Opportunistic gastrointestinal pathogens

Mohammad Sourav Islam
Mohammad Sourav IslamMicrobiologist en BSMMU
Opportunistic Gastrointestinal
Pathogens
Introduction
What is Opportunistic Infection?
Opportunistic infections are infections caused by pathogens that
exploit a weakened immune system. These infections primarily affect
individuals with compromised immune function.
Risk factors
HIV/AIDS
Cancer Chemotherapy
Bone marrow suppression
Antibiotic treatment leading to disruption
of the physiological microbiome
Organ transplant patients
Pregnancy
Genetic predisposition
Microbial agents causing opportunistic
infections
Bacterial agents:
• Campylobacter jejuni
• Helicobacter spp.
• Clostridium difficile
• E. coli
• Aeromonas spp.
• Plesiomonas spp
• Mycobacterium tuberculosis
• Non-tubercular mycobacterium
Viral agents
• Herpes virus family: Cytomegalovirus, Herpes simplex,
HHV-8, HHV-6
• Adenovirus
• Enterovirus
• Astrovirus
• Norovirus
Fungal agents
• Candida spp
• Histoplasma capsulatum
Parasitic agents
• Cryptosporidium parvum
• Isospora belli
• Cyclospora cayetanensis
• Giardia lamblia
• Strongyloides stercoralis
• Entamoeba histolytica
• Trichuris trichiura
• Ascaris lumbricoides
Bacterial agents
Campylobacter jejuni
Contd…
• Most common disease is acute enteritis, with diarrhoea,
fever, and abdominal pain
• Factors that decrease or neutralize gastric acid secretion
favour disease
• GI disease characteristically produces histologic damage
to the mucosal surface of the duodenum
Diagnosis
 Specimen:
1. Diarrheal stool- preferred sample
2. Rectal swab
 Microscopic examination:
 Gram-staining: Comma shape/ “Gull-wing” appearance
 Dark-field microscopy- darting movement
 Culture:
Skirrow’s media- colorless or gray dew-drop colony
 Biochemical:
 Oxidase +ve
 Catalase +ve
 Urease -ve
Helicobacter spp.
• Small, Spiral shape, Gram-negative, micro-aerophilic rods
• Highly motile with cork-screw movement
• Multiple, sheathed polar flagella
• Feco-oral and person-to-person spread occur
Virulence factors
Symptoms of H. pylori infection
Lab diagnosis
 Specimen:
 Endoscopic biopsy from multiple sites including healthy
tissue surrounding ulcers
 Specimen should be fresh, not delayed >3 hours
 Kept in 1-3 mL isotonic saline for culture and formalin for
histopathology
 Invasive test:
 Histopathology
 Rapid urease test
 Culture
 PCR
 Non-invasive test:
 Serological test- ELISA,
ICT, LAT
 Urea breath test
 Antigen detection in stool
(HPSA test)
Clostridium difficile
• Anaerobic, motile, Gram-negative bacteria, ubiquitous in nature,
and especially prevalent in soil
• May colonize the human colon without symptom; approximately 2–
5% of the adult population are carriers
• The use of systemic antibiotics, including broad-spectrum
penicillins/cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, and clindamycin,
causes the normal microbiota of the bowel to be altered
Opportunistic gastrointestinal pathogens
Laboratory diagnosis
 Colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy- (pseudomembranous colitis)
 LAT to detect antigens in stool
 Cytotoxic assay to detect cytotoxicity of toxin B
 ELISA for toxin A and B
 PCR
 M. tuberculosis may cause extrapulmonary disease affecting the GI tract
as a result of disseminated disease or primary intestinal involvement
 The most common mycobacterial infections causing GI disease in the
compromised host are those caused by Mycobacterium avium-
intracellulare complex (MAC).
