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BACTERIAL enterocolitis • Ingestion of bacterial toxins – Staph – Vibrio – Clostridium • Ingestion of bacteria which produce toxins Montezuma’s revenge (traveller’s diarrhea), E.coli • Infection by enteroinvasive bacteria Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) – Shigella Clostridium difficile

BACTERIAL enterocolitis

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BACTERIAL enterocolitis. Ingestion of bacterial toxins Staph Vibrio Clostridium Ingestion of bacteria which produce toxins Montezuma’s revenge (traveller’s diarrhea), E.coli Infection by enteroinvasive bacteria Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) Shigella Clostridium difficile. E. coli. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

BACTERIAL enterocolitis• Ingestion of bacterial toxins– Staph– Vibrio– Clostridium

• Ingestion of bacteria which produce toxins– Montezuma’s revenge (traveller’s diarrhea), E.coli

• Infection by enteroinvasive bacteria– Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)– Shigella– Clostridium difficile

Page 2: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

E. coli• Toxin, invasion, many subtypes• Food, water, person-to-person• Usually watery, some hemorrhagic• INFANTS often, in epidemics

Page 3: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

SALMONELLAFood, not hemorrhagic

SHIGELLA(person-to-person, invasive, i.e.,

often hemorrhagic)

Page 4: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

CAMPLYOBACTER• Toxins, Invasion

• Food spread

Page 5: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

YERSINIA (enterocolitica)

• Food• Invasion• LYMPHOID REACTION

Page 6: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

VIBRIO cholerae

• Water, fish, person-to-person• Cholera epidemics• NO invasion (watery)• ENTEROTOXIN

Page 7: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE

• CYTOTOXIN (lab test readily available)• NOSOCOMIAL• PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS (ANTIBIOTIC

ASSOCIATED) COLITIS

Page 8: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

MALABSORPTION• INTRALUMINAL• BRUSH BORDER (microvilli)• (TRANS)EPITHELIAL• OTHER– REDUCED MUCOSAL AREA: Celiac, Crohns– LYMPHATIC OBSTRUCTION: Lymphoma, TB– INFECTION– IATROGENIC: Surgical

Page 9: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

INTRALUMINAL• PANCREATIC• DEFECTIVE/REDUCED BILE• BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH

Page 10: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

BRUSH BORDER• DISACCHARIDASE DEFICIENCY• BRUSH BORDER DAMAGE, e.g., by bacteria

Page 11: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

(Trans)EPITHELIAL• ABETALIPOPROTEINEMIA• BILE ACID TRANSPORTATION DEFECTS

Page 12: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

CELIAC DISEASE

• Also called SPRUE• Also called NON-tropical SPRUE• Also called GLUTEN-SENSITIVE ENTEROPATHY– Sensitivity to GLUTEN, a wheat protein, gliadin– Immobilizes T-cells– Also in oat, barley, rye– Progressive mucosal “atrophy”, i.e. villous flattening– Relieved by gluten withdrawal

Page 13: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

CELIAC DISEASE

Page 14: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

“TROPICAL” SPRUE

• Epidemic forms• NOT related to gluten, cause UN-known• RECOVERY with antibiotics

Page 15: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

WHIPPLE’s DISEASE

• DISTENDED MACROPHAGES in the LAMINA PROPRIA

• PAS positive• ROD SHAPED BACILLI

Page 16: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

WHIPPLE’s DISEASE

Page 17: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

DISACCHARIDASE DEFICIENCY

• LACTASE by far MOST COMMON• ACQUIRED, NOT CONGENITAL• LACTOSE GLUCOSE + GALACTOSE • LACTOSE (fermented)XXXXXXXXX• OSMOTIC DIARRHEA

Page 18: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

ABETALIPOPROTEINEMIA

• Autosomal recessive• Rare• Inability to make chylomicrons from FFAs

and MONOGLYCERIDES• Infant failure to thrive, diarrhea,

steatorrhea

Page 19: BACTERIAL enterocolitis

ANGIODYSPLASIA• NOT really “dysplasia”• NOT neoplastic• TWISTED, DILATED SUBMUCOSAL VESSELS, can

rupture!• Common X-ray finding