
Health officials said in a statement that Mariana Bridi's
condition deteriorated overnight and she died early this morning.
The Espirito Santo State Health Secretariat said in the statement
she died from complications related to a generalised infection,
Associated Press
has reported.
It was caused by the bacteria Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, which is known to be resistant to several kinds
of antibiotics.
Bridi had been in the hospital in the city of Serra in
south-eastern Brazil since January 3.
She became ill in December and doctors originally diagnosed her
with kidney stones, local media said.
Mariana Bridi
da Costa had been in a hospital in Serra, in the
south-eastern state of Espirito Santo, and on artificial
respiration following the procedures, according to several
newspapers.
Her boyfriend, Thiago Simoes, told the G1 news website that Bridi
fell ill on December 30, but was initially misdiagnosed with
kidney stones.
The infection quickly spread, causing her to go back to hospital
for tests that revealed her condition.
Surgeons had to act to remove her damaged hands and feet.
Bridi was twice a finalist in the Brazilian stage of the
Miss World
pageant.

Gram stain of Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is member of the Gamma Proteobacteria
class of Bacteria. It is a Gram-negative, aerobic rod belonging to
the bacterial family Pseudomonadaceae. Since the revisionist
taxonomy based on conserved macromolecules (e.g. 16S ribosomal RNA)
the family includes only members of the genus Pseudomonas which are
cleaved into eight groups. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the type
species of its group. which contains 12 other members.
Like other members of the genus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a
free-living bacterium, commonly found in soil and water. However, it
occurs regularly on the surfaces of plants and occasionally on the
surfaces of animals. Members of the genus are well known to plant
microbiologists because they are one of the few groups of bacteria
that are true pathogens of plants. In fact, Pseudomonas
aeruginosa is occasionally a pathogen of plants. However,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa has become increasingly recognized as an
emerging opportunistic pathogen of clinical relevance. Several
different epidemiological studies track its occurrence as a
nosocomial pathogen and indicate that antibiotic resistance is
increasing in clinical isolates.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen, meaning
that it exploits some break in the host defenses to initiate an
infection. In fact, Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the epitome of
an opportunistic pathogen of humans. The bacterium almost never
infects uncompromised tissues, yet there is hardly any tissue that
it cannot infect if the tissue defenses are compromised in some
manner. It causes urinary tract infections, respiratory system
infections, dermatitis, soft tissue infections, bacteremia, bone and
joint infections, gastrointestinal infections and a variety of
systemic infections, particularly in patients with severe burns and
in cancer and AIDS patients who are immunosuppressed. Pseudomonas
aeruginosa infection is a serious problem in patients hospitalized
with cancer, cystic fibrosis, and burns. The case fatality rate in
these patients is near 50 percent.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is primarily a nosocomial pathogen.
According to the CDC, the overall incidence of P. aeruginosa
infections in U.S. hospitals averages about 0.4 percent (4 per 1000
discharges), and the bacterium is the fourth most commonly-isolated
nosocomial pathogen accounting for 10.1 percent of all
hospital-acquired infections.
Characteristics
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative rod measuring 0.5
to 0.8 µm by 1.5 to 3.0 µm. Almost all strains are motile by means
of a single polar flagellum.
The bacterium is ubiquitous in soil and water, and on surfaces in
contact with soil or water. Its metabolism is respiratory and never
fermentative, but it will grow in the absence of O2 if NO3
is available as a respiratory electron acceptor.
The typical Pseudomonas bacterium in nature might be found in
a biofilm, attached to some surface or substrate, or in a planktonic
form, as a unicellular organism, actively swimming by means of its
flagellum. Pseudomonas is one of the most vigorous,
fast-swimming bacteria seen in hay infusions and pond water samples.
In its natural habitat Pseudomonas aeruginosa is not
particularly distinctive as a pseudomonad, but it does have a
combination of physiological traits that are noteworthy and may
relate to its pathogenesis.
• Pseudomonas aeruginosa has very simple nutritional
requirements. It is often observed "growing in distilled water",
which is evidence of its minimal nutritional needs. In the
laboratory, the simplest medium for growth of Pseudomonas
aeruginosa consists of acetate as a source of carbon and
ammonium sulfate as a source of nitrogen.
• P. aeruginosa possesses the metabolic versatility for which
pseudomonads are so renowned. Organic growth factors are not
required, and it can use more than seventy-five organic compounds
for growth.
• Its optimum temperature for growth is 37 degrees, and it is able
to grow at temperatures as high as 42 degrees.
