Chronic Bacterial Disease
Chronic bacterial disease
Chronic bacterial infections persist for prolonged periods of time (e.g., months, years) in the host. This lengthy persistence is due to a number of factors including masking of the bacteria from the immune system , invasion of host cells, and the establishment of an infection that is resistance to antibacterial agents.
Over the past three decades, a number of chromic bacterial infections have been shown to be associated with the development of the adherent, exopolysaccharide-encased populations that are termed biofilms. The constituents of the exopolysaccharide are poorly immunogenic. This means that the immune system does not readily recognize the exopolysaccharide as foreign material that must be cleared from the body. Within the blanket of polysaccharide the bacteria, which would otherwise be swiftly detected by the immune system, are protected from immune recognition. As a result, the infection that is established can persist for a long time.
An example of a chronic, biofilm -related bacterial infection is prostatitis. Prostatitis is an inflammation of the prostate gland that is common in men over 30 years of age. Symptoms of this disease can include intense pain, urinary complications, and sexual malfunction including infertility. Chronic bacterial prostatitis is generally associated with repeated urinary tract infections. The chronic infection is typically caused by biofilms of Escherichia coli .
A second biofilm-related chronic bacterial infection is the Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection that develops early in life in some people who are afflicted with cystic fibrosis. Cystic fibrosis is due to a genetic defect that restricts the movement of salt and water in and out of cells in the lung. The resulting build-up of mucus predisposes the lungs to bacterial infection. The resulting Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection becomes virtually impossible to clear, due the antibiotic resistance of the bacteria within the biofilm. Furthermore, the body's response to the chronic infection includes inflammation. Over time, the inflammatory response is causes breathing difficulty that can be so pronounced as to be fatal.
Another chronic bacterial infection that affects the lungs is tuberculosis . This disease causes more deaths than any other infectious disease. Nearly two billion people are infected with the agent of tuberculosis, the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis. As with other chronic infections, the symptoms can be mild. But, for those with a weakened immune system the disease can become more severe. Each year some three million people die of this active form of the tuberculosis infection.
Tuberculosis has re-emerged as a health problem in the United States, particularly among the poor. The development of drug resistance by the bacteria is a factor in this reemergence.
Beginning in the mid 1970s, there has been an increasing recognition that maladies that were previously thought to be due to genetic or environmental factors in fact have their basis in chronic bacterial infections. A key discovery that prompted this shift in thinking concerning the origin of certain diseases was the demonstration by Barry Marshall that a bacterium called Helicobacter pylori is the major cause of stomach ulcers. Furthermore, there is now firm evidence of an association with chronic Helicobacter pylori stomach and intestinal infections and the development of certain types of intestinal cancers.
At about the same time the bacterium called Borrelia burgdorferi was established to be the cause of a debilitating disease known as Lyme disease . The spirochaete is able to establish a chronic infection in a host. The infection and the host's response to the infection, causes arthritis and long-lasting lethargy.
As a final recent example, Joseph Penninger has shown that the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis is the agent that causes a common form of heart disease. The bacterium chronically infects a host and produces a protein that is very similar in three-dimensional structure to a protein that composed a heart valve. The host's immune response to the bacterial protein results in the deterioration of the heart protein, leading to heart damage.
Evidence is accumulating that implicates chronic bacterial infection with other human ailments including schizophrenia
and Alzheimer's disease. While not yet conclusive, the involvement of chronic bacterial infections in maladies that have hitherto not been suspected of having a bacterial origin will not be surprising.
Research efforts to prevent chronic bacterial infections are focusing on the prevention of the surface adhesion that is a hallmark of many such infections. Molecules that can competitively block the sites to which the disease-causing bacteria bind have shown promising results in preventing infections in the laboratory setting.
See also Bacteria and bacterial infection; Biofilm formation and dynamic behavior; Immunity, active, passive and delayed
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STEPHEN'S STORY.(Entertainment)
Newspaper article from: Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England); 5/20/2005; 700+ words
; ...Byline: Katie Campling , Location Author Stephen Smith and Sheepridge, where he lived...Inset: Actor Johnny Depp, tipped to play Stephen n DIRECTOR Andy Serkis and in character...biopic about drug addict-turned author Stephen Smith. The pounds 6m film, Addict...
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STEPHEN CHOKED TO DEATH; TRAGEDY OF BOYZONE STAR.(News; Front Page)
Newspaper article from: Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland); 10/12/2009; 700+ words
; ...Byline: Mark McGivern TRAGIC Boyzone star Stephen Gately choked to death on his vomit...police investigation said last night. Stephen, 33, was found dead in his pyjamas by...unofficially confirmed the cause of the tragedy. Stephen was discovered kneeling against a sofa...
