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Burkholderia multivorans

Several Burkholderia species have been isolated from human clinical samples, but only Burkolderia cepacia complex, B. gladioli , B. mallei and B. pseudomallei are generally recognized as human pathogens.

Taxonomy
Family: Burkholderiaceae

Burkholderia cepacia complex includes genomospecies
B. ambifaria, B. anthina, B. arboris, B. cepacia, B. cenocepacia, B. diffusa, B. dolosa, B. latens, B. metallica, B. multivorans, B. phenazinium, B. pyrrocinia, B. seminalis, B. stabilis, B. vietnamiensis

Natural habitat
They are found in water and soil and can survive for prolonged periods in moist environments.
These bacteria can act as a powerful pesticide, capable of eliminating many soil-borne plant pathogens.

Transmission
B. cepacia complex is highly transmissible between cystic fibrosis patients and can be transferred from one CF patient to another in hospitals, health clinics, and social environments.

They are a significant risk factor for morbidity and mortality in CF.

Clinical significance
B. cepacia complex has long been recognized as an occasional opportunistic human pathogen, capable of causing a variety of infections, including bacteremia, urinary tract infection, peritonitis, and pneumonia in persons with underlying illness.

Like cystic fibrosis (CF), they are particularly susceptible to infection.

Cystic fibrosis
is a genetic, life-threatening disorder that primarily affects the digestive system and the lungs.

It is a most common potentially lethal autosomal recessive disease.

Strains of B. cepacia complex are frequently associated with aggressive pneumonia that is accompanied by rapidly fatal bacteremia.(cepacia syndrome)

Burkholderia cenocepacia

Several Burkholderia species have been isolated from human clinical samples, but only Burkoldeia cepacia complex, B. gladioli , B. mallei and B. pseudomallei are generally recognized as human pathogens.

Taxonomy
Family: Burkholderiaceae

Burkholderia cepacia complex includes genomospecies
B. ambifaria, B. anthina, B. arboris, B. cepacia, B. cenocepacia, B. diffusa, B. dolosa, B. latens, B. metallica, B. multivorans, B. phenazinium, B. pyrrocinia, B. seminalis, B. stabilis, B. vietnamiensis

Natural habitat
They are found in water and soil and can survive for prolonged periods in moist environments.
These bacteria can act as a powerful pesticide, capable of eliminating many soil-borne plant pathogens.

Transmission
B. cepacia complex is highly transmissible between cystic fibrosis patients and can be transferred from one CF patient to another in hospitals, health clinics, and social environments.

They are a significant risk factor for morbidity and mortality in CF.

Clinical significance
B. cepacia complex has long been recognized as an occasional opportunistic human pathogen, capable of causing a variety of infections, including bacteremia, urinary tract infection, peritonitis, and pneumonia in persons with underlying illness.

Like cystic fibrosis (CF), they are particularly susceptible to infection.

Cystic fibrosis
is a genetic, life-threatening disorder that primarily affects the digestive system and the lungs.
It is a most common potentially lethal autosomal recessive disease.

Strains of B. cepacia complex are frequently associated with aggressive pneumonia that is accompanied by rapidly fatal bacteremia. (cepacia syndrome)

Burkholderia cepacia

Several Burkholderia species have been isolated from human clinical samples, but only Burkoldeia cepacia complex, B. gladioli , B. mallei and B. pseudomallei are generally recognized as human pathogens.

Taxonomy
Family: Burkholderiaceae

Burkholderia cepacia complex includes genomospecies
B. ambifaria, B. anthina, B. arboris, B. cepacia, B. cenocepacia, B. diffusa, B. dolosa, B. latens, B. metallica, B. multivorans, B. phenazinium, B. pyrrocinia, B. seminalis, B. stabilis, B. vietnamiensis

Natural habitat
They are found in water and soil and can survive for prolonged periods in moist environments.
These bacteria can act as a powerful pesticide, capable of eliminating many soil-borne plant pathogens.

Transmission
B. cepacia complex is highly transmissible between cystic fibrosis patients, CF, and can be transferred from one CF patient to another in hospitals, health clinics, and social environments.