• It is tolerant to a wide variety of physical conditions, including
temperature. It is resistant to high concentrations of salts and
dyes, weak antiseptics, and many commonly used antibiotics.
• Pseudomonas aeruginosa has a predilection for growth in
moist environments, which is probably a reflection of its natural
existence in soil and water.
These natural properties of the bacterium undoubtedly contribute to
its ecological success as an opportunistic pathogen. They also help
explain the ubiquitous nature of the organism and its prominence as
a nosocomial pathogen.
P. aeruginosa isolates may produce three colony types.
Natural isolates from soil or water typically produce a small, rough
colony. Clinical samples, in general, yield one or another of two
smooth colony types. One type has a fried-egg appearance which is
large, smooth, with flat edges and an elevated appearance. Another
type, frequently obtained from respiratory and urinary tract
secretions, has a mucoid appearance, which is attributed to the
production of alginate slime. The smooth and mucoid colonies are
presumed to play a role in colonization and virulence.

Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonies on agar
P. aeruginosa strains produce two types of soluble pigments, the fluorescent pigment pyoverdin and the blue pigment pyocyanin. The latter is produced abundantly in media of low-iron content and functions in iron metabolism in the bacterium. Pyocyanin (from "pyocyaneus") refers to "blue pus", which is a characteristic of suppurative infections caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Resistance to Antibiotics
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is notorious for its resistance to
antibiotics and is, therefore, a particularly dangerous and dreaded
pathogen. The bacterium is naturally resistant to many antibiotics
due to the permeabiliity barrier afforded by its Gram-negative outer
membrane. Also, its tendency to colonize surfaces in a biofilm form
makes the cells impervious to therapeutic concentrations
antibiotics. Since its natural habitat is the soil, living in
association with the bacilli, actinomycetes and molds, it has
developed resistance to a variety of their naturally-occuring
antibiotics. Moreover, Pseudomonas maintains antibiotic
resistance plasmids, both R-factors and RTFs, and it is able to
transfer these genes by means of the bacterial mechanisms of
horizontal gene transfer (HGT), mainly transduction and conjugation.
Only a few antibiotics are effective against Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, including fluoroquinolones, gentamicin and imipenem,
and even these antibiotics are not effective against all strains.
The futility of treating Pseudomonas infections with
antibiotics is most dramatically illustrated in cystic fibrosis
patients, virtually all of whom eventually become infected with a
strain that is so resistant that it cannot be treated.
Diagnosis
Diagnosis of P.aeruginosa infection depends upon isolation
and laboratory identification of the bacterium. It grows well on
most laboratory media and commonly is isolated on blood agar or
eosin-methylthionine blue agar. It is identified on the basis of its
Gram morphology, inability to ferment lactose, a positive oxidase
reaction, its fruity odor, and its ability to grow at 42°C.
Fluorescence under ultraviolet light is helpful in early
identification of P.s aeruginosa colonies. Fluorescence is
also used to suggest the presence of P. aeruginosa in wounds.
Pathogenesis
For an opportunistic pathogen such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
the disease process begins with some alteration or circumvention of
normal host defenses. The pathogenesis of Pseudomonass
infections is multifactorial, as suggested by the number and wide
array of virulence determinants possessed by the bacterium. Multiple
and diverse determinants of virulence are expected in the wide range
of diseases caused, which include septicemia, urinary tract
infections, pneumonia, chronic lung infections, endocarditis,
dermatitis, and osteochondritis.
Most Pseudomonas infections are both invasive and toxinogenic.
The ultimate Pseudomonas infection may be seen as composed of
three distinct stages: (1) bacterial attachment and colonization;
(2) local invasion; (3) disseminated systemic disease. However, the
disease process may stop at any stage. Particular bacterial
determinants of virulence mediate each of these stages and are
ultimately responsible for the characteristic syndromes that
accompany the disease.
Colonization
Although colonization usually precedes infections by Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, the exact source and mode of transmission of the
pathogen are often unclear because of its ubiquitous presence in the
environment. It is sometimes present as part of the normal flora of
humans, although the prevalence of colonization of healthy
individuals outside the hospital is relatively low (estimates range
from 0 to 24 percent depending on the anatomical locale).