 Gastric ulceration, enterocolitis, enteric fistulae, and intra-abdominal
abscess and hemorrhage are common manifestations of disseminated
MAC
M. Tuberculosis & NTM
 The most common sites are the ileocecal and jejuni-ileum sites,
and less commonly include the esophagus, stomach, and
duodenum
 Patients may have signs suggestive of acute appendicitis or
intestinal obstruction and can have rectal lesions presenting as
perirectal abscess, fistulae, or fissures
Lab Diagnosis
Culture & Microscopy
 Z-N stain, Auramin/ Rhodamin stain
 Lowenstein-Jensen media, Middle
brook media
Immunological & Molecular
 Gene Xpert
 QuantiFERON-TB Gold test
 PCR
Specimen: Biopsy from endoscopy & colonoscopy, blood, ascetic fluid
Other supportive investigations
 Plain X-ray abdomen
 Sonography of abdomen
 CT scan abdomen
 ADA
Opportunistic gastrointestinal pathogens
Herpes virus family
 Herpes-simplex virus can cause esophagitis in HIV infected
patients and solid-organ transplant patients
 It is usually seen in the oropharynx in patients receiving bone
marrow transplants. There may be vesicles and punched-out
ulcerations with an adherent pseudomembrane
 Epstein-Barr virus associated post-transplant lymphoproliferative
disorder (PTLD) may have a GI component; the clinical
presentation of which may include GI bleeding, obstruction, and
perforation
 HHV-6 has been reported to cause colitis in patients following
renal transplant and is suggested as an etiologic agent of gastro-
duodenal disease and colitis following stem cell transplantation
 Human herpes virus (HHV)-8, associated with Kaposi’s sarcoma,
may cause gastritis as a complication of primary skin disease
 Varicella-zoster virus is a less common cause of GI disease in
the compromised host, and may cause esophagitis and
enterocolitis
Cytomegalovirus
 Cytomegalovirus is by far the most common viral agent causing GI
disease in the immunocompromised host
 It may cause esophagitis, gastritis, and enterocolitis.
 CMV enterocolitis is common in advanced HIV, solid-organ, bone-
marrow and HSCT recipients, and common-variable
immunodeficiency
 Esophagitis may occur in <5% to 10% of patients with AIDS
 The most common site affected is the colon, occasionally
affecting more than one GI site and sometimes becoming
disseminated
 Norovirus is the most common cause of gastroenteritis
 Infection is characterized by non-bloody diarrhea, vomiting, and
stomach pain. Fever or headaches may also occur
 The virus is usually spread by the fecal-oral route, through
contaminated food or water or person-to-person contact
 It is commonly associated with infection and gastroenteritis in
both immunocompromised as well as immunocompetents
Noro viruses
 It is potentially causing more significant disease in compromised
individuals
 The characteristics of norovirus illness include persistent diarrhea
with prolonged viral shedding, particularly in immunosuppressed
children
 Noroviruses have also been associated with chronic diarrhea in
transplant recipients
Contd…
Adenovirus
Adenovirus
 Adenovirus GIT infections often present with symptoms like
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain
 It may cause diarrhea and hemorrhagic colitis in bone-marrow
transplant patients and solid-organ transplant recipients,
particularly small-bowel
 The compromised host is susceptible to GI infection with rotavirus
and infection may be associated with prolonged diarrhea and
dehydration
 The diagnosis of viral infections of the GI tract may be
accomplished by histopathologic analysis of tissue and immunologic
and molecular methods for detection
 Adenovirus and norovirus can be detected in stool by PCR
 Among HIV patients with CMV GI disease, characteristic
inclusions of CMV by histopathologic analysis of duodenal/ rectal
biopsies were detected
Lab diagnosis of viral agents
B. Immunosuppressed patients may not mount
much of an inflammatory response to CMV
infection as seen in this biopsy. Two enlarged,
CMV-infected endothelial cells are present (arrows).
