocytic cells

• Antibodies– IgA important

• Delayed type hypersensitivity– More severe disease (immunopathogenesis)

Page 16: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae

• Microscopy– Difficult to stain– Can help eliminate other organisms

• Culture (definitive diagnosis)– Sputum (usually scant) or throat washings– Special transport medium needed

• Must suspect M. pneumoniae

– May take 2-3 weeks

Page 17: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae

• Serology– Complement fixation

• May take 4-6 weeks

• Fourfold rise in titer

– Cold agglutinins • 1/3 - 2/3 of patients

• I antigen

• Appear first

• Non-specific

• Presumptive diagnosis

– ELISA• Not commercially

available

Page 18: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae

• Molecular diagnosis– PCR-based tests are being developed and these are expected to

be the diagnostic test of choice in the future.

Page 19: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

Treatment and PreventionM. pneumoniae

• Treatment – Tetracycline or erythromycin

• Newer fluoroquinolones

– Can’t use cell wall synthesis inhibitors

• Prevention– Avoid close contact– No vaccine

Page 20: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

M. hominis, M. genitalium andU. urealyticum

• Clinical syndromes– M. hominis - pyleonephritis, pelvic inflammatory

disease and postpartum fever

– M. genitalium - nongonococcal urethritis

– U. urealyticum - nongonococcal urethritis

• Epidemiology– Colonization at birth - usually cleared

– Colonization with M. hominis - 15%

– Colonization with U. urealyticum - 45% -75%

– Colonization with M. genitalium - ??

Page 21: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma. Family: Mycoplasmataceae Genus: Mycoplasma –Species: M. pneumoniae –Species: M. hominis –Species: M. genitalium Genus: Ureaplasma.

M. hominis, M. genitalium and U. urealyticum

• Laboratory diagnosis– Culture (except M. genitalium)

• Treatment and prevention– Treatment

• Tetracycline or erythromycin

– Prevention• Abstinence or barrier protection

• No vaccine