1. Describe succinctly the disease this case represents
2. Describe the offending organism of this case, its morphologic, cultural characteristics and their normal habitat.
Listeria monocytogenes is a zoonoses. Carried by some animals.
In many foods (cabbage, milk products, soft cheese, pasteurized milk, sliced dale meats and cheese). Mexican style soft cheese has been implicated in a large out break of listeriosis.
Can grow at refrigerator temperatures.
3. What kinds of hosts are susceptible?
4. How do these organisms gain access, invade and spread in humans?
Exposure to contaminated food.
Transplacental infection (mother to infant)
5. What defenses humans have against these organisms?
Suppression of cell mediated immunity due to cyclosporine, azathioprine and prednisone. Azathioprine, cyclosporine and glucocorticoids suppress the ability of macrophages to ingest and kill intracellular pathogens in this patient.
6. How do these organisms able to overcome human defenses?
Listeria is able to manipulate host cell action (actin) to propel it into pseudopods that extend to adjacent host cells. Thus, listeria can spread from cell to cell with minimal contact with the host immune system.
7. What is the end result of this battle between organisms and humans?
Causes bacteremia and meningitis.
8. How do you diagnose this infection?
Other useful evaluations
9. What will be your therapeutic strategy?
10. How can you prevent it from spreading to others? Prevent its occurrence?
Only by not being exposed to contaminated food?
11. What are other clinical infections with these organisms