Medical Microbiology Test Questions – Flashcards

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Medical Microbiology
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human-microbe interactions: parasites, pathogens, virulence, host resistance, infection, disease, normal flora
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Parasites
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organism living in or on host & causes damage; diagnostic micro: parasitic worms & protozoa (stool samples)
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Infection
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such a rare process - amazing occurs at all
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Normal flora
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necessary to keep pathogens or competing bacteria away; intimately intertwined in physiology; w/o it, we wouldn't last a week
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Skin
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dry ; acidic (from amino acids on surface ; need water) - tough place to live; most w/I sweat glands ; hair follicles, Gram (+) because more resistant to UV light
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Transient Flora
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never stays in same place - transiently colonizing; can cause pathogenicity
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Resident Flora
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always stays in same place
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Oral Cavity - Saliva
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Saliva is hard place to live because lack of nutrients ; lysozymes/lactoperoxidase destroy bacteria;
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Oral Cavity - Teeth
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Teeth ; gumline have most flora; most anaerobic or strict anaerobes; plaque buildup is biofilm ; traps oral strep or bacilli; when eating, sugars attach ; ferment acid on biofilm, eventually eroding teeth; not as diverse as other biofilms but not monotypic
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Intestinal Tract
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gradient of pH increases ; O2 decrease moving down tract; very complicated ecosystem; organisms stretch out on flora based on physiology (anaerobic bacteria closer to colon; more aerobic closer to esophagus); archaea bacteria in GIT; gas production (H2, CO2, CH4)
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IT Flora
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B12 ; K production, steroid mods; they create vitamins we can't but need; they modify basal compound steroids we made; process carbs first that we can't; they metabolize first then we absorb to digest; detoxify foreign chemicals
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Sloughing epithelial cells
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Gram (-) help to slough epithelial cells to inhibit growth of pathogens
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Disruption of normal flora
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antimicrobials disrupt normal flora, especially in lower tract, which affects chemostat; need to limit antimicrobials
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Upper respiratory tract
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mucous membranes - do most work, keep inhaled particles from entering lower tract
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Lower respiratory tract
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lungs have normal flora; ciliated epi cells keep out particles; 15% have pneumocystis controlled by macrophages but can cause disease; normal flora can cause disease if immune system defective
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Urogenital Tract - Bladder
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Bladder is sterile - urine great medium for culturing; can get cystitis
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Urethra
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facultative (-) rods ; (+) cocci; can become opportunistic pathogens; nosocomial is infection from hospital from catheter
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Vagina
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Pre-puberty ; post-menopause: no glycogen ; alkalinic, Gram (-); Adults have glycogen ; acidic, Gram (+)
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Pathogenesis
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creation of disease; bacteria has to enter, adhere, invade tissues, colonize ; have virulence factors; w/o adherence, nothing will occur
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Adherence
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Bacteria can adhere ; not cause problems but must adhere if they are going to become pathogenic
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Colonization
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bacteria can colonize w/o causing problems; just growth doesn't mean pathogenic yet; mycobacteria can off and on colonize but not cause harm
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Harmful interactions
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exposure, adherence, invasion of tissues, further exposure, colonization/growth, production of virulence factors = pathogen; either toxicosis or invasiveness causes pathogenicity
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invasiveness
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spreads all over to cause tissue damage; ability to gain access to & invade, colonize & become pathogenic
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toxicity
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release of toxins to local or systemic areas to damage tissues
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Host entry - specific
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breaks in skin or mucous membranes (wounds, trauma) allow easy entry but some can implant w/o aggressive entry (gonorrhea)
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Specific adherence
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glycocalyx (capsule, slime layer), fimbrae (many small rods) & pili (few) allow bacteria to adhere like glue to tissues or cells; E. coli mainly causes pathogenicity from fimbrae in upper UT; pili are like grappling hooks
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Fimbrae & antibiotics
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some antibiotics can strip pathogenic flora of its fimbrae, making it inactive & losing pathogenic status
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Host entry - invasion
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penetration of epithelium, initiation of pathogenicity, growth on altered normal surfaces (burned skin, cuts); need plenty of bacterial cells to invade; can leave local sites & grow distantly (blood, lymph)
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Immune system & invasion
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immune system tries to keep bacterial infection local so it does not become systemic
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Growth limitations
