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Details

Enterococcus
ID Week 2
7
Medical
Graduate
04/12/2010

Additional Medical Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What do Enterococci look like under the microscope?
Definition

Gram+ cocci in pairs or short chains.


Note: Enterococci used to be known as Group D Streptococci, so it makes sense they look like strep.

 

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Term
What do Enterococci look like in culture?
Definition

White, alpha-hemolytic colonies. They can tolerate extreme conditions including high temperature, salt, and bile. They also hydrolyze escalin, and thus turn bile escalin agar black.

 

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Term
What is the reservoir for Enterococci?
Definition

They are part of the normal flora of the GI tract.

Term
What are some virulence factors of Enterococci?
Definition

No known classic virulence factors. Instead, Entercoccus is an opportunistic pathogen, growin when competing flora and cleared (by antibiotics). Often found in:

-- Mixed infection wounds (e.g. diabetic ulcer)

-- UTIs

-- Endocarditis


Note: One of the top causes of nosocomial infection.

Term
How do we treat Enterococci? Why?
Definition

Must use multiple, synergistic antibiotics


Enterococci are inherently resistant to many drugs, including:

-- sulfonamides (usually)

-- tetracyclines (ofen)

-- erythromycin, chloamphenicol (occasionally)

-- penicillins (bacteriostatic at typical doses)

-- aminoglycosides (penetrate cell wall poorly)

Note: Acquiring resistance to vancomycin; vancomycin-resistant strains found in pig farms


Term
By what mechanism did (hospital-associated) E. faecium acquire multidrug resistance?
Definition

Horizontal gene transfer. Insertion sequence IS16 increased genomic plasticity, facilitating later acquisition of cassette proteins conferring antibiotic resistance.

Term
What makes Enterococci hardy?
Definition

Multidrug resistance and ability to tolerate extreme environments, not because of any virulence factor(s).

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