Bordetella species
Paul Auwaerter, M.D.
MICROBIOLOGY
MICROBIOLOGY
MICROBIOLOGY
- Bordetella organisms are small, aerobic Gram-negative coccobacilli [Fig 1].
- Organisms are fastidious and need special media (such as charcoal blood agar with cephalexin, Regan Lowe, or Bordet-Gengou media) for isolation.
- Species:
- B. pertussis: most common etiology of whooping cough and exclusively a human pathogen.
- B. parapertussis: leads to less severe but similar symptoms.
- B. bronchiseptica (agent of kennel cough)
- Occasional human infections. Bacteria may be flagellated.
- B. holmesii: rarely been implicated in causing human respiratory disease.
- It has been shown to cause outbreaks similar to B. pertussis
- May cause sepsis in immunocompromised patients.
- B. trematum: rarely found in wounds and ear infections.
- B. hinzii: an uncommon cause of sepsis in immunocompromised hosts.
- B. avium: pathogen identified only in birds.
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