Bacillus anthracis
From IDWiki
- Causes anthrax
Background
Microbiology
- Gram-positive bacillus that is distinguished from other Bacillus species by being non-motile and non-hemolytic
- Colonies are gray, flat, and may have a "Medusa head" or "comet" appearance
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