Term
Phases of bacterial growth: |
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Definition
lag log / generation / doubling time stationary death |
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Term
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Definition
PROteinaceous INfectious agents |
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Term
Diseases caused by prions are collectively known as: |
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Definition
transmissible spongiform encephalopathies |
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Term
What sort of pathogen is an obligate intracellular organism? |
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Definition
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Term
Name the study of... viruses bacteria fungi |
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Definition
virology bacteriology mycology |
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Term
How do bacteria reproduce? |
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Definition
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Term
What sort of pathogen is a prokaryote? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
prokaryote: free DNA in cytoplasm, no nucleus eukaryote: nucleus with DNA; organelles |
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Term
What phase of bacterial growth can also be called "doubling time"? |
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Definition
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Term
Name the types of pathogens from smallest to largest: |
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Definition
prion virus bacteria fungi protozoa parasites |
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Term
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Definition
binary fission (budding) fruiting body (spore) |
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Term
What sort of pathogens are eukaryotes? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
How do protozoa reproduce? |
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Definition
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Term
What does NF stand for? What does it mean? |
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Definition
Normal Flora- non-pathogenic microbes on/in the body |
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Term
Which places in the body should be free of normal flora? |
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Definition
-spinal fluid -blood -bladder |
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Term
Microbes range in size from: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
concentration of oxygen at specific pressure in atmosphere |
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Term
Majority of clinically significant bacteria require pH _____. |
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Definition
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Term
Majority of bacteria pathogenic to animals requires what temperature range? What is this called? |
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Definition
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Term
Bacteria with low temp requirements are called ______. Bacteria with high temp requirements are called ______. |
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Definition
low- psychrophiles high- thermophiles |
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Term
Bacteria have specific requirements for what 4 environmental factors? |
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Definition
temp, pH, O2 tension, nutrition |
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Term
What liquid media is often used for anaerobes? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
require absence of oxygen |
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Term
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Definition
can grow under a variety of conditions |
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Term
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Definition
prefer reduced O2 tension (lower O2 conc than what's in atmosphere), and increased CO2 |
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Term
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Definition
require high levels of CO2 |
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Term
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Definition
dried extract of sea algae |
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Term
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Definition
protein from animal tissue |
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Term
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Definition
-general purpose media -antibiotic sensitivity |
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Term
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Definition
Blood Agar Plate -enriched media -beta, alpha, gamma, delta hemolysis |
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Term
How do enriched medias affect bacterial growth? |
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Definition
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Term
What are examples of enriched media? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-enriched media -anaerobes |
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Term
Name and describe the types of hemolysis shown on a BAP: |
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Definition
Beta: complete hemolysis, "clearing" Alpha: partial hemolysis, "greening" Gamma: no hemolysis Delta: double zone hemolysis (clear then green) |
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Term
Is blood agar differential or selective? |
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Definition
differential - the way that bacteria affect the blood on the plate helps you ID the bacteria |
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Term
Selective vs Differential media |
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Definition
Selective: promotes the growth of certain bacteria
Differential: helps distinguish different bacteria |
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Term
Is MacConkey differential or selective? Explain. |
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Definition
selective - crystal violet inhibits Gm+ growth, so the media selects for Gm- bacteria |
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Term
Is Simmons Citrate differential or selective? |
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Definition
differential - media starts off green, and bacteria that can use citrate turn it blue |
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Term
What are pre-enrichment media used for? |
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Definition
increase the number of organisms before you plate it |
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Term
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Definition
-pre-enrichment and differential -increases # orgs before plating -becomes transparent if Strep (vs Staph) -detect septicemia |
