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Medical Microbiology Overview

The document discusses various aspects of medical microbiology with a focus on Staphylococcus aureus including its classification, morphology, virulence factors, laboratory identification tests like Gram stain, catalase, coagulase and DNase tests. Practical laboratory methods are also described for identifying S. aureus such as culturing on mannitol salt agar and performing the coagulase test using both the tube and slide methods.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
341 views22 pages

Medical Microbiology Overview

The document discusses various aspects of medical microbiology with a focus on Staphylococcus aureus including its classification, morphology, virulence factors, laboratory identification tests like Gram stain, catalase, coagulase and DNase tests. Practical laboratory methods are also described for identifying S. aureus such as culturing on mannitol salt agar and performing the coagulase test using both the tube and slide methods.

Uploaded by

mdsajidaali
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Practical Medical Microbiology

PHT382
By

Dr. Mohamed Al-Agamy


Assistant Professor of Microbiology
Department of Pharmaceutics & Microbiology
College of Pharmacy
King Saud University
Medical Microbiology

Infectious
Microorganisms

Bacteria Fungi Virus


"Bacteriology" "Mycology" "Virology"
Medical Bacteriology

Bacteria

Mycoplasma
I- Gram II- Gram Chalamydia
III- Acid fast
positive negative Rickettsia
Spirochetes
Classification of Bacteria

Bacteria

Gram-Positive Gram-negative
Gram-Positive Bacteria
I- Gram Positive bacteria

A- Gram positive cocci B- Gram positive rods

Non spore-forming
Spore-forming
Corynebacterium

Aerobic Anaerobic
Bacillus anthracis Clostridium
Gram-Positive Cocci

A- Gram-positive
cocci

I- staphylococci II- streptococci


Species of
Satphylococci

Three species of staphyloccoci have medical


importance:
– S. aureus: Pathogenic & commensally found in
nose (nares)
 S. epidermidis: non pathogenic & common
commensals in nares & skin
 S. saprophyticus: Cause UTI in female &
occasionally commensally found skin
Staphylococci

General characters:
– Gram Positive Cocci
Characters of S. aureus
– Grape-like – Production of coagulase
– Non Motile – Production of phosphatase
– Non Spore Forming – Production of DNase
– Ferment Mannitol
– Non Capsulated
– Gelatin liquefied
– Non Fastidious – Β-hemolysis on blood agar
– Facultative Anaerobes – Acidification & clotting of
litmus milk
– Fermentative
– Catalase positive
Gram stain of Staphylococcus
Virulence factors of S. aureus
Coagulase:
– Converting fibrinogen into fibrin
Exofoliative toxin:
– Desquamation of skin in case of exofoliative dermatitis in SSSS
TSST:
– Fever, hypotension, & skin rash followed by desquamation of skin
Leucocytes
– Kills WBCs
Polysaccharide A and Protein A
– Antiphagocytic and Adhesion
Enterotoxins (A,B,C,D, & E)
– Food poisoning (Diarrhea, and Vomiting)
Hyaluronidase
– Destroy hyaluronic acid (constituent of connective tissues)
,, and  Toxins
– Destroy variety of cells (Polymorph)
Disease caused by S. aureus
Localized suppurartive (Pyogenic) inflammation:
– Folliculitis Infection of hair follicles
– Furuncle Infection of an obstructed hair follicle
– Carbuncle Larger abscess
– Deep Lesions (Osteomyelitis, Endocarditis & Meningitis)
Toxigenic infection
– Scalded Skin Syndrome (SSS)
– Toxic Shock Syndrome
Food poisoning
– Nausea, Vomiting, Diarrhea without Fever within 8 h after
ingestion of toxins in the contaminated food
Laboratory diagnosis of
Staphylococcus
Specimen:
– Pus, Urine, Stool, Blood, CSF
Gram Stain:
– Gram Positive Cocci, arranged in cluster
Culture:
– Blood agar (Non-Selective Media)
Coagulase Positive Staphylococci are Pigmented & hemolytic
Coagulase Negative Staphylococci are non-pigmented & non-
hemolytic
MSA is selective differential medium for staphylococci
– It contains: NaCl (7.5%), Mannitol, & Phenol Red
– The cause of selectivity due to presence of high salt
concentration
– The cause of differential because contains mannitol
(sugar) and phenol red (pH indicators turns yellow in
acidic pH and turns red in alkaline pH).