A B
A. Two infected cells (arrows) are seen: one
exhibits enlargement and the classic glassy
nuclear inclusion, and another displays subtler
features with coarse, eosinophilic cytoplasmic
inclusions
Fig: Cytomegalovirus (CMV)-infected cells (H&E stain)
 In patients with lesions in the oral cavity or esophagitis, the most
common agent herpes simplex virus (HSV) detected by direct
immunofluorescent staining of smears, culture, or molecular testing
of material from the lesions
 Testing for community-acquired viral infections, such as
adenoviruses, can be performed using commercially available
immunoassays for detection of viral antigen
 Norovirus detection is accomplished by RT-PCR assays and is
usually available in commercial-reference laboratories or
local/state public health laboratories
Fungal
Agents
• Candidiasis is caused by the yeast Candida albicans and
other Candida species
• Oral candidiasis is frequently associated with radiotherapy
and chemotherapy for treatment of solid tumors and
hematologic malignancies
• It is particularly common in HIV-positive patients with low
CD4+ T-cell counts, occurring in about 10% to 15% of
patients and associated with frequent recurrences
Candida spp.
Lab diagnosis:
Samples
• Whitish patches from the mucous membrane of the mouth
• Sputum
Method of collection
• Sterile swab
Direct examination (Microscopy)
• KOH wet mount
• Gram staining (presence of yeast cell & pseudohyphae)
Culture
• In SDA media- whitish creamy colony
Histoplasma capsulatum
• GI histoplasmosis, caused by Histoplasma capsulatum, occurs
mostly in the competent host, but risk increases in patients with
HIV and is predominant in males
• Patients receiving anti-TNF-α therapy for diseases like
inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are also at increased risk for
histoplasmosis
• The first year following solid-organ transplants is also a high
risk for histoplasmosis
Histoplasma capsulatum
• The organism may affect all sites of the GI tract, but primarily
affects the colon
• There is high mortality associated with GI histoplasmosis and
the disease is fatal in about one-fourth of cases
Lab Diagnosis:
• Histopathology: Endoscopic biopsy from affected site examined under
microscope- Intracellular yeast within macrophages
• Culture: In SDA media.
 At 25°- Slow growing, granular to cottony appearance
 At 37°- Creamy, moist yeast-like colony
 Microscopy from Culture showed- tuberculate macroconidia
 Antigen detection: By EIA
25°C 37°C
Opportunistic gastrointestinal pathogens
Cryptosporidium parvum
 Cryptosporidium parvum is a microscopic parasite that can cause
a diarrheal illness called cryptosporidiosis
 It's considered an opportunistic infection, particularly in
individuals with weakened immune systems, such as those with
HIV/AIDS or certain other underlying health conditions
 C. parvum inhabits the small intestine. It may also be found in
stomach, appendix, colon, rectum and pulmonary tree
 Involvement of sites other than small intestine like – pharynx,
stomach, large intestine and respiratory tract is quite common in
HIV positive pts
 Involvement of biliary tract can cause papillary stenosis - is a
disturbance of the sphincter of Oddi
 Obstruction of the valve can cause: pancreatic pain, jaundice
 Stool examination
 Wet mount preparation
 Modified Z-N staining
 Fluorescent staining
 IIF
 Histopathological examination
 Molecular diagnosis: PCR, Western blot
 Serodiagnosis: Antibody and antigen can be detected by ELISA
Laboratory Diagnosis
Cryptosporidium spp.
oocysts (pink arrows) in
Cryptosporidium spp.
oocysts in modified Z-N
stain
Isospora belli
 Isospora belli cause severe diarrhea in patients with AIDS, affecting
primarily the small intestine, and is often associated with severe
dehydration
 Infection and symptoms may occur 2 days after infectious oocysts
are ingested leading to destruction of intestinal epithelial cells and
causes watery diarrhea and vomiting
Laboratory diagnosis
Direct evidence
 Demonstration of transparent oocyst
in saline preparation
 Modified ZN stain
Indirect evidence
 High fecal fat content
 Charcot-Leyden crystals in
stool
A. Stool examination
A. Duodenal aspirates
 If stool examination reveals negative results, duodenal
aspirates and enterotest performed to demonstrate oocyst
Cyclospora caytanensis
 Cyclospora cayetanensis is a foodborne illness causing persistent
diarrhea in the compromised host, but usually self-limited in
competent hosts
 It causes prolong diarrhea with abdominal pain, low grade fever and
fatigue
 In patients with AIDS, symptoms may persist for as long as 12
weeks, biliary disease has also been detected in this group
 Stool examination:
 3 consecutive days sample should be screened
 Oocyst can be stained by ZN stain
 The oocyst under UV illumination, unstained oocyst are auto-fluorescent
 Histopathology:
 Acute and chronic inflammation
 Villous atrophy
 Hyperplasia of crypts
Laboratory diagnosis
 Strongyloides causes severe hyperinfection in immunosuppressed
patients
 Patients at risk include those treated with immunosuppressive drug
therapies and patients with other conditions such as leukemia,
lymphoma, and solid-organ transplants and also in HSCT
 Presence of worm and filariform larva in intestine may cause
epigastric pain, nausea, diarrhea and blood loss
Strongyloides stercoralis
 It causes intractable diarrhea with blood and mucus
 Repeated autoinfection occurs in an immunocompromised host
which leads to generate large number of worms in the intestine
and caused “Hyperinfection syndrome”
Saline mount of stool sample showing larvae of
Strongyloides stercoralis
Laboratory
Diagnosis
Microscopy
1. Dried wet mount
of stool:
Rhabditiform larva
2. Stool
concentration method
by formol ether conc.
