Enterococcus: Difference between revisions

From IDWiki
Enterococcus
m (Aidan moved page Enterococcus species to Enterococcus without leaving a redirect)
m ()
Line 38: Line 38:
 
* [[Ampicillin]] is preferred for susceptible strains
 
* [[Ampicillin]] is preferred for susceptible strains
 
* Inherent resistance to [[cephalosporins]]
 
* Inherent resistance to [[cephalosporins]]
* Resistant to [[ertapenem]], but ampicillin-susceptible strains are often susceptible to [[imipenem]] and (somewhat) [[meropenem]]
+
* Resistant to [[ertapenem]], but ampicillin-susceptible strains are often susceptible to [[imipenem]] and (less reliably) to [[meropenem]]
   
 
===VRE===
 
===VRE===

Revision as of 13:35, 19 July 2022

Background

Microbiology

  • Genus of facultative anaerobic, non-spore-forming, alpha- or gamma-hemolytic, catalase negative, Gram-positive cocci
  • Grows on bile esculin agar
  • PYR positive
  • Most are Lancefield group D
  • Commensal gut flora
  • Increasing antibiotic resistance

Species

  • E. faecalis
    • More common (90-95%)
    • More commonly genitourinary source
    • More susceptible to antibiotics
  • E. faecium
    • Less common (5-10%)
    • More commonly gastrointestinal source
    • Less susceptible to antibiotics
    • Most common VRE
  • E. gallinarum
  • E. casseliflavus
  • E. hirae, a rare zoonotic pathogen from chickens that can cause bacteremia and endocarditis

Vancomycin Resistance

  • Vancomycin binds to d-Ala-d-Ala pentapeptids, interfering with cell wall synthesis
  • VanA: most common. Mutation to d-Ala-d-Lac, leading to high resistance to glycopeptides.
  • VanB: more common in E. faecium in Australia
  • VanC: chromosomal resistance on E. gallinarum and E. casseliflavus

Management

VRE