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STEPHEN SCHWARTZ'S SONGS
Transcript from: ABC Good Morning America Sunday; 2/8/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...Host: Welcome back. We are here with Stephen Schwartz. Did I describe you-- were...musician you've never heard perform ? STEPHEN SCHWARTZ, Broadway Composer/Lyricist...have this new CD, Reluctant Pilgrim. STEPHEN SCHWARTZ: That's what I've done...
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Stephen Shih (1933-2002): a storybook escape from China to teach in Canada. (Lives Lived: Obituary).
Magazine article from: Presbyterian Record; 1/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Yunnan Province, he was given the name Stephen. The Presbyterian missionary from Canada chose Stephen for its Christian significance and its resemblance...but was written last instead of first. Stephen was born in Honan Province of north-central...
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Stephen Heywood 37, Dies; Subject of the 2006 Major Motion Picture - 'So Much So Fast'.
PR Newswire; 11/28/2006; 700+ words
; ...sudden, accidental death of his brother, Stephen Heywood, 37. (Photo: http://www...her arms and into his bedroom, I found Stephen. His vent had disconnected, his lips...also grew up in Newton and remembered Stephen from other visits. Between Wendy, his...
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Stephen still urging Medicaid reforms Lawmakers to tackle budget affairs soon
Newspaper article from: Concord Monitor; 2/23/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...that all but ignored Health Commissioner John Stephen's plans for Medicaid reform, Stephen is still urging lawmakers to adopt some of those...government over the next few weeks. So far, Stephen's approach is to persuade lawmakers to consider...
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Stephen used to call the kids his little deck-hands.. we had some lovely days on the water - HELEN HUMPHREYS YESTERDAY; EXCLUSIVE WIDOW OF TRAGIC TUGBOAT SKIPPER REVEALS HER FAMILY'S DEVASTATING LOSS.(News)
Newspaper article from: Sunday Mail (Glasgow, Scotland); 1/6/2008; 700+ words
; ...MACASKILL THE widow of tragic tugboat skipper Stephen Humphreys told yesterday how she is creating...describing the dad she will never know. Stephen, 33, died when his tugboat went down...crewman survived by swimming ashore. Stephen and Helen had just 14 months of married...
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Stephen Bishop: cave explorer: at Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, Stephen Bishop was known as the "prince of guides.".
Magazine article from: Highlights for Children; 2/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; Stephen's lantern cast shaky shadows on the walls...He might not find his way back out. Stephen was a slave owned by Franklin Gorin. Gorin...Gorin decided to have 17-year-old Stephen trained as a guide. Facing the Challenge...
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Stephen, Argyle teaming up; The rivalry of two northwestern Minnesota nine-man football powers has ended. School consolidation has created Stephen-Argyle Central High School and a new team, the Storm. Fall football practice saw 47 kids show up, and unlike previous seasons, freshmen weren't needed.(SPORTS)
Newspaper article from: Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN); 8/29/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...started the rivalry between Argyle and Stephen, two small towns nine miles apart in...rivalry has ended. On Jan. 30, Argyle and Stephen citizens voted to consolidate school districts this fall. The combined school is Stephen-Argyle Central and the school's nickname...
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Stephen will step down as health chief; He and Lynch had clashed repeatedly
Newspaper article from: Concord Monitor; 7/24/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...Health and Human Services Commissioner John Stephen announced yesterday that he will step...long been a question of when, not if: Stephen, whose term expires in October, has...leader for the state's largest agency. Stephen is widely believed to be considering a...
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Stephen
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Stephen Stephen (c. 1096-1154) was king of England from 1135 to 1154. His claim...civil war. He eventually accepted Matilda's son Henry as his heir. Stephen was the third son of Stephen, Count of Blois and Chartres, and Adela...
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Stephen I
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Stephen I Stephen I (ca. 973-1038) was king of Hungary, who went from pagan tribal...problems and delayed progress. When Géza died in 997, his son Stephen took a more direct action some three years later by appealing to Pope...
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Sir Leslie Stephen
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Sir Leslie Stephen The English historian, critic, and editor Sir Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) was one of the great popularizers of Victorian thought and literature. Leslie Stephen was born in London on Nov. 28, 1832, the son...
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Simon, Stephen 1946– (Stephen Deutsch)
Book article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television
SIMON, Stephen 1946– (Stephen Deutsch) PERSONAL Born June 30, 1946, in Los Angeles, CA...Harvard: The Liz Murray Story. CREDITS Film Producer: (As Stephen Deutsch) Somewhere in Time, Universal, 1980. (As Stephen...
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St. Stephen Harding
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
St. Stephen Harding The English monastic reformer and medieval abbot St. Stephen Harding (died 1134) helped to found the reformed...Cistercians, which date from his abbacy, reflect St. Stephen's ideas. Before the Norman invasion of England...
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