3. Demonstration of
larva in duodenal
aspirates or jejunal
biopsies
Stool culture
1. Done when
larvae are scanty in
stools
Methods used:
-Agar plate culture
-Charcoal culture
method
Serology
1. Done using
Strongyloides or
filarial antigens
Methods used:
-Complement
fixation
-Indirect
hemagglutination
-ELISA
Blood examination
1.Peripheral eosinophilia
2. Raised serum IgE
Giardia lamblia
 Giardia lamblia infections may have a chronic course in patients
with immunodeficiencies, particularly patients with IgA
deficiency or other disorders associated with immunoglobulin
deficiencies
 Often they are asymptomatic, but in some cases, Giardia may
lead to mucus diarrhea, fat malabsorption (steatorrhea), dull
epigastric pain, belching and flatulence
In immunocompromised patients as hypogammaglobulinemia,
decreased IgA in small intestine, decreased gastric acidity or
achlorhydria
Severe manifestations
 Persistent diarrhea, steatorrhea, Fatty dyspepsia hypoproteinemia,
deficiency of fat-soluble vitamins (vit. A, D, E, K), folic acid
 Chronic malabsorption syndrome
 Stunted growth
 Cholangitis, cholecystitis jaundice Biliary colic
Laboratory
Diagnosis
Stool
examination
1.Macroscopic exam
2.Microscopic exam.
of stained pathogen
Entero test Serology
1. Antigen test:
-ELISA
-IIF test
2. Antibody detection:
-ELISA
-IIF test
Molecular test
1. DNA probe
2. PCR
Saline mount of stool sample showing
cyst of Giardia lamblia
From left to right: Entero-Test device prior to
swallowing, Entero-Test in situ(image source: Guiney
WJ et al British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology)
 E. histolytica causes enterocolitis and extraintestinal disease (liver
abscess) and may be more common in immunocompromised
patients, particularly in malnourished children
 Acute necrotizing colitis is a rare complication with high mortality
seen predominantly in developing countries
 Toxic megacolon is also a rare complication and assisociated with
corticosteroid use
Entamoeba histolytica
Lab diagnosis of intestinal
amoebiasis
Stool
examination
-Microscopy
-Macroscopy
-Iodine prep.
-Trichome stained
prep.
Stool
culture
Media used:
-NIH polygenic
-Nelson’s
-Robinson’s
Mucosal
scraping
-Wet mount
-Stained prep.
Sero-
diagnosis
-IHA
-ELISA
-LAT
Molecular
diagnosis
DNA
probe
Fig: Cyst of E. histolytica
in a concentrated wet
mount stained with
iodine
Fig: Trophozoites of E. histolytica
with ingested erythrocytes stained
with trichrome
Enteric parasites Indian World
Cryptosporidium parvum 10.8% to 82.0% 0.6% to 18.3%
Giardia spp. 2.2% to 8.3% 1.5% to 17.7%
Isospora belli 2.5% to 31.0% 0.8% to 16.0%
E. histolytica 1.7% to 7.7% 1.4% to 10.3%
Cyclospora cayatenensis 1.5% to 31.0% 0.1% to 10.0%
Table: Prevalence of opportunistic enteric parasites in HIV-infected
patients- Indian and world scenario
Opportunistic gastrointestinal pathogens
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Opportunistic gastrointestinal pathogens

  • 2. Introduction What is Opportunistic Infection? Opportunistic infections are infections caused by pathogens that exploit a weakened immune system. These infections primarily affect individuals with compromised immune function.
