Term
What is the reason for streaking bacteria on a plate? |
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Definition
It is similar to a serial dilution- you want to isolate individual colonies. |
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Term
Why would you grow bacteria on a CNA plate? |
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Definition
The Colistin and Nalidixic acid inhibit growth of many Gram-negative bacteria, so it is used to select for gram-positives.
- Colistin is a Polymyxn antibiotic that is effective against most Gram-negative species, including Pseudomonas
- Nalidixic acid is a synthetic quinolone, which inhibits gram-negative bacteria as well
NaCl maintains osmotic balance B vitamins for growth Peptones for growth. |
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Term
Why would you grow bacteria on a MacConkey agar plate? How does it work? |
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Definition
This plate selects for Gram-negative enterics, and can distinguish between lactose fermentors and non-lactose fermentors.
1) Lac+ bacteria such as E. coli, Enterobacter and Klebsiella will produce acid, which lowers the pH and results in the appearance of red/pink colonies
2) Lac- bacteria such as Salmonella, Proteus species, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Shigella use peptone instead, increasing pH and growing clear.
3) The hydrophobic bile salts repel the hydrophilic O-antigens of gram-negative bacteria, protecting them from membrane breakdown and lysis. |
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Term
Why grow bacteria on Chocolate agar? |
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Definition
Nonselective media enriched with lysed RBCs which provide the nutrients necessary for the growth of fastidious organisms such an Haemophilus. |
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Term
What do "alpha," "beta" and "gamma" mean in terms of RBC hemolysis activity by bacteria growing on a Blood agar plate? |
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Definition
Alpha= partial lysis/greenish pigment surround bacteria
Beta= Total hemolysis/good zone of clearing surrounding bacteria
Gamma= no hemolysis, but may observe growth. |
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Term
How does one perform a gram stain? |
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Definition
Tells you cell wall type and morphology!
1) Fix organisms to slide with flame 1) Flood with Crystal Violet 2) Cross-link with mortem (iodine) 3) Decolarize with EtOH and then wash with tap water 4) Counter stain with Safranan for 30s
- Thick peptidoglycan walls that contain techoic acid in gram + species are unaffected by decolorization with alcohol, but single layer in gram - is drained of color |
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Term
WHat is the Kirby-Bauer Method? |
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Definition
1) Paper discs containing different antibiotics are placed on agar plates that have been streaked with bacteria.
2) Measure "zone of inhibition" of each to determine susceptibilities (cant use for TB, because it is slow growing) |
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Term
What do you learn from an Oxidase test? |
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Definition
-Tells you which organisms have cytochrome oxidase, and thus which organisms can use oxygen.
- In lab, Enterobacteria like Klebsiella are oxidase-, while Pseudomonas and Neisseria are oxidase + (dark purple/blue) |
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Term
What do you learn from an indole test? |
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Definition
Tests for organisms' abilities to metabolize tryptophan to indole. This is common in strains of E. coli |
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Term
What does an API test tell you? |
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Definition
- Series of biochemical assays that is used to differentiate between Enteric Gram-negative rods.
- Recall, Enterobacteria are gram negative, facultative anaerobic rods and oxidase-negative. They are isolated from feces, urine, blood and CSF and can grow on MacConkey. They can be motile or non-motile |
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Term
What is the differential diagnosis for typical versus atypical Pneumonia? |
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Definition
TYPICAL (with Sputum) : 1) Streptococcus pneumoniae 2) Haemophilus influenzae 3) Staphylococcus aureus (especially post- influenza) 4) Enterobacteriaceae
ATYPICAL (w/o sputum)
1) Viral 2) Mycoplasma pneumoniae 3) Chlamydophila pneumoniae 4) Legionella pneumophila |
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Term
Which standard antibiotics are provided for a pneumonia? |
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Definition
1) Macrolide (usually azithromycin) 2) Beta-lactam antibiotic (previously ceftriaxone was recommended, now it is ampicillin-sulbactam) |
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Term
How do organisms cause pneumonia? |
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Definition
Microorganisms must first colonize the nasopharynx. This involves transmission by respiratory secretions and landing on the right surface.
Microaspirations during sleep normally provide route of entry into lower respiratory system. |
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Term
How do pathogens associated with CA-pnuemo differ from those in HA-pneumo? |
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Definition
HA= Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus.
CA= Klebsiella and others (easier to treat w/o risk factors and antibiotic resistance of HA) |
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Term
Why might you use Dark-Field microscopy and how does it work? |
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Definition
Spirochetes- Treponema pallidum (Syphilis) and Rickettsia (RMSF)
1) Light source that comes in and is blocked by ANNULAR STOP (except light at edges), which gives the "darkness."
2) Scattered light light is refracted around organism (a shadow around them)
3) Light hits condenser lens and is magnified |
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Term
How do Neisseria look on a gram stain? |
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Definition
Gram-negative Dipplococci |
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Term
Why would you use a Thayer Martin plate? |
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Definition
Selective media for Neisseria
1) Vancomycin (Gram +) 2) Colistin (gram – except Neisseria) 3) Nystatin (Fungals) |
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Term
What serological tests are used to diagnose Syphillus? |
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Definition
Run EIA, RPR then EIA.