The pili of Pseudomonas aeruginosa will adhere to the
epithelial cells of the upper respiratory tract and, by inference,
to other epithelial cells as well. These adhesins appear to bind to
specific galactose or mannose or sialic acid receptors on epithelial
cells. Colonization of the respiratory tract by Pseudomonas
requires pili adherence and may be aided by production of a protease
enzyme that degrades fibronectin in order to expose the underlying
pilus receptors on the epithelial cell surface. Tissue injury may
also play a role in colonization of the respiratory tract, since
P. aeruginosa will adhere to tracheal epithelial cells of mice
infected with influenza virus but not to normal tracheal epithelium.
This has been called opportunistic adherence, and it may be an
important step in Pseudomonas keratitis and urinary tract
infections, as well as infections of the respiratory tract.
The receptor on tracheal epithelial cells for Pseudomonas
pili is probably sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid). Mucoid
strains, which produce an exopolysaccharide (alginate), have an
additional or alternative adhesin which attaches to the
tracheobronchial mucin (N-acetylglucosamine). Besides pili and the
mucoid polysaccharide, there are possibly other cell surface
adhesins utilized by Pseudomonas to colonize the respiratory
epithelium or mucin. Also, it is possible that surface-bound
exoenzyme S could serve as an adhesin for glycolipids on respiratory
cells.
The mucoid exopolysaccharide produced by P. aeruginosa is a
repeating polymer of mannuronic and glucuronic acid referred to as
alginate. Alginate slime forms the matrix of the Pseudomonas
biofilm which anchors the cells to their environment and in medical
situations, it protects the bacteria from the host defenses such as
lymphocytes, phagocytes, the ciliary action of the respiratory
tract, antibodies and complement. Biofilm mucoid strains of
Pseudomonas are also less susceptible to antibiotics than their
planktonic counterparts. Mucoid strains of P. aeruginosa are
most often isolated from patients with cystic fibrosis and they are
usually found in lung tissues from such individuals.
Invasion
The ability of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to invade tissues
depends upon production of extracellular enzymes and toxins that
break down physical barriers and damage host cells, as well as
resistance to phagocytosis and the host immune defenses. As
mentioned above, the bacterial capsule or slime layer effectively
protects cells from opsonization by antibodies, complement
deposition, and phagocyte engulfment.
Two extracellular proteases have been associated with virulence that
exert their activity at the invasive stage: elastase and alkaline
protease. Elastase has several activities that relate to virulence.
The enzyme cleaves collagen, IgG, IgA, and complement. It also lyses
fibronectin to expose receptors for bacterial attachment on the
mucosa of the lung. Elastase disrupts the respiratory epithelium and
interferes with ciliary function. Alkaline protease interferes with
fibrin formation and will lyse fibrin. Together, elastase and
alkaline protease destroy the ground substance of the cornea and
other supporting structures composed of fibrin and elastin. Elastase
and alkaline protease together are also reported to cause the
inactivation of gamma interferon (IFN) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF).
Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces three other soluble proteins
involved in invasion: a cytotoxin (mw 25 kDa) and two hemolysins.
The cytotoxin is a pore-forming protein. It was originally named
leukocidin because of its effect on neutrophils, but it appears to
be cytotoxic for most eucaryotic cells. Of the two hemolysins, one
is a phospholipase and the other is a lecithinase. They appear to
act synergistically to break down lipids and lecithin. The cytotoxin
and hemolysins contribute to invasion through their cytotoxic
effects on neutrophils, lymphocytes and other eucaryotic cells.
One Pseudomonas pigment is probably a determinant of
virulence for the pathogen. The blue pigment, pyocyanin, impairs the
normal function of human nasal cilia, disrupts the respiratory
epithelium, and exerts a proinflammatory effect on phagocytes. A
derivative of pyocyanin, pyochelin, is a siderophore that is
produced under low-iron conditions to sequester iron from the
environment for growth of the pathogen. It could play a role in
invasion if it extracts iron from the host to permit bacterial
growth in a relatively iron-limited environment. No role in
virulence is known for the fluorescent pigments.
Dissemination
Blood stream invasion and dissemination of Pseudomonas from
local sites of infection is probably mediated by the same
cell-associated and extracellular products responsible for the
localized disease, although it is not entirely clear how the
bacterium produces systemic illness. P. aeruginosa is
resistant to phagocytosis and the serum bactericidal response due to
its mucoid capsule and possibly LPS. The proteases inactivate
complement, cleave IgG antibodies, and inactivate IFN, TNF and
probably other cytokines. The Lipid A moiety of Pseudomonas
LPS (endotoxin) mediates the usual pathologic aspects of
Gram-negative septicemia, e.g. fever, hypotension, intravascular
coagulation, etc. It is also assumed that Pseudomonas
Exotoxin A exerts some pathologic activity during the dissemination
stage (see below).