  • 3. Risk factors HIV/AIDS Cancer Chemotherapy Bone marrow suppression Antibiotic treatment leading to disruption of the physiological microbiome Organ transplant patients Pregnancy Genetic predisposition
  • 4. Microbial agents causing opportunistic infections Bacterial agents: • Campylobacter jejuni • Helicobacter spp. • Clostridium difficile • E. coli • Aeromonas spp. • Plesiomonas spp • Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Non-tubercular mycobacterium
  • 5. Viral agents • Herpes virus family: Cytomegalovirus, Herpes simplex, HHV-8, HHV-6 • Adenovirus • Enterovirus • Astrovirus • Norovirus
  • 6. Fungal agents • Candida spp • Histoplasma capsulatum
  • 7. Parasitic agents • Cryptosporidium parvum • Isospora belli • Cyclospora cayetanensis • Giardia lamblia • Strongyloides stercoralis • Entamoeba histolytica • Trichuris trichiura • Ascaris lumbricoides
  • 10. Contd… • Most common disease is acute enteritis, with diarrhoea, fever, and abdominal pain • Factors that decrease or neutralize gastric acid secretion favour disease • GI disease characteristically produces histologic damage to the mucosal surface of the duodenum
  • 11. Diagnosis  Specimen: 1. Diarrheal stool- preferred sample 2. Rectal swab  Microscopic examination:  Gram-staining: Comma shape/ “Gull-wing” appearance  Dark-field microscopy- darting movement
  • 12.  Culture: Skirrow’s media- colorless or gray dew-drop colony  Biochemical:  Oxidase +ve  Catalase +ve  Urease -ve
  • 13. Helicobacter spp. • Small, Spiral shape, Gram-negative, micro-aerophilic rods • Highly motile with cork-screw movement • Multiple, sheathed polar flagella • Feco-oral and person-to-person spread occur
  • 15. Symptoms of H. pylori infection
  • 16. Lab diagnosis  Specimen:  Endoscopic biopsy from multiple sites including healthy tissue surrounding ulcers  Specimen should be fresh, not delayed >3 hours  Kept in 1-3 mL isotonic saline for culture and formalin for histopathology
  • 17.  Invasive test:  Histopathology  Rapid urease test  Culture  PCR  Non-invasive test:  Serological test- ELISA, ICT, LAT  Urea breath test  Antigen detection in stool (HPSA test)
  • 18. Clostridium difficile • Anaerobic, motile, Gram-negative bacteria, ubiquitous in nature, and especially prevalent in soil • May colonize the human colon without symptom; approximately 2– 5% of the adult population are carriers • The use of systemic antibiotics, including broad-spectrum penicillins/cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, and clindamycin, causes the normal microbiota of the bowel to be altered
  • 20. Laboratory diagnosis  Colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy- (pseudomembranous colitis)  LAT to detect antigens in stool  Cytotoxic assay to detect cytotoxicity of toxin B  ELISA for toxin A and B  PCR
  • 21.  M. tuberculosis may cause extrapulmonary disease affecting the GI tract as a result of disseminated disease or primary intestinal involvement  The most common mycobacterial infections causing GI disease in the compromised host are those caused by Mycobacterium avium- intracellulare complex (MAC).  Gastric ulceration, enterocolitis, enteric fistulae, and intra-abdominal abscess and hemorrhage are common manifestations of disseminated MAC M. Tuberculosis & NTM
  • 22.  The most common sites are the ileocecal and jejuni-ileum sites, and less commonly include the esophagus, stomach, and duodenum  Patients may have signs suggestive of acute appendicitis or intestinal obstruction and can have rectal lesions presenting as perirectal abscess, fistulae, or fissures
  • 23. Lab Diagnosis Culture & Microscopy  Z-N stain, Auramin/ Rhodamin stain  Lowenstein-Jensen media, Middle brook media Immunological & Molecular  Gene Xpert  QuantiFERON-TB Gold test  PCR Specimen: Biopsy from endoscopy & colonoscopy, blood, ascetic fluid Other supportive investigations  Plain X-ray abdomen  Sonography of abdomen  CT scan abdomen  ADA
  • 25. Herpes virus family  Herpes-simplex virus can cause esophagitis in HIV infected patients and solid-organ transplant patients  It is usually seen in the oropharynx in patients receiving bone marrow transplants. There may be vesicles and punched-out ulcerations with an adherent pseudomembrane
