TOP 10 Bacterial Diseases: Introduction, List, Pathogenicity, Lab Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention, and Keynotes
Introduction to Bacterial Diseases
Table of Contents
Bacterial diseases are illnesses caused by pathogenic bacteria entering the body, multiplying, and releasing toxins that damage host tissues. These pathogens spread through contaminated food, water, airborne droplets, sexual contact, or vectors. Despite the advent of antibiotics, bacterial infections remain a global health challenge due to rising antimicrobial resistance.
Top 10 Bacterial Diseases
1. Tuberculosis (TB)
Pathogenicity: Caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It enters via respiratory droplets, survives inside lung macrophages, and forms granulomas (tubercles), leading to tissue necrosis.
Treatment: A combination of isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol for 6 months.
Prevention: BCG vaccine administration and proper ventilation.
2. Cholera
Pathogenicity: Caused by Vibrio cholerae. It produces cholera toxin in the small intestine, triggering massive secretion of water and electrolytes, causing “rice-water” diarrhea.
Lab Diagnosis: Stool culture on TCBS agar or rapid diagnostic dipstick tests.
Treatment: Aggressive oral rehydration salts (ORS), intravenous fluids, and antibiotics like azithromycin.
Prevention: Clean water, sanitation, proper hygiene, and oral cholera vaccines.
3. Typhoid Fever
Pathogenicity: Caused by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi. It invades the intestinal mucosa, multiplies within macrophages, enters the bloodstream, and damages the spleen, liver, and Peyer’s patches.
Lab Diagnosis: Blood culture (first week), Widal test (after 2 weeks), or stool culture.
Treatment: Ceftriaxone, azithromycin, or ciprofloxacin.
Prevention: Typhoid conjugate vaccine (TCV) and avoiding contaminated food or water.
4. Tetanus (“Lockjaw”)
Pathogenicity: Caused by Clostridium tetani entering via wounds. It releases the neurotoxin tetanospasmin, which blocks inhibitory neurotransmitters, causing painful, continuous muscle spasms.
Lab Diagnosis: Primarily clinical presentation; wound cultures are often unreliable.
Treatment: Tetanus immunoglobulin (TIG), wound debridement, muscle relaxants, and metronidazole.
Prevention: DTaP/Tdap vaccination and proper wound care.
5. Strep Throat (Streptococcal Pharyngitis)
Pathogenicity: Caused by Streptococcus pyogenes (Group A Strep). It adheres to pharyngeal epithelial cells via M protein, causing severe local inflammation and tonsillar exudate.
Lab Diagnosis: Rapid Antigen Detection Test (RADT) or throat culture on blood agar.
Treatment: Oral penicillin V or amoxicillin.
Prevention: Frequent handwashing and avoiding close contact with infected individuals.
6. Syphilis
Pathogenicity: Caused by Treponema pallidum. It penetrates mucous membranes, replicates locally to form a painless chancre (primary), spreads systemically (secondary), and can cause neurological damage (tertiary).
Lab Diagnosis: VDRL and RPR tests for screening; FTA-ABS or TP-PA tests for confirmation.
Treatment: Benzathine penicillin G intramuscular injection.
Prevention: Safe sex practices (condom use) and regular screening.
7. Pertussis (“Whooping Cough”)
Pathogenicity: Caused by Bordetella pertussis. It paralyzes respiratory cilia using pertussis toxin and tracheal cytotoxin, causing mucus accumulation and violent coughing fits.
Treatment: Macrolide antibiotics like azithromycin or erythromycin.
Prevention: DTaP and Tdap immunization schedules.
8. Plague
Pathogenicity: Caused by Yersinia pestis and transmitted by flea bites or respiratory droplets. It targets lymph nodes (bubonic) or lungs (pneumonic), destroying tissue and causing septic shock.
Lab Diagnosis: Microscopic examination of bubo aspirate, blood culture, or PCR.
Treatment: Streptomycin, gentamicin, or doxycycline.
Prevention: Flea and rodent control; avoiding contact with wildlife.
9. Gonorrhea
Pathogenicity: Caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae. It uses pili to attach to mucosal epithelial cells of the genitourinary tract, causing painful inflammation, purulent discharge, and potential infertility.
Treatment: Dual therapy typically consists of ceftriaxone injection plus oral azithromycin.
Prevention: Consistent barrier contraceptive use and screening partners.
10. Bacterial Meningitis
Pathogenicity: Commonly caused by Neisseria meningitidis or Streptococcus pneumoniae. Bacteria cross the blood-brain barrier, triggering massive inflammation of the protective membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord.
Lab Diagnosis: Lumbar puncture to analyze Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) for elevated protein, low glucose, and presence of bacteria.
Treatment: Immediate intravenous broad-spectrum antibiotics like ceftriaxone combined with vancomycin.
Prevention: Meningococcal and pneumococcal conjugate vaccines.
Antibiotic Resistance: Overuse of antibiotics has led to dangerous strains like Multi-Drug-Resistant TB (MDR-TB) and antibiotic-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
Gram Staining: A foundational lab technique that splits most bacteria into Gram-positive (purple, thick peptidoglycan wall) or Gram-negative (pink, thin wall with outer lipopolysaccharide layer).
Bacterial Toxins: Pathogenicity is heavily driven by Exotoxins (actively secreted by living bacteria, like tetanus toxin) and Endotoxins (part of the Gram-negative outer membrane released upon cell death).
Vaccination Success: Diseases like Tetanus, Pertussis, and Meningitis are completely preventable via routine childhood immunization schedules.