Describe staphylococci
Staphyle = greek for bunch of grapes
Gram +, coccus shaped anaerobe
Name coagulase positibe and negative staphylococci
positive: S. aureus (latin for gold)
negative: S. epidermidis, S. saprophyticus (many others)
is S. aureus virulent?
No, it is an efficient colonizer of humans that doesn’t usually cuase problems
Carriers of S. aureus are asymptomatic, but at greater risk for infection, prognosis is also generally better
Where does S. aureus colonize and how does it spread?
Colonizes skin and mucous membranes, nose (30% of people are colonized)
spreads by direct or indirect contact (person to person)
fomites (objects capable of transmitting disease like towels, bandaids razors)
How does S. aureus get into the host?
surface proteins bind host proteins using adhesins
adhesins are important in endocarditis
How many nosocomial infections does S. aureus cause?
leading cause of hospital-aquired (nosocomial) infections
In the US: >10 million skin and soft tissue infections/year,
94,000 invasive infections
19,000 deaths
Is S. aureus an extra or intracellular pathogen?
extracellular pathogen
S. aureus is a pyogenic infection, what does this mean?
pus-producing infection
What is the “Hallmark” of S. aureus infection?
abscess
Do abscesses from S. aureus heal on their own?
No they typically do not, they require drainage and maybe antibiotics
What kind of infections can S. aureus cause?
enourmous range:
stye, boils, carbuncles, sinusitis, furuncles, hematogenous spread, endocarditis, pnemonia, emesis impetigo, diarrhea, toxic shock syndome, scalded skin syndrom, osteomyelitis, uti cystitis
What are S. aureus’ regulated virulence factors?
produces many virulence factors
surface virulence factors expressed during exponential growth (colonization purposes)
secreted virulence factors (exotoxins) expressed during stationary phase (invasion adn spread)

How do S. aureus’ virulence factors let it evade phagocytosis?
S. aureus is resistant to phagocytosis
How do S. aureus’ virulence factors let it evade leukocytes?
Toxins kill leukocytes
What diseases due the virulence factors of S. aureus cause?
What skin lesions do S. Aureus cause?
Impetigo - superficial skin infection usually in young children
Stye - infection of the eye sebaceous gland
Furuncle (boil) - infectino of hair follicle
Carbuncles - infection of several hair follicles
What are deep abscesses caused by S. aureus?
What are examples of S. aureus systemic infections, how hard are they to treat?
What is the systemic infcetion which affects bone marrow caused by S. aureus? describe it
Osteomyelitis
How can one get osteomyelitis?
What is the systemic infection caused by S. aureus which affects heart valves?
Infective endocarditis
What class is an S. areus localized infection with systemic effects?
Toxin-mediated disease
What causes toxic shock syndrome?
superantigens
non-menstrual form
Menstrual form
What are the symptoms of toxic shock syndrome?
Fever
red rash
hypotension leading to shock
desquamation
mortality <10%