Diphtheria: Difference between revisions

From MicrobeWiki, the student-edited microbiology resource
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:


==Etiology/Bacteriology==
==Etiology/Bacteriology==
===Taxonomy===
| Domain = [[Bacteria]]
| Domain = [[Bacteria]]
| Phylum = [[Actinobacteria]]
| Phylum = [[Actinobacteria]]
Line 9: Line 10:
| Genus = [[Corynebacterium]]
| Genus = [[Corynebacterium]]
| Species = [[Diphtheriae]]
| Species = [[Diphtheriae]]
===Taxonomy===
===Description===
 
Diphtheria is caused by an infection of C. diphtheriae. Four subspecies are recognized: ''C. d. mitis', 'C. d. intermedius', 'C. d. gravis', and 'C. d. belfanti'. In sufficiently low iron concentrations, 'C. diphtheria' is known to produce diphtheria toxins.
==Pathogenesis==
==Pathogenesis==
===Virulence factors===
===Virulence factors===

Revision as of 06:16, 22 July 2015

University of Oklahoma Study Abroad Microbiology in Arezzo, Italy[1]

Etiology/Bacteriology

Taxonomy

| Domain = Bacteria | Phylum = Actinobacteria | Class = Actinobacteria | Order = Actinomycetales | Family = Corynebacteriaceae | Genus = Corynebacterium | Species = Diphtheriae

Description

Diphtheria is caused by an infection of C. diphtheriae. Four subspecies are recognized: C. d. mitis', 'C. d. intermedius', 'C. d. gravis', and 'C. d. belfanti'. In sufficiently low iron concentrations, 'C. diphtheria' is known to produce diphtheria toxins.

Pathogenesis

Virulence factors

Mechanism

Adherence

Invasion of the cell

Encountering macrophages

Clinical features

Diagnosis

Treatment

Prevention

Host immune response

References