Toxinogenesis
Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces two extracellular protein
toxins, Exoenzyme S and Exotoxin A. Exoenzyme S has the
characteristic subunit structure of the A-component of a bacterial
toxin, and it has ADP-ribosylating activity (for a variety of
eucaryotic proteins) characteristic of many bacterial exotoxins.
Exoenzyme S is produced by bacteria growing in burned tissue and may
be detected in the blood before the bacteria are. It has led to the
suggestion that exoenzyme S may act to impair the function of
phagocytic cells in the bloodstream and internal organs as a
preparation for invasion by P. aeruginosa.
Exotoxin A has exactly the same mechanism of action as the
diphtheria toxin; it causes the ADP ribosylation of eucaryotic
elongation factor 2 resulting in inhibition of protein synthesis in
the affected cell. Although it is partially-identical to diphtheria
toxin, it is antigenically-distinct. It utilizes a different
receptor on host cells than diphtheria toxin, but otherwise it
enters cells in the same manner and has the exact enzymatic
mechanism. The production of Exotoxin A is regulated by exogenous
iron, but the details of the regulatory process are distinctly
different in C. diphtheriae and P. aeruginosa.
Exotoxin A appears to mediate both local and systemic disease
processes caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. It has
necrotizing activity at the site of bacterial colonization and is
thereby thought to contribute to the colonization process.
Toxinogenic strains cause a more virulent form of pneumonia than
nontoxinogenic strains. In terms of its systemic role in virulence,
purified Exotoxin A is highly lethal for animals including primates.
Indirect evidence involving the role of exotoxin A in disease is
seen in the increased chance of survival in patients with
Pseudomonas septicemia that is correlated with the titer of
anti-exotoxin A antibodies in the serum. Also, tox- mutants show a
reduced virulence in some models.
Table 2. Diseases caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Endocarditis. Pseudomonas aeruginosa infects heart
valves of IV drug users and prosthetic heart valves. The organism
establishes itself on the endocardium by direct invasion from the
blood stream.
Respiratory infections. Respiratory infections caused by
Pseudomonas aeruginosa occur almost exclusively in individuals
with a compromised lower respiratory tract or a compromised systemic
defense mechanism. Primary pneumonia occurs in patients with chronic
lung disease and congestive heart failure. Bacteremic pneumonia
commonly occurs in neutropenic cancer patients undergoing
chemotherapy. Lower respiratory tract colonization of cystic
fibrosis patients by mucoid strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
is common and difficult, if not impossible, to eradicate.
Bacteremia and septicemia. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
causes bacteremia primarily in immunocompromised patients.
Predisposing conditions include hematologic malignancies,
immunodeficiency relating to AIDS, neutropenia, diabetes mellitus,
and severe burns. Most Pseudomonas bacteremia is acquired in
hospitals and nursing homes. Pseudomonas accounts for about
25 percent of all hospital acquired Gram-negative bacteremias.
Central nervous system infections. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
causes meningitis and brain abscesses. The organism invades the CNS
from a contiguous structure such as the inner ear or paranasal
sinus, or is inoculated directly by means of head trauma, surgery or
invasive diagnostic procedures, or spreads from a distant site of
infection such as the urinary tract.
Ear infections including external otitis. Pseudomonas
aeruginosa is the predominant bacterial pathogen in some cases
of external otitis, including "swimmer's ear". The bacterium is
infrequently found in the normal ear, but often inhabits the
external auditory canal in association with injury, maceration,
inflammation, or simply wet and humid conditions.
Eye infections. Pseudomonas aeruginosa can cause
devastating infections in the human eye. It is one of the most
common causes of bacterial keratitis, and has been isolated as the
etiologic agent of neonatal ophthalmia. Pseudomonas can
colonize the ocular epithelium by means of a fimbrial attachment to
sialic acid receptors. If the defenses of the environment are
compromised in any way, the bacterium can proliferate rapidly
through the production of enzymes such as elastase, alkaline
protease and exotoxin A, and cause a rapidly destructive infection
that can lead to loss of the entire eye.
Bone and joint infections. Pseudomonas infections of
bones and joints result from direct inoculation of the bacteria or
the hematogenous spread of the bacteria from other primary sites of
infection. Blood-borne infections are most often seen in IV drug
users and in conjunction with urinary tract or pelvic infections.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa has a particular tropism for
fibrocartilagenous joints of the axial skeleton. Pseudomonas
aeruginosa causes chronic contiguous osteomyelitis, usually
resulting from direct inoculation of bone and is the most common
pathogen implicated in osteochondritis after puncture wounds of the
foot.
