Escherichia coli
Organism
-
- Possess a peritrichous (def)
arrangement of flagella.
- Facultative anaerobe (def).
Habitat
- Normal flora of the intestinal
tract in humans and animals.
Source
- Usually the patient's own fecal
flora; some transmission is patient-to-patient.
Clinical Disease
- E. coli causes around 80
percent of all uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTIs)
and more than 50 percent of nosocomial (def)
UTIs. UTIs account for more than 7, 000,000 physician office visits per year
in the U.S. Between 35 and 40 percent of all nosocomial infections, about
900,000 per year in the U.S., are UTIs and are usually associated with urinary
catheterization (def).
- E. coli causes wound
infections, usually a result of fecal contamination of external wounds
or a result of wounds that cause trauma to the intestinal tract, such as surgical
wounds, gunshot wounds, knife wounds, etc.
- E. coli is by far the most
common Gram-negative bacterium causing sepsis. Septicemia
(def)
is a result of bacteria getting into the blood. They are usually introduced
into the blood from some other infection site, such as an infected kidney,
wound, or lung. There are approximately 500,000 cases of septicemia per year
in the U.S. and the mortality rate is between 20 and 50 percent. Approximately 45 percent
of the cases of septicemia are due to Gram-negative bacteria. Klebsiella,
Proteus, Enterobacter, Serratia, and E. coli, are all common gram-negative
bacteria causing septicemia.
- E. coli, along with group
B streptococci, are the leading cause of neonatal meningitis
(def).
- While E. coli is one of
the dominant normal flora in the intestinal tract of humans and animals, some
strains can cause gastroenteritis, an infection of the intestinal
tract.
- Enterotoxigenc E. coli
(ETEC) produce enterotoxins that cause the loss of sodium ions and water
from the small intestines resulting in a watery diarrhea. Over half of
all travelers' diarrhea is due to ETEC; almost 80,000 cases a year in
the U.S.
- Enteropathogenic E. coli
(EPEC) cause an endemic diarrhea in areas of the developing world, especially
in infants younger than 6 months. The bacterium disrupts the normal microvilli
(def)
on the epithelial cells of the small intestines resulting in maladsorbtion
and diarrhea.
- Enteroaggregative E. coli
(EAEC) is a cause of persistant diarrhea in developing countries. It probably
causes diarrhea by adhering to mucosal epithelial cells of the small intestines
and interfering with their function.
- Enteroinvasive E. coli
(EIEC) invade and kill epithelial cells of the large intestines causing
a dysentery-type syndrome similar to Shigella common in underdeveloped
countries.
- Enterohemorrhagic E. coli
(EHEC), such as E. coli 0157:H7, produce a shiga-like toxin that
kills epithelial cells of the large intestines causing hemorrhagic colitis,
a bloody diarrhea. In rare cases, the shiga-toxin enters the blood and
is carried to the kidneys where, usually in children, it damages vascular
cells and causes hemolytic uremic syndrome. E. coli 0157:H7 is
thought to cause more than 20,000 infections and up to 250 deaths per
year in the U.S.
- Diffuse aggreegative E.
coli (DAEC) causes watery diarrhea in infants 1-5 years of
age. They stimulate elongation of the microvilli on the epithelial cells
lining the small intestines.
Based on
Escherichia coli
infections, by Chi Hiong U Go, MD, Assistant Professor, Department of Internal
Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Science Center at Odessa and
Burke A Cunha, MD, Professor of Medicine,
State University of New York at Stony Brook School of Medicine; Chief, Infectious
Disease Division, Vice-Chair, Department of Internal Medicine, Winthrop-University
Hospital