Staph Basics - Golden Troublemakers
- Gram-positive cocci, typically in grape-like clusters. Facultative anaerobes. All Staphylococci are catalase-positive.
- 📌 Mnemonic: "Staph" has a "Staff" (catalase enzyme), "Strep" is "Stripped" of it.
- Classification (Coagulase test is key):
- Coagulase-positive:
- S. aureus: Golden colonies (aureus=golden), most pathogenic. Produces numerous toxins.
- Coagulase-negative (CoNS):
- S. epidermidis: Normal skin flora; biofilms on prosthetics, catheters. Novobiocin sensitive.
- S. saprophyticus: UTIs in sexually active young women. Novobiocin resistant.
- Coagulase-positive:

⭐ Staphylococci are catalase-positive, differentiating them from Streptococci (catalase-negative). This is a crucial initial lab identification step.
S. aureus Virulence - Arsenal of Attack
- Structural Components:
- Capsule: Antiphagocytic.
- Protein A: Binds IgG Fc, ↓ opsonization & phagocytosis.
- Teichoic acids: Adherence, endotoxin-like.
- Key Enzymes: (📌 Coagulase, Catalase, Hyaluronidase, Fibrinolysin, Lipases, Nucleases, Penicillinase)
- Coagulase: Fibrin clot formation.
- Catalase: Neutralizes H₂O₂.
- Hyaluronidase: Spreading factor.
- Fibrinolysin (Staphylokinase): Dissolves clots.
- Lipases, Nucleases: Tissue invasion.
- Penicillinase: β-lactam resistance.
- Major Toxins:
- Cytotoxins (α, β, δ, γ, PVL): Lyse cells; PVL targets WBCs.
- Exfoliative Toxins (ETA, ETB): Scalded Skin Syndrome.
- Enterotoxins (A-E, G-I): Food poisoning (superantigens).
- TSST-1: Toxic Shock Syndrome (superantigen).
⭐ Protein A, found on S. aureus, binds the Fc portion of IgG, thereby inhibiting opsonization and phagocytosis.

S. aureus Diseases - Clinical Chaos
📌 Mnemonic: SOFT PAINS (Skin infections, Osteomyelitis, Food poisoning, Toxic shock syndrome, Pneumonia, Acute endocarditis, Impetigo, Necrotizing fasciitis, Sepsis)
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Toxin-Mediated Diseases:
- Scalded Skin Syndrome (SSSS): Exfoliative toxins (ETA, ETB).
- Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS): TSST-1 superantigen.
- Staphylococcal Food Poisoning: Preformed enterotoxins (A-E, G-J).
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Infections due to Direct Invasion:
- Skin & Soft Tissue: Impetigo, folliculitis, furuncles, carbuncles, cellulitis, wound infections.
- Bacteremia & Endocarditis: Often with IV drug use or indwelling catheters.
- Pneumonia: Post-influenza, empyema common.
- Osteomyelitis & Septic Arthritis: Hematogenous spread or direct inoculation.

⭐ Staphylococcal food poisoning is caused by ingestion of preformed heat-stable enterotoxin, leading to a rapid onset (1-6 hours) of vomiting and diarrhea.
CoNS, Labs & Battles - Staph's Full Story
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Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci (CoNS):
Feature S. epidermidis S. saprophyticus Key Association Biofilms, prosthetic infections, contaminant UTIs (young women) Novobiocin Sensitive Resistant - 📌 Mnemonic: NO StRESs (Novobiocin: Resistant - S. saprophyticus; Epidermidis - Sensitive).
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Lab Diagnosis:
- Microscopy: Gram +ve cocci, clusters ("bunches of grapes").
- Culture: Blood Agar. Mannitol Salt Agar (MSA) → S. aureus ferments mannitol (yellow colonies).

- Biochemical: Catalase +ve (all Staph). Coagulase +ve (S. aureus).
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Antimicrobial Resistance & Treatment:
- Penicillin resistance: Common (β-lactamase).
- MRSA: mecA gene → altered PBP2a.
⭐ Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains are resistant to all β-lactam antibiotics due to the mecA gene, which encodes an altered penicillin-binding protein (PBP2a).
- VISA/VRSA: Vancomycin-Intermediate/Resistant S. aureus.
- Key Treatments: Vancomycin (for MRSA), Linezolid, Daptomycin.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Staphylococci: Gram-positive cocci in grape-like clusters, catalase-positive (distinguishes from Streptococci).
- S. aureus: Coagulase-positive. Potent virulence factors include Protein A, TSST-1, Exfoliatin, and Enterotoxins.
- MRSA (Methicillin-Resistant S. aureus): A critical nosocomial threat, typically treated with Vancomycin.
- S. epidermidis: Coagulase-negative, notorious for biofilm formation on prosthetic devices and catheters.
- S. saprophyticus: Coagulase-negative, common cause of UTIs in young, sexually active females; novobiocin-resistant.
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