  • 26.  Epstein-Barr virus associated post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) may have a GI component; the clinical presentation of which may include GI bleeding, obstruction, and perforation  HHV-6 has been reported to cause colitis in patients following renal transplant and is suggested as an etiologic agent of gastro- duodenal disease and colitis following stem cell transplantation
  • 27.  Human herpes virus (HHV)-8, associated with Kaposi’s sarcoma, may cause gastritis as a complication of primary skin disease  Varicella-zoster virus is a less common cause of GI disease in the compromised host, and may cause esophagitis and enterocolitis
  • 29.  Cytomegalovirus is by far the most common viral agent causing GI disease in the immunocompromised host  It may cause esophagitis, gastritis, and enterocolitis.  CMV enterocolitis is common in advanced HIV, solid-organ, bone- marrow and HSCT recipients, and common-variable immunodeficiency
  • 30.  Esophagitis may occur in <5% to 10% of patients with AIDS  The most common site affected is the colon, occasionally affecting more than one GI site and sometimes becoming disseminated
  • 31.  Norovirus is the most common cause of gastroenteritis  Infection is characterized by non-bloody diarrhea, vomiting, and stomach pain. Fever or headaches may also occur  The virus is usually spread by the fecal-oral route, through contaminated food or water or person-to-person contact  It is commonly associated with infection and gastroenteritis in both immunocompromised as well as immunocompetents Noro viruses
  • 32.  It is potentially causing more significant disease in compromised individuals  The characteristics of norovirus illness include persistent diarrhea with prolonged viral shedding, particularly in immunosuppressed children  Noroviruses have also been associated with chronic diarrhea in transplant recipients Contd…
  • 34. Adenovirus  Adenovirus GIT infections often present with symptoms like nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain  It may cause diarrhea and hemorrhagic colitis in bone-marrow transplant patients and solid-organ transplant recipients, particularly small-bowel  The compromised host is susceptible to GI infection with rotavirus and infection may be associated with prolonged diarrhea and dehydration
  • 35.  The diagnosis of viral infections of the GI tract may be accomplished by histopathologic analysis of tissue and immunologic and molecular methods for detection  Adenovirus and norovirus can be detected in stool by PCR  Among HIV patients with CMV GI disease, characteristic inclusions of CMV by histopathologic analysis of duodenal/ rectal biopsies were detected Lab diagnosis of viral agents
  • 36. B. Immunosuppressed patients may not mount much of an inflammatory response to CMV infection as seen in this biopsy. Two enlarged, CMV-infected endothelial cells are present (arrows). A B A. Two infected cells (arrows) are seen: one exhibits enlargement and the classic glassy nuclear inclusion, and another displays subtler features with coarse, eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions Fig: Cytomegalovirus (CMV)-infected cells (H&E stain)
  • 37.  In patients with lesions in the oral cavity or esophagitis, the most common agent herpes simplex virus (HSV) detected by direct immunofluorescent staining of smears, culture, or molecular testing of material from the lesions  Testing for community-acquired viral infections, such as adenoviruses, can be performed using commercially available immunoassays for detection of viral antigen
  • 38.  Norovirus detection is accomplished by RT-PCR assays and is usually available in commercial-reference laboratories or local/state public health laboratories
  • 40. • Candidiasis is caused by the yeast Candida albicans and other Candida species • Oral candidiasis is frequently associated with radiotherapy and chemotherapy for treatment of solid tumors and hematologic malignancies • It is particularly common in HIV-positive patients with low CD4+ T-cell counts, occurring in about 10% to 15% of patients and associated with frequent recurrences Candida spp.