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Term
Bacteria are organized by what 3 traits? |
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Definition
shape, arrangement, staining |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-pl bacilli -rod or cylinder |
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Term
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Definition
-pl spirilla -twisted like spiral -motile |
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Term
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Definition
-shape ranges from cocci to rod -eg coccobacilli |
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Term
Name the shapes of bacteria: |
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Definition
-cocci -bacilli -spirilla -pleomorphic |
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Term
Name the arrangements of bacteria, describe each, and give an example. |
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Definition
-single: lone bacterium; spirillum and most bacilli -pairs: two bacteria; diplococci like Strep. pneumoniae -short/long chains: Streptococcus -clusters/bunches/groups: Staph. aureus -palisade: like fence posts, Corynebacterium |
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Term
When describing bacteria, in what order do you list their traits? |
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Definition
stain - shape - arrangement
eg. Gm- cocci in short chains |
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Term
2 genus of bacteria that have endospores? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-resistant to heat, dessication, chemicals, radiation -can be central, subterminal, or terminal |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What bacterium has central endospores? Subterminal? Terminal? |
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Definition
Central: Bacillus anthracis Subterminal: Clostridium chauvoei Terminal: Clostridium tetani |
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Term
What bacterium causes "black leg"? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-aids in ID -determine predominant organisms in mixed specimen -help determine culture medium -help determine appropriate anti-bacterials for sensitivity testing |
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Term
Gm staining doesn't work for what bacteria? |
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Definition
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Term
Describe how to perform a Gm stain: |
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Definition
1. heat fix 2. crystal violent 1 min, rinse 3. iodine 1 min, rinse 4. decolorizer until clear, rinse 5. safranin 1 min, rinse |
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Term
What color are Gm+ bacteria? What color are Gm- bacteria? |
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Definition
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Term
When reporting your findings on a Gm stain slide, what do you need to include? |
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Definition
-whole smear and individual bacteria -staining, shape, arrangement of bacteria -quantify the bacteria -epi cells, inflammatory cells -lysed WBCs = pink proteinaceous material |
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Term
How can you find a good spot to evaluate a Gm stain slide? |
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Definition
look for pink epis with purple cocci (NF) |
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Term
How to distinguish artifacts from bacteria: |
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Definition
artifacts may be refractile, have edges, not be uniform size/shape |
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Term
When looking at a Gm stain fecal smear, it is important to note what? |
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Definition
proportion of Gm+ to Gm- bacteria (healthy = mostly Gm+) |
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Term
What is the KOH test used for? How do you perform it? |
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Definition
-gram variable reaction -differentiate Gm+ from Gm-
1. mix sample with drop KOH 2. stir 2 min 3. Gm- become mucoid, strand-like; Gm+ remain homogenous |
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Term
Name the simple stains and for what they are used. |
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Definition
-crystal violet: yeast -methylene blue: yeast -lactophenol blue: confirm and ID fungi |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
preserves fungal structures |
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Term
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Definition
stains chitin in fungal cell wall |
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Term
What pathogen is often isolated from the ears of dogs with chronis otitis externa? |
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Definition
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Term
Where is Candida usually found? |
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Definition
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Term
What to record about yeast? |
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Definition
-is it budding? -are there hyphae? |
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Term
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Definition
vegetative structure of yeast |
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Term
Name 3 types of yeast and where they are often found: |
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Definition
-Malassezia: ears -Candida: MM -Aspergillus: bird lungs/air sacs |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Wood's lamp may ID ringworm, but it depends on... |
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Definition
the stage the fungi is in |
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Term
DTM turns ___ if positive. |
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Definition
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Term
How to diagnose dermatophytes? |
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Definition
-Wood's lamp -DTM: + turns red -fungassay -Sabouraud agar media for culture -lactophenol blue |
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Term
Name 2 pathogenic fungi (not yeast), and describe them. |
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Definition
Blastomycoses: -"Chicago Disease" -sniff moist soil in spring -destroys lungs -hard to treat
Histoplasma -need high exposure -bird/bat droppings (eg caves) |
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Term
Acid fast staining is often used for what sort of specimen? |
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Definition
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Term
What bacteria must you stain with Acid Fast instead of Gm stain? |
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Definition
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Term
