â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a versatile, opportunistic Gram-negative pathogen notorious for causing severe healthcare-associated infections.
â– IDENTIFYING PROPERTIES:
1. Gram Stain & Shape: Gram-negative, thin, aerobiotic rod.
2. Enzyme Profile: Oxidase-positive and catalase-positive.
3. Sugar Fermentation: Non-lactose fermenting on MacConkey agar (forming clear colonies), and is highly motile via its polar flagellum.
4. Pigment Synthesis: Produces Pyocyanin (a blue-green pigment generating reactive oxygen species) and Pyoverdine (a yellow-green fluorescent siderophore).
5. Sweet Aroma: Synthesizes aminoacetophenone, yielding a characteristic sweet, grape-like and fruity odor in culture and infected wounds.
â– RADIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA:
Imaging modalities (such as high-resolution CT, contrast-enhanced MRI, and point-of-care ultrasound) show characteristic density shifts, enhancement patterns, or structural deviations.
â– EPIDEMIOLOGICAL PROFILE & DENSITY CORRELATIONS:
Global burden patterns reveal notable associations with lifestyle habits, regional environmental factors, and inherited traits.
[HY-BOARD-1357]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
A major source of hospital-acquired infections, particularly ventilator-associated pneumonia in ICU patients, ecthyma gangrenosum in neutropenic patients, malignant otitis externa in diabetics, hot tub folliculitis, and chronic pulmonary infections in cystic fibrosis patients. Always correlate imaging signs with clinical presentation to avoid unnecessary surgical explorations of benign incidentalomas. Focus screening efforts on high-risk geographic regions to maximize clinical yield.