  • 41. Lab diagnosis: Samples • Whitish patches from the mucous membrane of the mouth • Sputum Method of collection • Sterile swab Direct examination (Microscopy) • KOH wet mount • Gram staining (presence of yeast cell & pseudohyphae) Culture • In SDA media- whitish creamy colony
  • 42. Histoplasma capsulatum • GI histoplasmosis, caused by Histoplasma capsulatum, occurs mostly in the competent host, but risk increases in patients with HIV and is predominant in males • Patients receiving anti-TNF-α therapy for diseases like inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are also at increased risk for histoplasmosis • The first year following solid-organ transplants is also a high risk for histoplasmosis
  • 43. Histoplasma capsulatum • The organism may affect all sites of the GI tract, but primarily affects the colon • There is high mortality associated with GI histoplasmosis and the disease is fatal in about one-fourth of cases
  • 44. Lab Diagnosis: • Histopathology: Endoscopic biopsy from affected site examined under microscope- Intracellular yeast within macrophages • Culture: In SDA media.  At 25°- Slow growing, granular to cottony appearance  At 37°- Creamy, moist yeast-like colony  Microscopy from Culture showed- tuberculate macroconidia  Antigen detection: By EIA 25°C 37°C
  • 46. Cryptosporidium parvum  Cryptosporidium parvum is a microscopic parasite that can cause a diarrheal illness called cryptosporidiosis  It's considered an opportunistic infection, particularly in individuals with weakened immune systems, such as those with HIV/AIDS or certain other underlying health conditions  C. parvum inhabits the small intestine. It may also be found in stomach, appendix, colon, rectum and pulmonary tree
  • 47.  Involvement of sites other than small intestine like – pharynx, stomach, large intestine and respiratory tract is quite common in HIV positive pts  Involvement of biliary tract can cause papillary stenosis - is a disturbance of the sphincter of Oddi  Obstruction of the valve can cause: pancreatic pain, jaundice
  • 48.  Stool examination  Wet mount preparation  Modified Z-N staining  Fluorescent staining  IIF  Histopathological examination  Molecular diagnosis: PCR, Western blot  Serodiagnosis: Antibody and antigen can be detected by ELISA Laboratory Diagnosis Cryptosporidium spp. oocysts (pink arrows) in Cryptosporidium spp. oocysts in modified Z-N stain
  • 49. Isospora belli  Isospora belli cause severe diarrhea in patients with AIDS, affecting primarily the small intestine, and is often associated with severe dehydration  Infection and symptoms may occur 2 days after infectious oocysts are ingested leading to destruction of intestinal epithelial cells and causes watery diarrhea and vomiting
  • 50. Laboratory diagnosis Direct evidence  Demonstration of transparent oocyst in saline preparation  Modified ZN stain Indirect evidence  High fecal fat content  Charcot-Leyden crystals in stool A. Stool examination A. Duodenal aspirates  If stool examination reveals negative results, duodenal aspirates and enterotest performed to demonstrate oocyst
  • 51. Cyclospora caytanensis  Cyclospora cayetanensis is a foodborne illness causing persistent diarrhea in the compromised host, but usually self-limited in competent hosts  It causes prolong diarrhea with abdominal pain, low grade fever and fatigue  In patients with AIDS, symptoms may persist for as long as 12 weeks, biliary disease has also been detected in this group
  • 52.  Stool examination:  3 consecutive days sample should be screened  Oocyst can be stained by ZN stain  The oocyst under UV illumination, unstained oocyst are auto-fluorescent  Histopathology:  Acute and chronic inflammation  Villous atrophy  Hyperplasia of crypts Laboratory diagnosis
  • 53.  Strongyloides causes severe hyperinfection in immunosuppressed patients  Patients at risk include those treated with immunosuppressive drug therapies and patients with other conditions such as leukemia, lymphoma, and solid-organ transplants and also in HSCT  Presence of worm and filariform larva in intestine may cause epigastric pain, nausea, diarrhea and blood loss Strongyloides stercoralis
