Micro| Bartonella Henselae - podcast episode cover

Micro| Bartonella Henselae

Feb 10, 20234 minSeason 3Ep. 18
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Episode description

3.18 Bartonella Henselae

Microbiology review for the USMLE Step 1 exam

  • Bartonella henselae is an intracellular gram negative rod that causes several different diseases
  • Bartonella targets and lives inside specialized immune cells called CD34+ cells
  • Bartonella creates a protective vacuole that protects it and helps it evade immune detection
  • Bartonella henselae is a facultative intracellular bacteria
  • Three different clinical syndromes associated with bartonella henselae: cat scratch disease, bacillary angiomatosis in immunocompromised patients, and bacterial endocarditis
  • Cat scratch disease presents with cutaneous manifestations at the site of inoculation (warm, red, swollen, with a vesicle) and swollen lymph nodes near the site
  • Bacillary angiomatosis symptoms include fever, multiple clustered red or violaceous papules or nodules on the skin and mucosa, and bone pain
  • Bacterial endocarditis: Bartonella makes its way into the bloodstream and infects the inner surface of the heart
  • Bartonella henselae is hard to culture from blood, usually diagnosed via serology
  • Treatment depends on the clinical syndrome presented, cat scratch disease is usually self-limited and doesn’t necessarily require antibiotics, bacillary angiomatosis treated with a long 4-month course of either erythromycin or doxycycline.

 

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