1) ELISA (indirect in Ag first) 2) Western Blot to confirm ELISA 3) Agglutination (RPR for Syphilis to detect Cardiolipin- nonspecific to detect cellular death). |
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Term
How does an RPR test work and why would you run it? |
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Definition
Syphilis!
Carbon linked to Treponema antigen (look for distributed agglitination vs. restricted dot) |
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Term
How does qPCR work in Chlamydia diagnosis? |
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Definition
target 18S ribosome and cryptic plasmid of Chlamydia
- Rapid and can determine viral load. |
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Term
How can an Oxidase test help you distinguish between Neisseria and Chlamydia? |
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Definition
Neisseria is Oxidase-positive, since it is a facultatively intracellular
Chlamydia is an obgligate, intracellular pathogen that is Oxidase-negative |
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Term
Why do you need Dark-Field Microscopy for Spirochetes? |
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Definition
Can’t be gram-stained or cultured by ordinary media. |
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Term
What major complications are associated with Chlamydia? |
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Definition
1) PID- "shuffle" and infertility
2) Perihepatitis (Fitzhugh-Curtis Syndrome)- ascites and peritoneal inflammation with no liver enzyme abnormalities
3) Conjunctivitis |
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Term
Why can't you target Chlamydia with beta-lactam antibiotics? |
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Definition
No peptidoglycan, so you cant target cross-linking! |
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Term
What are 3 virulence factors associated with Neisseria gonnorhea? |
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Definition
1) Type IV pili are “grappling hooks” that pull 100,000X times their weight (twitching mobility). Genetic recombination prevents adaptive PMN access
2) Opa proteins bind immune cells to mitigate response, and help with adherence/invasion.
3) Porins- PorA and PorB that promote invasion
4) Iron aqcuisition |
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Term
How do you treat Chlamydia and Neisseria? |
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Definition
Azithromycin (Macrolide) or Doxicycline (tetracycline) |
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Term
What clinical features are characteristic of Neisseria gonorrhea? |
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Definition
1) After attachment to an epithelial surface, followed by penetration between or through epithelial cells, there is a local inflammatory reaction that may or may not be accompanied by dissemination.
2) Local manifestations depending on site of inoculation: urethritis, pharyngitis, proctitis, conjunctivitis
3) Local extension: PID, perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome) Dissemination: cutaneous papular/pustular lesions, septic arthritis (especially monoarticular arthritis in sexually active patients) |
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Term
How does blindness develop in Chlamydial infection? |
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Definition
Blindness develops from chronic conjunctivitis and scarring, ultimately involving the cornea.
Importantly, scarring of the eyelids leads to inversion of eyelashes that abrade, ulcerate, and scar the cornea. |
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Term
What STI’s are reportable to the public health department? |
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Definition
1) Gonorrhea – N. gonorrheae 2) Syphilis- Treponema pallidum 3) Chancroid – Hemophilus ducryei 4) Chlamydia – Chlamydia trachomatis 5) Hepatitis B 6) HIV/AIDS |
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Term
What test should you run if you expect TB? How can you confirm? |
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Definition
1) Acid-Fast stain for Mycobacteria
- Cell wall of mycobacteria is waxy and will take up dye but not de-colarize under acid wash.
WONT GIVE YOU SPECIES.
2) Traditional TB culture (4-6 weeks in special lab with >90% sensitivity and gold standard for specificity) followed by Niacin test to confirm.
3) Automated Liquid Culture- 9-10 days for + specimens and 16 days for - specimens and susceptibilities.
4) Direct PCR |
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Term
Which organisms do not gram-stain well and why? |
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Definition
These Rascals May Microscopically Lack Color
1) Treponema pallidum (dark-field and IF)
2) Rickettsia (intracellular)
3) Mycobacteria (Lipid-content needs acid-fast)
4) Mycoplasma (No cell wall and high sterols)
5) Legionella pneumophila (intracellular- silver stain)
6) Chlamydia (Intracellular) |
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Term
Which species can be stained by Giemsa? |
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Definition
1) Borrelia burdorfieri (lyme)
2) Plasmodium (malaria)
3) Trypanosomes (protoza for Chaga's and Meningo-encephalitis)
4) Chlamydia |
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Term
Why might you use an india ink stain? |
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Definition
To look for Cryptococcus neoformans yeast infections |
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Term
When do you need a silver stain? |
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Definition
Fungi (Pneumocystic jirovici)
Listeria (can cause meningitis) |
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Term
What special requirements are there for culturing H. influenzae? |
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Definition
1) Chocolate Agar (fastidious and needs V and X) |
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Term
What special requirements are there for culturing N. gonorrhoeae? |
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Definition
Thayer-Martin (VPN) media with Vancomycin (gram +), polymyxn (gram - except N. gonorrhea) and nystatin (fungal) |
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Term
What special requirements are there for culturing C. diphtheriae? |
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Definition
Tellurite plate with Loffler's media |
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Term
What special requirements are there for culturing M. tuberculosis? |
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Definition
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Term
What special requirements are there for culturing M. pnuemoniae? |
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Definition
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Term
What special requirements are there for culturing Lactose-fermenting enterics such as E. coli? |
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Definition
Pink colonies on MacConkey (also will grow black on EMB agar) |
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