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Foundations in Microbiology, 4/e
Kathleen Park Talaro, Pasadena City College
Arthur Talaro

The Gram-positive Bacilli of Medical Importance

Chapter Overview

  • Gram-positive bacilli account for a number of significant infectious diseases. General separation into groups can be done according to presence of spores, acid fastness, and cell morphology.
  • The major genera of endospore-forming bacilli are Bacillus and Clostridium.
  • Members of the genus Bacillus are primarily aerobic soil inhabitants that are noninfectious. The most important pathogen is B. anthracis, the cause of anthrax, a zoonotic disease of livestock.
  • Members of the genus Clostridium are anaerobic inhabitants of soil, vegetation, and occasionally normal flora. Their pathogenesis is due to resistant spores and powerful exotoxins and enzymes.
  • Clostridial diseases arising from wounds include tetanus, a neuromuscular disease, and gas gangrene, a soft-tissue infection that damages muscles.
  • Clostridia are also implicated in food-borne illness, notably botulism, a food intoxication.
  • Listeria monocytogenes and Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae are non-spore-forming rods that can infect humans.
  • Listeria is widespread throughout natural habitats and may be ingested in contaminated food. It causes a systemic infection, listeriosis, which can be very serious in babies and the elderly.
  • Erysipelothrix causes a zoonosis in pigs and erysipeloid, a skin infection in humans.
  • Corynebacterium species are gram-positive pleomorphic rods with palisades arrangement.
  • The primary pathogen in the group is Corynebacterium diphtheriae, the agent of diphtheria, a toxin-induced disease of the throat, heart, and nervous system.
  • Members of Mycobacterium are acid-fast bacilli with complex lipids in their cell walls.
  • The most prominent pathogen worldwide is Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the cause of tuberculosis, a disease spread by respiratory droplets.
  • Tuberculosis begins with a lung infection but can progress chronically to other organs. It is diagnosed by skin testing, X ray, and acid-fast staining.
  • Mycobacterium leprae is an obligate parasite of humans that is weakly communicable through very close contact.
  • The disease leprosy is a slow, progressive infection of skin and nerves that leads to nerve damage, deformities, and thickened nodules in the skin of the face and extremities.
  • The gram-positive bacillary diseases for which there is effective vaccination are anthrax, tetanus, diphtheria, and tuberculosis.