When is Giemsa stain used? |
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Definition
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Term
When is Malachite Green used? |
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Definition
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Term
Aside from Acid Fast, what are 3 special stains? |
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Definition
Giemsa, Malachite Green, Fluorescent |
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Term
When is fluorescent stain used? |
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Definition
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Term
Why is Gm staining often the first step in ID'ing bacteria? |
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Definition
-start Tx based on Gm+ or Gm-, then confirm -get idea of which antibiotic disks to use |
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Term
What is the goal of inoculation and isolation? |
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Definition
isolate bacteria of interest with most aseptic method |
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Term
What comes first: streak plate or gram stain? |
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Definition
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Term
After making a streak plate, what do you do? |
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Definition
-incubate it at 37C for most pathogenic bacteria, for 12-24 hrs -check plate, if growth then isolate colonies |
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Term
What traits should you evaluate when describing bacterial colonies on a streak plate? |
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Definition
-form -elevation -margins -texture -pigmentation |
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Term
Method used to ID bacteria: |
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Definition
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Term
"fastidious" bacteria means: |
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Definition
has complex nutritional requirements, very picky |
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Term
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Definition
-performed on Gm+ cocci and small Gm+ bacilli -more opaque and frothy if positive -POS: Staph or Bacillus -NEG: Strep or Clostridium |
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Term
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Definition
-performed on Catalase+ Gm+ cocci -grows fibrin clot if positive -POS: pathogenic S. aureus -NEG: S. epidermis |
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Term
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Definition
-performed on Gm- bacilli -turns dark color if positive -POS: Pseudomonas -NEG: enterics |
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Term
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Definition
-kit identification -hemolyze RBCs |
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Term
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Definition
-kit identification -enterics |
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Term
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Definition
-kit identification -used on oxidase neg enterics -plastic strips with wells, a bunch of tests in 1 -$$$ -doesn't work for exotics |
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Term
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Definition
-kit identification -pH specific organisms |
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Term
ELISA can used to test for what? Is it often used? |
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Definition
-Salmonella and Staph -not really because $$$ |
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Term
What sort of sample and media are used for antibiotic susceptibility testing? |
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Definition
pure culture on Mueller Hinton |
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Term
What does MIC stand for? What does it tell us? |
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Definition
MIC = Minimum Inhibitory Concentration
tells us if bacteria is sensitive or resistant to an anbiotic |
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Term
What is the term for when 4 bacteria are clumped neatly together? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
--Streptococcus (opportunistic, commensal gut) --Enterococcus (opportunistic, commensal gut) --Staphylococcus (opportunistic, commensal skin/MM, Ab resistant strains) |
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Term
Streptococcus is usually in what formation/s? |
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Definition
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Term
Grape-like clusters are associated with what bacterium? |
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Definition
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Term
Flesh-eating bacteria is most closely associated with what bacterium? |
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Definition
Staphylococcus (or Strep) |
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Term
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Definition
-rare -usually not in chains or clusters --Moraxella (bovis/ovis) = IBK, infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis |
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Term
What does IBK stand for? What bacterium causes it? |
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Definition
Infectious Bovine Keratoconjunctivitis -Moraxella bovis(ovis) -Gm- cocci |
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Term
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Definition
-vary greatly in size/appearance, so describe! --Bacillus --Clostridium --Corynebacterium --Listeria --Actinomyces --Nocardia --Erysipelothrix --Lactobacillus |
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Term
What traits do Bacillus and Clostridium share? What differs? |
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Definition
BOTH: GM+ bacilli, spore-formers that produce toxins
Bacillus = aerobe, zoonotic Clostridium = anaerobe |
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Term
Gm+ bacilli, aerobic spore-former that produces toxins and is zoonotic |
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Definition
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Term
Gm+ bacilli, anaerobic spore-former that produces toxins |
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Definition
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Term
Notable Corynebacterium species? What do they cause? |
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Definition
C. bovis = mastitis C. pseudotuberculosis = ulceratiev lymphangitis in horses/cattle |
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Term
Gm+ Bacilli that are pallisading? |
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Definition
-Corynebacterium -Listeria |
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Term