Urinary tract infections. Urinary tract infections (UTI)
caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa are usually hospital-acquired and
related to urinary tract catheterization, instrumentation or
surgery. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the third leading cause of
hospital-acquired UTIs, accounting for about 12 percent of all
infections of this type. The bacterium appears to be among the most
adherent of common urinary pathogens to the bladder uroepithelium.
As in the case of E. coli, urinary tract infection can occur
via an ascending or descending route. In addition, Pseudomonas
can invade the bloodstream from the urinary tract, and this is the
source of nearly 40 percent of Pseudomonas bacteremias.
Gastrointestinal infections. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
can produce disease in any part of the gastrointestinal tract from
the oropharynx to the rectum. As in other forms of Pseudomonas
disease, those involving the GI tract occur primarily in
immunocompromised individuals. The organism has been implicated in
perirectal infections, pediatric diarrhea, typical gastroenteritis,
and necrotizing enterocolitis. The GI tract is also an important
portal of entry in Pseudomonas septicemia and bacteremia.
Skin and soft tissue infections, including wound infections,
pyoderma and dermatitis. Pseudomonas aeruginosa can cause
a variety of skin infections, both localized and diffuse. The common
predisposing factors are breakdown of the integument which may
result from burns, trauma or dermatitis; high moisture conditions
such as those found in the ear of swimmers and the toe webs of
athletes, hikers and combat troops, in the perineal region and under
diapers of infants, and on the skin of whirlpool and hot tub users.
Individuals with AIDS are easily infected. Pseudomonas has
also been implicated in folliculitis and unmanageable forms of acne
vulgaris.
Host Defenses
Most strains of P. aeruginosaare resistant to killing in
serum alone, but the addition of polymorphonuclear leukocytes
results in bacterial killing. Killing is most efficient in the
presence of type-specific opsonizing antibodies, directed primarily
at the antigenic determinants of LPS. This suggests that
phagocytosis is an important defense and that opsonizing antibody is
the principal functional antibody in protecting from P.
aeruginosa infections. Once P. aeruginosa infection is
established, other antibodies, such as antitoxin, may be important
in controlling disease.
The observation that patients with diminished antibody responses
(caused by underlying disease or associated therapy) have more
frequent and more serious P. aeruginosa infections
underscores the importance of antibody-mediated immunity in
controlling Pseudomonas infections. unfortunately, cystic
fibrosis is the exception. Most cystic fibrosis patients have high
levels of circulating antibodies to bacterial antigens, but are
unable to clear P. aeruginosa efficiently from their lungs.
Cell-mediated immunity does not seem to play a major role in
resistance or defense against Pseudomonas infections.
Epidemiology and Control of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Infections
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common inhabitant of soil, water,
and vegetation. It is found on the skin of some healthy persons and
has been isolated from the throat (5 percent) and stool (3 percent)
of nonhospitalized patients. In some studies, gastrointestinal
carriage rates increased in hospitalized patients to 20 percent
within 72 hours of admission.
Within the hospital, P. aeruginosa finds numerous reservoirs:
disinfectants, respiratory equipment, food, sinks, taps, toilets,
showers and mops. Furthermore, it is constantly reintroduced into
the hospital environment on fruits, plants, vegetables, as well by
visitors and patients transferred from other facilities. Spread
occurs from patient to patient on the hands of hospital personnel,
by direct patient contact with contaminated reservoirs, and by the
ingestion of contaminated foods and water.
The spread of P. aeruginosa can best be controlled by
observing proper isolation procedures, aseptic technique, and
careful cleaning and monitoring of respirators, catheters, and other
instruments. Topical therapy of burn wounds with antibacterial
agents such as silver sulfadiazine, coupled with surgical
debridement, dramatically reduces the incidence of P. aeruginosa
sepsis in burn patients.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is frequently resistant to many
commonly used antibiotics. Although many strains are susceptible to
gentamicin, tobramycin, colistin, and fluoroquinolins, resistant
forms have developed. The combination of gentamicin and
carbenicillin is frequently used to treat severe Pseudomonas
infections. Several types of vaccines are being tested, but none is
currently available for general use.
© 2008 Kenneth Todar, PhD
From the website: http://textbookofbacteriology.net
