🧬 Bodyland: E. coli, Klebsiella & Campylobacter — made simple
Scene: In Bodyland’s Gut City, three visitors show up.
- E. coli — the clever tinkerer: can build fimbriae hooks for UTIs, wear a K-capsule cloak for pneumonia/neonatal meningitis, and wave a red LPS flag that triggers septic sirens.
- Klebsiella — the slippery jelly thief: leaves thick, mucoid trails and raids lungs of Alcoholics & Diabetics, coughing up “currant jelly.”
- Campylobacter — the campfire camper: a comma/S-shaped hiker who loves it hot (grows at 42 °C), bringing bloody diarrhea after undercooked poultry.
🟡 Escherichia coli (E. coli)
G− rod indole +
Virulence toolkit: fimbriae → cystitis/pyelonephritis; K capsule → pneumonia & neonatal meningitis; LPS endotoxin → septic shock.
Enteric pathotypes (how the tinkerer misbehaves):
- EIEC (Invasive): invades & inflames → dysentery. Like Shigella-style injury.
- ETEC (Toxins, no invasion): heat-Labile ↑cAMP + heat-Stable ↑cGMP → watery “Traveler’s” diarrhea. L is like cholera; S is like ST
- EPEC (Pediatric): adheres, flattens villi → malabsorption, childhood watery diarrhea. (No toxin.)
- EHEC (Hamburger): O157:H7 serotype; Shiga-like toxin → HUS triad (anemia + thrombocytopenia + AKI). Does not ferment sorbitol; bloody diarrhea.
Mnemonic — “E. coli’s F-K-L toolkit”
Fimbriae = UTI, K-capsule = pneumonia/meningitis, LPS = septic shock.
Fimbriae = UTI, K-capsule = pneumonia/meningitis, LPS = septic shock.
Clinical pearl: Suspect EHEC after undercooked beef/leafy greens with bloody diarrhea; avoid antibiotics that may ↑ toxin release.
🟥 Klebsiella
G− rod huge polysaccharide capsule → “mucoid” colonies
- Classic picture: aspiration pneumonia or lung abscesses in Alcoholics & Diabetics with “currant jelly” sputum.
- Nosocomial UTIs; notorious for MDR (carbapenemase producers).
Mnemonic — “5 A’s of KlebsiellA”:
Aspiration, Abscesses, Alcoholics, A (type 2) Diabetics, and Ancient “currant jelly.”
Aspiration, Abscesses, Alcoholics, A (type 2) Diabetics, and Ancient “currant jelly.”
🟩 Campylobacter jejuni
G− comma/S-shaped polar flagella oxidase + grows at 42 °C
- Source: undercooked poultry, unpasteurized milk, or animal contact; person-to-person possible.
- Disease: bloody diarrhea (esp. kids), fever, cramps.
- Post-infectious: common antecedent to Guillain–Barré syndrome & reactive arthritis.
Mnemonic — “Hot Campfire Campy”: loves it 42 °C, curls like a comma, leaves bloody prints after the chicken cookout.
✅ 20-second Check
- Which E. coli pathotype flattens villi without toxin? EPEC (pediatric).
- Which one doesn’t ferment sorbitol and causes HUS? EHEC O157:H7.
- Mucoid “currant jelly” sputum in alcoholic with pneumonia? Klebsiella.
- Bloody diarrhea after undercooked chicken; grows at 42 °C? Campylobacter jejuni.
Grounding Thought: “Let the wise hear and increase in learning.” — Proverbs 1:5.
Study calmly, repeat simply, teach others — mastery follows.
Study calmly, repeat simply, teach others — mastery follows.
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