Corynebacterium ulcerans

Corynebacterium ulcerans is a rod-shaped, aerobic, and gram-positive bacteria. Most Corynebacterium are harmless but some cause serious illness in humans, especially in immunocompromised humans. C. ulcerans has been known to cause diphtheria and diphtheria-like infections in patients. Previously thought to simply be contaminants recovered from diphtheria patients, “coryneform” or “diphtheroids” are now believed to be the cause of such infections.[1]

Corynebacterium ulcerans
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Subclass:
Order:
Suborder:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
C. ulcerans
Binomial name
Corynebacterium ulcerans
Riegel, et al. 1995

Disease

Increasingly over the past few decades, C. ulcerans has been recognized as an emerging pathogen in over six countries across the globe including the United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan.[2] C. diphtheriae is the causative agent of classical diphtheria, and C. ulcerans has been found to carry the same gene that codes for the diphtheria toxin.[2] After swabbing lesions on a 53-year-old woman in Germany who experienced swelling of her pharynx and who developed a whitish pseudomembrane, doctors were able to grow C. ulcerans.[2] This made it the first documented case of classical diphtheria caused by C. ulcerans in Germany.

C. ulcerans can also cause zoonotic infections.[3] In 2003, A 47-year-old woman in Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France was admitted to the intensive care unit for labored breathing. It was found that as a result of a kidney graft received the previous year, the patient was immunocompromised and vulnerable to C. ulcerans, which was found growing from a swab of her throat. After many tests, it was concluded that the patient had contracted the disease from her dog, which was found to have chronic labial ulcerations that provided an easy way to transmit the bacteria to the patient.[4]

In addition to classical diphtheria, C. ulcerans can also cause skin infections that resemble classical cutaneous diphtheria as a result of production of the diphtheria toxin.[5] By contracting this skin infection, patients become more vulnerable to contracting other bacteria that exist naturally in the patient's environment that can cause life-threatening diseases.

Treatment

Patients who contract diphtheria and diphtheria-like symptoms as a result of C. ulcerans require treatment with diphtheria antitoxin and antibiotics.[6] Surgery and other more extreme measures must be taken if not treated immediately.

gollark: Some of the time it's actually just an AI designed to occasionally post memes, answer/complain about very simple questions and talk about potatOS.
gollark: Bold of you to assume I actually have a job, let alone one in which I interact with the horrors of Windows.
gollark: Download them in advance, I mean, if I actually needed to use Windows.
gollark: If I particularly wanted to I could just download multiple ISOs and select which one to use when necessary.
gollark: I can just use my phone for that, there are a bunch of apps to allow your (rooted, Android) phone to act as a USB mass storage device.

References

  1. Bernar, Kathryn (2012). "The Genus Corynebacterium and Other Medically Relevant Coryneform-Like Bacteria". Journal of Clinical Microbiology. 50 (10): 3152–8. doi:10.1128/JCM.00796-12. PMC 3457441. PMID 22837327.
  2. Sing, A; Bierschenk, S; Heesemann, J (2005). "Classical Diphtheria Caused by Corynebacterium ulcerans in Germany: Amino Acid Sequence Differences between Diphtheria Toxins from Corynebacterium diphtheriae and C. ulcerans". Clinical Infectious Diseases. 40 (2): 325–326. doi:10.1086/426687. PMID 15655760.
  3. Hogg, R. A.; Wessels, J; Hart, J; Efstratiou, A; De Zoysa, A; Mann, G; Allen, T; Pritchard, G. C. (2009). "Possible zoonotic transmission of toxigenic Corynebacterium ulcers from companion animals in a human case of fatal diphtheria". Veterinary Record. 165 (23): 691–692. doi:10.1136/vr.165.23.691 (inactive 2020-01-22). PMID 19966333.
  4. Lartigue, M. F.; Monnet, X; Le Flèche, A; Grimont, P. A.; Benet, J. J.; Durrbach, A; Fabre, M; Nordmann, P (2005). "Corynebacterium ulcerans in an Immunocompromised Patient with Diphtheria and Her Dog". Journal of Clinical Microbiology. 43 (2): 999–1001. doi:10.1128/JCM.43.2.999-1001.2005. PMC 548063. PMID 15695729.
  5. Wagner, Jutta; Ignatius, Ralf; Voss, Stefan; Höpfner, Volker; Ehlers, Stefan; Funke, Guido; Weber, Ulrich; Hahn, Helmut (2001). "Infection of the Skin Caused by Corynebacterium ulcerans and Mimicking Classical Cutaneous Diphtheria". Clinical Infectious Diseases. 33 (9): 1598–600. doi:10.1086/322969. PMID 11568853.
  6. "Notes from the Field: Respiratory Diphtheria-Like Illness Caused by Toxigenic Corynebacterium ulcerans --- Idaho, 2010". 28 January 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.