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Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum • The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 • Rare but important if not treated • Living example-Karen Bahr the Biology Department Administrative Assistant

Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

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Page 1: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Microbe of the WeekMycobacterium marinum

• The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962

• Rare but important if not treated

• Living example-Karen Bahr the Biology Department Administrative Assistant

Page 2: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Mycobacterium marinum Infection

• Commonly found in aquariums and infected fish, reptiles or amphibians

• Never transmitted from an infected human to another human

Page 3: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

How do I get the Infection?

• ・ when in contact with water from an aquarium or fish tank

• when handling, cleaning, or processing fish

• while swimming or working in fresh or salt water.

Page 4: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Mycobacterium marinuminfection

• Contracted when small cuts or abrasions exposed to aquarium water or fish amphibians etc

• Usually results in superficial nodulars or ulcerated lesions on hands and fingers in the case of aquarium transmission

• Swimming pool transmission same symptoms on elbows, knees and feet.

Page 5: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

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Mycobacterium marinumInfection

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 6: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Mycobacterium marinumDiagnosis

• Hardest part is the diagnosis. Difficult to culture using normal diagnostic media and incubation temperature and often goes undiagnosed for long periods

• Culture on Mycobacterium medium called Lowenstein-Jensen or LJ at 32C. Will not grow at 37C

• It is photochromogenic which means it produces a pigment when exposed to light thus this is diagnostic

Page 7: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Mycobacterium marinumDiagnosis

• After culturing do an acid fast stain and then antibiotic susceptibility

Page 8: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Mycobacterium marinumTreatment

• Surgical aspiration often done• Antibiotic treatment often for 2-12

months. • Minocycline combined with

rifampin(rifamicin). Most potent rifamycins +clarithromycin

• Wound dressing often silver based with collagen

Page 9: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Mycobacterium marinumPrognosis

• Excellent recovery if treated with antibiotics and surgery

• If untreated can lead to death

Page 10: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

MICROBE OF THE WEEK

• Infection usually results because of antibiotic therapy which disturbs normal bacterial flora of colon.

• Cause- C. difficile releases 2 toxins, A and B. A is an enterotoxin and B is a cytotoxin. Both bind to receptors on the intestinal mucal cells compromising fluid absorption + retention

Page 11: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

MICROBE OF THE WEEKClostridium difficile

• Disposition to: Hospitalization, antibiotic therapy, Age (elderly). Most common antibiotics implicated are chephalosorins, ampicillin/amoxicillin and clindamycin

• Mechanism: Spores of bacteria prevalent in hospitals. Ingestion or surgical contamination of patient. Spores germinate in colon and colonize producing toxins.

Page 12: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

MICROBE OF THE WEEK

• Symptoms. Mild to moderate watery diarrhea(rarely bloody)

cramping, anorexia, fever, dehydration, abdominal tenderness.

Diagnosis. Conclusive diagnosis depends on detection of toxin in stool. Fibroblast tissue culture-24-48h(94-100%). Commercial enzyme immunoassay kits (69-87%). Less sensitive but very quick (hours)

Page 13: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

MICROBE OF THE WEEK

• Treatment. Usually Vancomycin or Metronidazole. Organism is very susceptible to vancomycin. It is resistant to cephalosporins, ampicillin/amoxicillin, and clindamycin and aminoglycosides.

• Support therapy. Hydration.

Page 14: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

MICROBE OF THE WEEK

HELICOBACTER PYLORI AND PEPTIC ULCERS

95% of peptic ulcers and gastritis

Also correlation between infection and gastric cancer

Page 15: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Helicobacter pylori

Gram negative spirocheteColonizes gastric mucous secreting cells

•Grown best under microaerophilic conditions

•Causes disease via urease, proteases and phospholipase combined with a cell mediated immune response

•50% of world population infected

Page 16: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Helicobacter pylori

Gram negative spirocheteColonizes gastric mucous secreting cells

•Grown best under microaerophilic conditions

•Causes disease via urease, proteases and phospholipase combined with a cell mediated immune response

•50% of world population infected

Page 17: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Helicobacter pylori

Gram negative spirocheteColonizes gastric mucous secreting cells

•Grown best under microaerophilic conditions

•Causes disease via urease, proteases and phospholipase combined with a cell mediated immune response

•50% of world population infected

Page 18: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Helicobacter pylori

Identification • a biopsy with subsequent culture • breath test for urea • stool antigen assays •urease detection in biopsy

Page 19: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Helicobacter Pylori

Treatment •PeptoBismol combined with metronidazole and tetracycline or amoxicillin

Page 20: Microbe of the Week Mycobacterium marinum The aquarium or fish tank disease,first reported in 1962 Rare but important if not treated Living example-Karen

Helicobacter pylori