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physical (37oC), nutritional & trace elements (iron) needed; iron can be drawn in by acidophores from bacteria, allowing them to become pathogenic
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Dissemination
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swollen lymph nodes signalling infection sites, inflammation causes sentinels to be called in to respond (WBC's, etc)
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Bacteremia
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viable or living bacterial cells in blood, but not growing
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Septicemia
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pathogenic bacterial cells from blood that have invaded ; grown - can cause death
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Virulence
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measure of how pathogenic a bacteria is or relative ability of parasite to cause disease; physiological factors allow them to be competitive in their environments helps to dominate body
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Virulence factors
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extracellular proteins help establish ; maintain disease; enzymes aid colonization ; growth; fibrin clots allow pathogens to live in body and not get attacked; have to be effective because of energy cost or will be cut lose
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Attenuation
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continuous re-growth of pathogen eventually loses pathogenicity
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VF - toxicity
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how much toxins are needed to cause pathogenicity
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Exotoxins
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extracellular proteins; cause damage far from infection site; botulinum loose - most virulent toxin; tetanus toxin clenched
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Enterotoxins
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intestines; organ system failure; from food poisoning; massive secretion of fluid; E. coli and Shigella are same bug phylogenetically (shig has 4 diff species derived from non-pathogenic E. coli); shiga toxin causes more severe Shigellosis
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Endotoxin
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Gram (-) lipopolysaccharide; release of endogenous pyrenogens; usually have low levels in circulation; causes fever, diarrhea, decrease in lymphocytes ; leukocytes ; platelets, inflammation; severe is septic shock; test levels with Limulus (horseshoe crabs)
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Host defense mechanisms
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nonspecific, specific, natural resistance; amplitude of reaction for response rate: nonspecific attack anything (weak rate), specific only attacks one kind (strong rate)
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Nonspecific mechanism
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always turned on, no prior stimulus from particular pathogen; can react towards anything (primary immune response)
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Specific mechanism
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prior infection, body already built-up immune response for specific pathogen to be turned on (needs priming from repeated exposure to be more efficient) (secondary immune response)
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Natural host resistance
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certain populations have resistance to diseases because they lack receptors for those pathogenic cells (bacteria, virus)
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Stress
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can allow normal flora to become pathogenic, it harms immune system if too high
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Physical ; Chemical defenses
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these are independent of immune system; secretions, blood, cilia, mucous, normal flora, skin, acidity, flushing, pH
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Inflammation ; fever
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body's response to infection - low amounts can be good to rid bacteria; high or chronic amounts are bad; swollen, red & warm when fluid released & blood (RBC, WBC) at site of infection; fever either kills or stimulates blood to kill pathogen (pyrogenic compounds)
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Cytokines
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chemical messengers produces by leukocytes to send signals & bring in reinforcement
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Clinical Microbiology
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detection & ID of pathogens, antimicrobial susceptibility testing - determine if pathogen suspectible to what antibiotic; more important to figure out antimicrobial susceptibility than the ID of pathogen; can start broad spectrum AB's ; switch once ID determined
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Clinical Micro Routes
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microbiological route is classical: collect specimen; Conventional: culture ; isolate specimen; Molecular: immunological or molecular; Immunological
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Molecular route
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detect genetics, molecules or Ag's specific to that bug; can also do Ag-Ab test (PCR most common); amplification of nucleic acids
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Conventional Micro route
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enrich, select or differentiate culture & isolate to identify & determine AB susceptibility
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Molecular micro route
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search for genome of pathogen (nucleic acid hybridization or PCR)
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Molecular immuno route
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search for pathogen's microbial cells or virus particles using fluorescent Ab test or ELISA
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Immuno route
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blood sample - search for Ab against suspected pathogens Ag; Ab assay (agglutination, RIA, ELISA, etc)
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Specimen collection
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most important step in clinical micro; asceptic collection; can get contamination or not enough of sample; transport
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culture media
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general purpose (NA), enriched (BA), selective (EMB Gm -) or differential (EMB Lac +)
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Blood cultures
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rule out bacteremia vs. septicemia; aerobic ; anaerobic vials; amt/vol of sample VERY important (can increase or decrease sensitivity) incubate 5 days
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UTI's
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very common & from normal flora, most common is nosocomial infection (from hospital); (-) rods or (+) cocci