Mannitol fermentation on MSA

Mannitol fermented Mannitol nonfermenter


Yellow colonies: Red colonies:
S. aureus S. epidermidis& S.
saprophyticus
Catalase test
The catalase test is distinguished streptococci from
staphylococci
flood culture with drops of 3% H2O2
Catalase-positive cultures bubble at once

Catalase
H2O2 H2O + O2 (gas, ↑)
Staphylococci

The test should not be done on blood agar because


blood itself will produce bubbles
Catalase test

Positive Negative
Microcococcaceae Streptococcaceae
Staphylococci Streptococci
Coagulase Test
Principle:
This test used to differentiate between S. aureus (CPS)
& other Staphylococcus species (CNS)

Fibrinogen Coagulase Fibrin


(Plasma) )Clot(

Coagulase test

Coagulase Positive Coagulase-Negative


Staphylococus aureus S. epidermidis & S. saprophyticus
Coagulase Test
The tube coagulase test
(Free):
Procedure:
– Mix 0.1 ml of culture + 0.5 ml of plasma
– Incubate at 37C for 4 h
– Observing the tube for clot formation
– Any degree of clotting constitutes a
positive test
Advantage
– More accurate
Disadvantage S. aureus S. epidermidis
– Time consumed
Coagulase Test
Two Methods:
– The slide Method
– Tube Method
The slide coagulase test
– Used to detect bound coagulase or clumping factor
– Add one drop heavy bacterial suspension and one drop of plasma on
clean slide
– Mixing well and observing for clumping within 10 seconds
Advantage
– Rapid diagnosis
Disadvantage
– Less accurate
Deoxyribonuclease (DNAase) test
DNase test

Positive Negative
Staphylococus aureus S. epidermidis & S. saprophyticus

Principle:
– DNA is insoluble in acid
– DNA is hydrolyzed into oligonucleotides by the
action of DNase
– Nucleotides soluble in acid
DNase Test
Procedure & result:
– Inoculate DNA agar with tested organism in circular motion
– Incubate at 37C for 24-48h
– Observe DNase activity by adding 1N HCl to the agar surface, a zone of clearing
indicates a positive test
– The zone represents the absence of DNA
– The medium around colonies not producing DNase remains opaque, which is a
reflection of the precipitation of DNA by the added acid.
Novobiocin Sensitivity

Novobiocin test

Sensitive Resistant
S. aureus
S. saprophyticus
S. epidermidis

A simple disk diffusion test for estimating novobiocin susceptibility


used to distinguish S. saprophyticus from other clinically species
Inoculated overnight culture on Mueller-Hinton agar
Add novobiocin disk on inoculated plate
Incubate at 370C overnight
Novobiocin resistance is intrinsic to S. saprophyticus but
uncommon in other clinically important species.
Preparation of Smear and Staining

Gram Stain
– Primary Dye (C.V.)
Preparation of smear – Mordant (iodine)
– Solid culture – Decolorizer (Alcohol)
– Liquid culture – Counterstain (Safranin)
– Distribute culture in slide – All applied for 1 min
– Air dry – After each step wash with
water
– Heat fix
– Blot dry
– Ready to stain
– Add one drop of immersion oil
– Examine under oil immersion
lens
Practical Work

Gram stain
Catalase test
Mannitol fermentation on MSA
Coagulase Test by Tube and Slide Method
DNAase Test

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