  • 54.  It causes intractable diarrhea with blood and mucus  Repeated autoinfection occurs in an immunocompromised host which leads to generate large number of worms in the intestine and caused “Hyperinfection syndrome” Saline mount of stool sample showing larvae of Strongyloides stercoralis
  • 55. Laboratory Diagnosis Microscopy 1. Dried wet mount of stool: Rhabditiform larva 2. Stool concentration method by formol ether conc. 3. Demonstration of larva in duodenal aspirates or jejunal biopsies Stool culture 1. Done when larvae are scanty in stools Methods used: -Agar plate culture -Charcoal culture method Serology 1. Done using Strongyloides or filarial antigens Methods used: -Complement fixation -Indirect hemagglutination -ELISA Blood examination 1.Peripheral eosinophilia 2. Raised serum IgE
  • 56. Giardia lamblia  Giardia lamblia infections may have a chronic course in patients with immunodeficiencies, particularly patients with IgA deficiency or other disorders associated with immunoglobulin deficiencies  Often they are asymptomatic, but in some cases, Giardia may lead to mucus diarrhea, fat malabsorption (steatorrhea), dull epigastric pain, belching and flatulence
  • 57. In immunocompromised patients as hypogammaglobulinemia, decreased IgA in small intestine, decreased gastric acidity or achlorhydria Severe manifestations  Persistent diarrhea, steatorrhea, Fatty dyspepsia hypoproteinemia, deficiency of fat-soluble vitamins (vit. A, D, E, K), folic acid  Chronic malabsorption syndrome  Stunted growth  Cholangitis, cholecystitis jaundice Biliary colic
  • 58. Laboratory Diagnosis Stool examination 1.Macroscopic exam 2.Microscopic exam. of stained pathogen Entero test Serology 1. Antigen test: -ELISA -IIF test 2. Antibody detection: -ELISA -IIF test Molecular test 1. DNA probe 2. PCR
  • 59. Saline mount of stool sample showing cyst of Giardia lamblia From left to right: Entero-Test device prior to swallowing, Entero-Test in situ(image source: Guiney WJ et al British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology)
  • 60.  E. histolytica causes enterocolitis and extraintestinal disease (liver abscess) and may be more common in immunocompromised patients, particularly in malnourished children  Acute necrotizing colitis is a rare complication with high mortality seen predominantly in developing countries  Toxic megacolon is also a rare complication and assisociated with corticosteroid use Entamoeba histolytica
  • 61. Lab diagnosis of intestinal amoebiasis Stool examination -Microscopy -Macroscopy -Iodine prep. -Trichome stained prep. Stool culture Media used: -NIH polygenic -Nelson’s -Robinson’s Mucosal scraping -Wet mount -Stained prep. Sero- diagnosis -IHA -ELISA -LAT Molecular diagnosis DNA probe
  • 62. Fig: Cyst of E. histolytica in a concentrated wet mount stained with iodine Fig: Trophozoites of E. histolytica with ingested erythrocytes stained with trichrome
  • 63. Enteric parasites Indian World Cryptosporidium parvum 10.8% to 82.0% 0.6% to 18.3% Giardia spp. 2.2% to 8.3% 1.5% to 17.7% Isospora belli 2.5% to 31.0% 0.8% to 16.0% E. histolytica 1.7% to 7.7% 1.4% to 10.3% Cyclospora cayatenensis 1.5% to 31.0% 0.1% to 10.0% Table: Prevalence of opportunistic enteric parasites in HIV-infected patients- Indian and world scenario

Notas del editor

  1. Curved, Gram-negative, microaerophilic rods Feco-oral transmission Zoonotic infection; improperly prepared poultry is a common source of infection Leading cause of diarrhea associated with consumption of unpasteurized milk Person-to-person spread is unusual
  2. 12 weeks after treatment HPSA becomes negative. It still positive then it indicates drug resistance.
  3. Pathogenic C. difficile strains produce multiple toxins, most well-characterized are enterotoxin (Clostridium difficile toxin A) and cytotoxin (Clostridium difficile toxin B)