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Definition
-pallisading Gm+ Bacilli -cattle (abortions and encephalitis) -zoonotic |
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Term
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Definition
-Gm+ Bacilli -anaerobic, filamentous -A. bovis = lumpy jaw |
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Term
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Definition
-aerobic, filamentous -intracellular -partial acid fast ->30 spp cause Dz in animals |
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Term
What bacteria has over 30 spp that cause Dz in animals? |
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Definition
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Term
"Lumpy jaw" is associated with what bacterium? |
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Definition
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Term
What bacterium is carried in the larynx of 50% of pigs and is shed in feces, urine, and saliva? |
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Definition
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Term
"Diamond skin" is associated with what bacterium? Describe the disease. |
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Definition
Erysipelothrix -septicemia, high mortality, red spots on skin in acute cases, zoonotic, there is a pig vaccine |
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Term
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Definition
-Erysipelas mostly in pigs -septicemia -high mortality -zoonotic -vaccine for pigs -diamond skin in acute cases |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-wide size variation --Pseudomonas: P. aeruginosa = guinea pig pneumonia --Brucella: Brucellosis, zoonotic --Bordatella --Francisella: F. tularensis = tularemia, rabbits, zoonotic --Neisseria: commensal in mouth; opportunistic elsewhere; gonorrhea |
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Term
Guinea pig pneumonia is associated with what bacterium? |
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Definition
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Term
What's the stain / O2 requirement / shape of Brucella? |
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Definition
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Term
What causes tularemia? What sort of bacterium is it? |
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Definition
Francisella tularensis Gm- Aerobic Bacilli |
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Term
Human gonorrhea is associated with what bacterium? |
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Definition
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Term
Commensal bacterium in the mouth that can cause opportunistic infections via bites? What sort of bacterium is it? |
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Definition
Neisseria Gm- Aerobic Bacilli |
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Term
Gm- Facultative Bacilli (just list) |
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Definition
--Escherichia --Shigella --Salmonella --Klebsiella --Enterobacter --Citrobacter --Yersinia --Proteus --Aeromonas --Actinobacillus --Haemophilus --Pasteurella |
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Term
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Definition
Gm- Facultative Bacilli -NF but can cause UTIs -highly pathogenic strains 0157:H7, ESBL |
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Term
What bacterium causes dysentary in people and NHPs? What sort of bacterium is it? |
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Definition
Shigella, a Gm- Facultative Bacilli |
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Term
What bacterium is NF but can opportunistically cause pneumonia? What sort of bacterium is it? |
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Definition
Klebsiella, Gm- Facultative Bacilli |
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Term
What is the most isolated pathogen? What sort of bacterium is it? |
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Definition
Enterobacter, Gm- Facultative Bacilli |
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Term
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Definition
Gm- Facultative Bacilli NF, opportunistic, motile, most frequently isolated pathogen |
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Term
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Definition
Enterobacter coli NF, UTI, highly pathogenic strains like 0157:H7, ESBL) |
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Facultative Bacilli -ubiquitous in aquatic environment -pathogenic to fish and cold-blooded spp |
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Facultative Bacilli -oral cavity -opportunistic, mostly LA pathogen |
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Facultative Bacilli -oral commensal -opportunistic |
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Facultative Bacilli -P. multocida = pasteurellosis in rabbits |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Anaerobic Bacilli -gut NF esp. in carnivores -opportunistic -increasing # Ab resistant strains |
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Term
What bacterium is found in the gut of all warm-blooded animals? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Anaerobic Bacilli -gut NF esp. in carnivores -opportunistic -increasing # Ab resistant strains |
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Term
Gm- Pleomorphic (just list) |
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Definition
--Chlamydia --Haemobartonella --Anaplasma --Ricketsia --Mycoplasma |
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Term
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Definition
--Leptospira --Treponema --Borrelia |
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Term
Spiral and Curved Bacteria |
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Definition
Campylobacter Helicobacter |
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Pleomorphic -parasitic bacteria attach to RBC cell wall -reclassified as Mycoplasma |
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Term
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Definition
-Gm- Pleomorphic -intracellular parasitic bacteria -C. psittaci -zoonotic |
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Term
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Definition
-spirochete -syphillis in humans and rabbits |
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Term
What bacterium causes syphilis in humans? What other animal? |
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Definition
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Term
Tick/Flea-borne obligate parasitic spirochete? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-spiral/curved, or boomerang-shaped -GI Dz, zoonotic |
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Term
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Definition
H. pylori = ulcers in humans / NHPs |
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