Transcript Pathogens
Microbial Pathogens
Living organisms that cause disease
– Can be
Viruses
Bacteria
Protozoa
Helminths
– But not all are pathogens
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Viruses
Intracellular parasites
– very small (20-100 nm), very simple
– not composed of cells
– need host cells to replicate
– infection usually person-to-person, not
through water
– hepatitis, gastroenteritis....
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Aside - Units
nm
– Nano = 1/1,000,000,000
– ~ 3 to 6 atoms end to end constitute a
nanometer
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Detection of Viruses
Not recommended for routine analyses
Should be done only by competent and
specially trained water virologists
Three Steps
– Collect representative sample
– Concentrate viruses in sample
– Identify and quantify
Beyond our capability
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Problems, Virus Methods
Very small (20 to 100 nm)
Generally present at low concentration,
but variable in amount and type
Unstable as biological entities
Other compounds interfere
Current methods are limited
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Bacteria
microscopic, single-celled organisms
– 500-5000 nm
– procaryotic (DNA not enclosed in membrane)
– most are not pathogens
perform valuable functions in environment,
our bodies, & wastewater treatment
Proliferate in:
– feces: 1 - 1000 X 106 / gram
– wastewater: ~ 10,000 / ml
Pathogenic bacteria cause typhoid, cholera....
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Vibrio cholerae (Microbe causing cholera)
From www.bact.wisc.edu/microtextbook/TOC.html
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Detection Methods - Specific Species
Not recommended for routine analyses
Three Steps
– Collect representative sample
– Concentrate bacteria in sample / Grow bacteria
colonies
– Identify and quantify
Stains, size, shape, growth patters, what they grow on...
Beyond our capability
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Protozoa
Microscopic, single-celled "animals", more
complex and larger than bacteria
–
–
–
–
10000-15000 nm
eucaryotic (DNA in nucleus within cell)
Most not pathogenic
Form Cysts / Oocysts
Resistant forms which allows Protozoa to survive under
adverse conditions
Pathogenic protozoans cause diarrhea
(Cryptosporidium), dysentery, gastrointestinal
infection (Giardia lamblia)...
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Giardia lamblia
111 waterborne outbreaks between
1965 and 1990, >26,000 cases
Causes diarrhea
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Cryptosporidium parvum
Of increasing concern
Causes cholera-like diarrhea
– can be life-threatening to immunodeficient
persons
1993, Milwaukee
- 400,000 sick
- 50 dead
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Entamoeba histolytica
Causes amebic dysentery
Averages 28 deaths / year
Has not been a frequent cause of
waterborne outbreaks in recent times
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Protozoa Detection
Not recommended for routine analyses
Crypto and Giardia
– concentrate, purify and distribute organisms in
monolayer on membrane filter
– label with fluorescent antibody reagents
– identify cysts and oocysts by specific criteria
(immunoflorescence, size, shape, internal
morphological characteristics)
Beyond our capability
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Helminths (worms)
Humans can ingest worm eggs in
contaminated water
Worm can grow inside body, causing disease
Some (e.g., Hookworms) can infect by
penetrating skin
Worms can cause joint arthritis, damage
lymph nodes, damage tissue and organs
Not of Concern in US
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Intestinal nematodes - from www.life.sci.qut.edu.au/LIFESCI/darben/paramast.htm
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Drinking Water Standards & Pathogens
Maximum Contaminant Level Goal
– zero pathogens
Maximum Contaminant Level
– We will accept a limited number of positive
samples (indicator organism)
to account for inadvertent contamination
re-check water
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Indicator organisms
Too difficult to identify all pathogens, so
we use indicator organisms
– May not be pathogens themselves
Find indicator organisms?
– sample might be pathogen contaminated
Don't find indicator organisms?
– very unlikely sample is contaminated
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Common Indicator Organisms
Total Coliform
Fecal Coliform
Bacteria
E. Coli
Common denominator is fecal coliform
– found in intestines
– evidence of fecal contamination
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General Types of Tests
Prescriptive tests
– Positive result good indication of presence
of indicator organism, but not definitive
Confirmatory
– Positive result indicates definite presence
of indicator organism
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Specific Tests
Membrane Filtration
Presence/Absence
Fermentation tube
– (confirmatory)
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Membrane Filtration
Filter known volume through sterile filter
– with proper dilution, deposit isolated bacteria
Place filter in petri dish w/ sterile agar
– promotes organism of interest,
inhibits others
Incubate (time / temperature)
– isolated bacteria grow into easily
identified colonies
Count colonies
– Concentration = Colonies /
Volume of sample
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Presence/Absence
Add
100 mL sample to broth
Incubate
(time / temperature)
– yellow color indicates presence of coliforms
Determines
only
presence or absence
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Fermentation Tubes
(1)
Presence/Absence
– Inoculate tube containing special
broth
– Incubate (time / temperature)
gas production in tubes indicates
presence
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Fermentation Tubes
(2)
Concentration
– Inoculate series of tubes with various
amounts of sample
# of bacteria introduced proportional to
sample amount
– Incubate
Observe which tubes generate gas
– Statistically relate to most likely
concentration
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WWW Resources
EPA Pathogen Document
– www.epa.gov/enviro/html/icr/gloss_path.html
Germ Tutorial
– www.mwra.state.ma.us/germs/intro.htm
Pathogenic Bacteria Photo Gallery
– www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/3504/
Cryptosporidium Newsletter
– www.fspubl.com/index.html
Online Microbiology Textbook
– www.bact.wisc.edu/microtextbook/TOC.html
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