Leptospira spp. is a topic covered in the Johns Hopkins ABX Guide.

To view the entire topic, please or .

Official website of the Johns Hopkins Antibiotic (ABX), HIV, Diabetes, and Psychiatry Guides, powered by Unbound Medicine. Johns Hopkins Guide App for iOS, iPhone, iPad, and Android included. Explore these free sample topics:

-- The first section of this topic is shown below --

MICROBIOLOGY

  • Leptospira is one of the spirochetes [Fig 1] pathogenic for humans (other examples, Borrelia burgdorferi causing Lyme disease, relapsing fever Borreliae, and Treponemes e.g., Treponema pallidum [syphilis]).
    • Organisms don’t replicate in the environment but may survive in standing water or contaminated soils.
  • Multiple species described (66) and may also be classified by serovars (>300) both pathogenic and non-pathogenic for humans. Further divisions into subclades, for human pathogens
    • P1 subclade, 8 species, may cause severe illness: L. alexanderi, L. borgpetersenii, L. interrogans, L. kirschneri, L. mayottensis, L. noguchii, L. santarosai, L. weillii.
    • P2 subclade, 21 species, usually mild infection. The remaining 26 species comprise the S1 and S2 subclades, which include "saprophytes" known to consume decaying matter (saprotrophic nutrition).
  • Zoonotic disease, transmitted by domestic animals (dogs, cattle, pigs, and more) and rodents (rats, mice).
  • Difficult to culture in the laboratory, fastidious.
    • Liquid media is preferred (e.g, modified Ellinghausen McCulloughJohnson Harris (EMJH) medium +/- 5-FU), temperature 29-32°C. Doubling time 6-18h.
    • Aerobic, but CO2 needed; aeration appears to help growth.

-- To view the remaining sections of this topic, please or --

MICROBIOLOGY

  • Leptospira is one of the spirochetes [Fig 1] pathogenic for humans (other examples, Borrelia burgdorferi causing Lyme disease, relapsing fever Borreliae, and Treponemes e.g., Treponema pallidum [syphilis]).
    • Organisms don’t replicate in the environment but may survive in standing water or contaminated soils.
  • Multiple species described (66) and may also be classified by serovars (>300) both pathogenic and non-pathogenic for humans. Further divisions into subclades, for human pathogens
    • P1 subclade, 8 species, may cause severe illness: L. alexanderi, L. borgpetersenii, L. interrogans, L. kirschneri, L. mayottensis, L. noguchii, L. santarosai, L. weillii.
    • P2 subclade, 21 species, usually mild infection. The remaining 26 species comprise the S1 and S2 subclades, which include "saprophytes" known to consume decaying matter (saprotrophic nutrition).
  • Zoonotic disease, transmitted by domestic animals (dogs, cattle, pigs, and more) and rodents (rats, mice).
  • Difficult to culture in the laboratory, fastidious.
    • Liquid media is preferred (e.g, modified Ellinghausen McCulloughJohnson Harris (EMJH) medium +/- 5-FU), temperature 29-32°C. Doubling time 6-18h.
    • Aerobic, but CO2 needed; aeration appears to help growth.

There's more to see -- the rest of this topic is available only to subscribers.

Last updated: October 4, 2020