They are a significant risk factor for morbidity and mortality in CF.

Clinical significance
B. cepacia complex has long been recognized as an occasional opportunistic human pathogen, capable of causing a variety of infections, including bacteremia, urinary tract infection, peritonitis, and pneumonia in persons with underlying illness.

Like cystic fibrosis (CF), they are particularly susceptible to infection.

Cystic fibrosis
is a genetic, life-threatening disorder that primarily affects the digestive system and the lungs.

It is a most common potentially lethal autosomal recessive disease.

Strains of B. cepacia complex are frequently associated with aggressive pneumonia that is accompanied by rapidly fatal bacteremia.(cepacia syndrome)

Brucella melitensis

Brucella cultures should be handled using BSL-3 practices, with culture manipulations being done in a biological safety cabinet.

General information
Brucella from Sir David Bruce (1855-1931), microbiologist in Australia and England.

Brucellosis continues to be one of the most common laboratory-acquired infections.

Practices associated with transmission in the laboratory include unprotecting handling of specimens, sniffing of plates, mouth pipetting and exposure of the eyes, nose, or mouth to infectious aerosols.

Taxonomy
Family: Brucellaceae

Natural habitats
Brucella are facultative intracellular parasites, taking as their natural habitat a variety of animal species.

Human pathogen in order of decreasing virulence

B. melitensis - Malta fever sheep, goats, alpacas and camel
B. suis - Brucellosis pigs, swine, reindeer and caribou
B. abortus - Bang's disease cattle, camels, buffalo, yaks and horses
B. canis - Brucellosis dogs

Malditof knows only B. melitensis

Clinical significance

Transmission from human to human is very rare

Brucellosis
Although the disease can begin acutely, the beginning is usually insidious and is characterized by slight fever without local symptoms.
The fever is irregular and is accompanied with complaints of headache, malaise, fatigue, sweating and joint problems.

They can live intracellular and invade a variety of tissues.

Incubation period of 1 week to 2-3 months.

Sometimes it proceeds acutely with wavy fever (febris undulans).
They spread into the bloodstream and localize in the liver, spleen, bone and other tissues and form granulomas there.
Are therefore difficult to reach for the immune system and antibiotics.

Complications include bacterial endocarditis, nephritis, meningoencephalitis and orchitis.

The fatality rate is <1% and is mainly associated with the occurrence of bacterial endocarditis.

In non-zoonotic areas the infection proceeds possibly exacerbated by doctor's delay, probably due to a slower running diagnostics because the disease is low in the differential diagnosis.

Serology
Usually the diagnosis is established by serological testing.
Practical nature of the reasons are: it can take up to 4 weeks before a culture is positive and in practice, the patient is often already used antibiotics, so the culture is useless.

Bordetella pertussis

Taxonomy
Family: Alcaligenaceae

Natural habitats
B. pertussis is thought to be a strictly human pathogen
The bacterium is spread by airborne droplets, its incubation period is 7-14 days.

Clinical significance
B. pertussis cause pertussis, or whooping cough.

Pertussis (or whooping cough)
is an infection of the respiratory system characterized by a “whooping” sound when the person breathes in.

B. pertussis continues to circulate in population where high vaccination coverage of infants and children is achieved, because the protection induced after natural infection and vaccination decreases after several years.

Pertussis is most dangerous in infants, and most hospitalizations and death occur in this age group.
The signs and symptoms are similar to a common cold; running nose, sneezing, mild cough, and low-grade fever.
The patient becomes more contagious during the catarral stage of infection, normally two weeks after the coughing begins.

It may become airborne when the persons cough, sneezes, or laughs.

The cough is a crowing inspiratory sound characteristic of pertussis. After a spell, the patient might make a “whooping” sound when breathing in, or may vomit.

Adults have milder symptoms, such as prolonged coughing without the “whoop”.
Infants less than six month also may not have the typical whoop.

A coughing spell may last a minute or more, producing cyanosis, apnoea, and seizures.

When not in a coughing fit, the patient does not experience trouble breathing.

oxidase positive