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Urine specimens
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bacturia - infection 105; culture on blood agar or MacConkey agar; MA selective gram (-) & differential for Lac (+); Blood is both Gram (+) & Gram (-)
Also blood specimen for nitrite production, or high WBC; dipstick
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Fecal specimens
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preservation necessary; Selective & Differential media required; Campylobacter most common cause of GTI's; H10157 big outbreak from variation of Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (cause shiga toxins); Parasites (worms, protozoa)
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Fecal Parasites
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worms like tapeworms or protozoa like nematodes
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Wound/Abscess cultures
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wound - superficial, deep; specimens - tissue, fluid aspirate, swab; anaerobes
tissue sample or fluid aspirate from outside of wound (not swab of tissue); "jelly donut story"; most likely polymicrobic infection (do anaerobic ; aerobic cultures)
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Abscess treatment
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antimicrobials hard to disseminate abscesses so masses have to be excised
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Genital cultures
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STD's; some hard to culture, Neisseria, Chlamydia, Treponema pallidum (syphillis) & HIV
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Neisseria
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enriched, selective agar w/ increased CO2 & humidity
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Chlamydia
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very hard to culture; cell culture & Ag detection or nucleic acid sequencing tests (can also determine if other infections)
***for sexually abused - cannot run nucleic test bcz false (+); only cell culture for legal purposes
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Polymorphonuclear cells
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Gram (-) diplococci Neisseria - can see only one form for males but different morphology for females
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Growth-dependent ID methods
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selective & differential media; conventional biochemical tests; rapid biochemical tests; automated biochemical tests
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Antimicrobial susceptibility testing
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disk diffusion methods & liquid dilution methods
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Disk diffusion methods
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Kirby-Bauer, Zones of inhibition, interpretation: sensitive, intermediate
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Liquid dilution methods
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minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC)
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Immunological ID methods
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serology: Ag-Ab reactions, IgM, IgG, agglutination, fluorescent Ab's, ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay)
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IgM, IgG
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IgM key because it's quickly increased during infection (current or recent infection); IgG harder to test for
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Agglutination
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Ag-Ab binding to form lattice = + result
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Fluorescent Ab's
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tag Ab's w/ fluorescent dye & wash; see binding with color
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ELISA (don't focus on - might not be on test)
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direct enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay; Ab's to virus on plate; add patient sample (serum, etc) which possible virus particles or Ag's; Add antivirus Ab with conjugated enzyme; wash w/ buffer; add substrate for enzyme; + results are colored; quantitation proportional to Ag
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Molecular diagnostic methods*
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based on analysis of pathogen-specific nucleic acid (NA); can use PCR's or other technology to amplify sequences; because complimentary DNA is stable
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Benefits of molecular diagnostic methods
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readily extracted, visualized & detected; sequences unique to each pathogen & can be amplified; DNA stable
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Mol diagnostic methods: NA (nucleic acid) probes & PCR*
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NA probes: ssDNA, specific to particular pathogen, hybridization reactions
PCR: amplify NA targets, increasity sensitivity, qualitative PCR, quantitative PCR (viral load), reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR); PCR uses two NA primers, one is cell & one is ssDNA
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NA probes - Detection*
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place specimen cells on filter; lyse cells & generate ss target DNA; add reporter-labeled probe; allow for reannealing to target; measure hybridization directly if reporter radioactive or fluorescent; add enzyme substrate if reporter enzyme; detect using radioactive detector, fluorimeter or colorimeter/visual inspection
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NA probes - Measure Reporter*
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lyse & denature sample in NaOH; region complementary to target DNA with reporter probe & capture probe; hybridize sample DNA to probes in solution; nucleases destroy unhybridized probe; target DNA against complementary DNA - capture w/ dipstick; measure reporter.
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Qualitative PCR
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Used for mycobacterium TB
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RT-PCR*
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HIV is RNA virus so RT needed, then do PCR
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clinical micro - diagnostic virology*
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cytopathogenic effect on cell lines; electron microscopy; ELISA, virus-specific PCR
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clinical micro - diagnostic virology*
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selective media, non-selective media, direct microscopic observation
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Exotoxins - Gram (+) or (-)?
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Gram (+)
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Endotoxins - Gram (+) or (-)?
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Gram (-)
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