Bacillus anthracis

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Bacillus anthracis /
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Background

Microbiology

  • Gram-positive bacillus that is distinguished from other Bacillus by being non-motile and non-hemolytic
  • Colonies are gray, flat, and may have a "Medusa head" or "comet" appearance
  • The main toxin has subunits A and B
    • A subunit may be either EF (edema factor) or LF (lethal factor)
    • B subunit is the protective antigen, against which antibodies react
  • Lives in soil
  • Wild and farm animals that have contact with contaminated soil is a common exposure, including to wool and animal hides
  • Can also be acquired by inhalation of spores

Clinical Manifestations

Cutaneous Anthrax

  • Caused by inoculation of spores into soft tissue
  • Incubation period of 2 to 5 days
  • Lesion develops at site of inoculation, starting as erythemaous papule, then ulceration, then eschar
  • May progress to sepsis

Pulmonary Anthrax

  • Caused by inhalation of spores
  • Also known as woolsorter's disease
  • Start with malaise, fever, and nonproductive cough, followed by respiratory distress, severe pulmonary edema, and death

Gastrointestinal Anthrax

  • Caused by ingestion of spores
  • Infects oropharynx or abdomen
  • Causes sepsis

Management

  1. Tucker Maxson, Thiphasone Kongphet-Tran, Thitipong Mongkolrattanothai, Tatiana Travis, Katherine Hendricks, Corinne Parker, Heather P McLaughlin, Julia Bugrysheva, Frank Ambrosio, Pierre Michel, Blake Cherney, Christine Lascols, David Sue, Systematic Review of In Vitro Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing for Bacillus anthracis, 1947–2019, Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 75, Issue Supplement_3, 15 October 2022, Pages S373–S378, https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciac520