Microbiology Lab – Midterm – Flashcards

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Streptococcus pneumoniae

 

- alpha hemolysis

- Optochin susceptible

- aerotolerant anaerobes / obligate fermenters / some capnophiles (CO2)

- prefer BA plate

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Corynebacterium diphtheria

(w/ L. monocytogenes)

 

- can show BETA hemolysis (we didn't see any)

- on Tellurite, black growth

- facultative anaerobes

- slow growth (except on Loeffler's slant)

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Haemophilus influenzae

 

- requires X factor (heme) and V factor (NAD)

- therefore they must grow on CA or around Staph colonies

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H. parainfluenzae

 

- requires V factor only, so will grow around V strips all the way

- can look a lot like H. influenzae

- facultative anaerobes

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Listeria monocytogenes

 

- can show soft beta hemolysis (we didn't see)

- growth on tellurite is grey-black

- facultative anaerobe

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Staphylococcus aureus w/S. epidermis

 

- S. aureus: beta hemolysis, larger

- S. epidermis: no hemolysis, small

 

- facultative anaerobes

- hardy, salt-tolerant and drying-tolerant

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Staph. saprophyticus

 

- no hemolysis

- facultative anaerobe

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Strep pyogenes (Grp A)

 

- beta hemolysis 100% when anaerobic incubation

- aerotolerant anaerobe

- prefers BA plate

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Strep. agalactiae (Grp B)

 

- beta hemolysis

- aerotolerant anaerobe

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Acid-fast stain
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- used to visualize mycobacteria, which have high MW lipid cell walls that repel gram staining, and are slow-growing

- mycobacteria show up as beaded, slender, pink rods, usually stuck together in clumps

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Novobiocin resistance
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- used to differentiate S. saprophyticus from S. aureus and S. epidermis

- S. saprophyticus is the only one of these that is RESISTANT

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Coagulase test
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- used to differentiate S. aureus from S. epidermis and

S. saprophyticus

- S. aureus is POSITIVE

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Catalase test
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- used to differentiate between GPC

- Staph is catalase POS, and

Streps are all catalase NEG

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Beta Hemolysis
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- complete lysing of RBCs

- exhibited by:

- Staph. aureus

- Strep pyogenes (A) - 100% when anaerobic incub.

- Strep agalactiae (B)

- Corynebacterium diphtheria (possible)

- Listeria monocytogenes (possible)

"Beta A DiffLisAur" (Strep B & A, Diph, List, S. aureus)

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Alpha hemolysis

- what tests could you use first to distinguish them?

answer
- partial RBC lysis

- exhibited by:

Strep pneumoniae

viridans Streptococci

Tests you could do:

- catalase? if NEG, it's a strep...

- optochin test? if susceptible, it could be pneumo, and you should do bile solubility

to confirm. If it's resistant, it's viridans or other. You can stop here.

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NO hemolysis
answer

exhibited by:

  • Staph. epidermidis, Staph. saprophyticus
  • Enterococcus
  • Neisserias & Moraxella (GC, MC, MX)
  • C. pseudodiphtheria
  • H. influenzae, H. parainfluenzae
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Normal microbiota
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  • Staph aureus (nares)
  • Staph epidermidis (skin)
  • Strep pneumo (10-30% of throats)
  • viridans Strep
  • Enterococcus (fecal)
  • N. meningitidis (3-15% of URTs)
  • Moraxella catarrhalis
  • diphtheroids
  • L. monocytogenes (environmental & intestinal)
  • H. influenzae & parainfluenzae (URT)
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Facultative anaerobes
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  • Staph spp.
  • C. diptheria & C. pseudo
  • L. monocytogenes
  • Haemophilus spp.
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Incubate in increased CO2
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-Strep species (viridans, Pneumo, Enterococcus)

-Neisseria gonorrhea

-Neisseria meningitidis

(but not M. catarrhalis)

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Fastidious

(most to least)

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  • N. gonorrhea (CA, CO2)
  • H. influenzae (X/V factor so CA), H. para (V only, still CA)
  • N. meningitidis (BA, CO2)
  • Strep Grp A, B, pneumo, viridans (BA preferred)
  • Enterococcus (aerotolerant, but hardier)
  • C. diphtheria (slow)
  • Staph. aureus / epidermidis, Listeria monocytogenes
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UTI
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  • Staph. saprophyticus
  • Enterococcus
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Meningitis can be caused by...
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  • Grp B Strep (neonatal)
  • Strep pneumoniae
  • N. meningitidis (hematogenous)
  • L. monocytogenes (rare, foodborne)
  • H. influenzae

Brains Have No Problem Listening!

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CSF sample
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- taken from lumbar puncture / spinal tap

potential pathogens:

  • Grp B strep (neonates)
  • H. influenzae (young children)
  • N. meningitidis (children, young adults)
  • Strep pneumoniae* (older adults)
  • Listeria monocytogenes (rare)
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Wound specimen
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- Staph aureus (abscesses, impetigo)

- Staph epidermis (occasional, often a contaminant but can be acq. nosocomial)

- Grp A Strep (necrotizing fasciitis; can be w/ or w/o S. aureus in erysipelas)

- Enterococcus

- diphtheroids (usually contaminants)

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Sputum specimen

- what types of cells to look for?

- what types of bacteria to look for?

- what type of contaminants to watch out for?

answer
- should have PMNs in bacterial pneumonia infx

LOOK FOR:

- Strep. pneumoniae

- Staph aureus (tho could be normal microbiota)

- H. influenzae(tho could be normal microbiota)

Contaminants from mouth if improper collection:

- Neisseria

- viridans Strep

- or confusion w S. aureus / H. influenzae normal microbiota

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Bacitracin resistance

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- used to differentiate Group A & B Strep

- Group B Strep is RESISTANT

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Optochin resistance

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- used to differentiate between Streps

- viridans Streptococci are RESISTANT

while pneumococcus is Susceptible

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Bile esculin

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Enterococcus

- where found?

- nutrition r/t other Strep?

- infx where?

- tests?

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- typical fecal microbiota

- they're aerotolerant anaerobes, but hardier

- can cause wound infx, sometimes UTI

- no hemolysis

- Catalase NEG (maybe pseudo)

- Bile Esculin POS (black on slant)

- NaCl 6.5% POS (color chg)

 can confirm

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viridans Streptococci

- what type of specimen?

- tests? colony morphology?

answer
- often found in throat/mouth, so contaminates sputum specimens

- Catalase NEG

- alpha hemolytic, very tiny colonies

- Optochin resistant

- Bile Solubility - NEG

confirms it

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Strep. pneumoniae

- where?

- infx?

- distinctions?

answer
- Throat microbiota of 10-30% healthy ppl

- Pneumonia* also Meningitis

 

- colonies have mucoid appearance, small, white, alpha hemolytic

- Catalase NEG

- Optochin susceptible

- to confirm do:

- Bile Solubility - POS (soluble)

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Bile Solubility

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- used to differentiate Strep pneumo from other alpha-hemolytic Strep

- put a drop of sodium deoxycholate onto isolated colonies on a plate, and incubate 15 mins.

- Strep pneumo is Bile Soluble - these colonies should lyse and disappear

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Sodium hippurate test

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- differentiates Grp B Strep from other Strep spp.

- positive test indicated by deep purple color after incubation and addition of ninhydrin reagent

 

- Grp B Strep is Sodium Hippurate POS

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Group B Streptococcus

- colony morphology

- tests

- where would you look for this

answer
- incubate anaerobically for reliable beta hemolysis

- beta-hemolytic, colonies have slight orange pigmentation, small, creamy

- Catalase NEG

- Bacitracin RESISTANT

- Sodium Hippurate Hydrolysis - POS (purple)

(B is more HIP than A)

- look for in suspected neonatal meningitis

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Group A Streptococcus
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- Strep throat, wounds, also think of post-Strep disease

- toxins!!!

- white colonies, remain intact when pushed w/loop

- Catalase NEG

- beta hemolysis

- Bacitracin susceptible

confirm serologically

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Oxidase Test
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- few orgs are Oxidase pos (purple)

-The Neisserias

- M. catarrhalis

- tests for activity of cytochrome c oxidase (part of ETC of some bacteria)

- moisten filter paper with oxidase reagent, transfer test colony to paper and POS result is purple color change

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VCN media
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- SELECTIVE media containing Abx that inhibit growth of organisms that might outcompete N. gonorrhea (it's a slow grower)

 

- V = vancomycin (for G+)

- C = colistimethate (for G-)

- N = nystatin (for yeasts)

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What organisms grow only on Chocolate agar?
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- N. gonorrhoeae

- H. influenzae
(H. flu will also grow in satellite colonies around Staph)

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CTA slants (Cystine Trypticase soy agar)

- used to differentiate between N. gonorrhoeae,

N. meningitidis, and M. catarrhalis

- you'd use it if you had Oxidase POS organisms & you want to narrow it down

- color change from pink to yellow if positive

- Glu - GC & MC, but not MX

- Mal - MC only

- Lac - neither

- Suc - neither

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Moraxella catarrhalis

- growth and differentiation

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- growth on NA, without CO2 incr

- sugar degradation test - NEG for all

 

- GC, MC and MX are all oxidase POS

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Strep pneumo

- hemolysis?

- Bile Solubility?

- Abx resistant / susceptible

answer

- ALPHA hemolysis

- bile SOLUBLE

- optochin SUSCEPTIBLE

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Urease Test

- L to R: POS, NEG, NEG or not inoc

- tests for organisms ability to produce urease; urease hydrolyzes urea and releases NH3, raising pH of medium

- pH raised = more alkaline = pink result (POS)

- we use to differentiate between GPRs:

- C. pseudodiphtheria is Urease POS

- C. diphtheria & L. monocytogenes are Urease NEG

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Enterococcus vs. Group D Strep

- tests?

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Enterococcus is bile-esculin POS + grows in 6.5% NaCl.

Group D Strep is bile-esculin POS, but does NOT grow in NaCl.

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Not inoculated

NG

A - C diph and L mono

AG

NC

- C. diphtheria  is (A) for Glu and Mal

- C. pseudo is (NC) for all

- L. mono is (A) for Glu and Mal

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Nitrate reduction test
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- tests an orgs ability to reduce nitrate to nitrite, NO, N2O, N2

- nitrate A/B detect nitrite

- red color change after adding reagents A/B indicates (+) result.

- If no (+) result, add zinc, which tests for remaining nitrate

- if red color change results after adding zinc, we can conclude a (-) test

- Orgs that are (+) C. diph and C. pseudo (L. mono is negative)

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Metachromatic Granules
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- can be visualized using methylene blue

- spirillum volutans

- C. diphtheria

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India Ink Stain
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- used to see the capsule on bacteria

- Cryptococcus (yeast)

- Klebsiella

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Staph aureus infections?

Toxins?

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- abscesses, wound infx, septicemia/bacteremia, pneumonia (rare)

- often nosocomial

Toxin-producing strains:

- food poisoning, TSS, SSSS

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Latex agglutination serogroups spp.
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- Strep A/B

- N. meningitidis

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C. diphtheria
- where found? (is it normal)
- tests?
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- throat in lesions (few carriers, and some strains are non-toxigenic)
- diptheroids themselves are very common, so lab should be looking specifically for diphtheria.
- beta-hemolytic (though can't always see it)
- GPR? Check for Listeria or Corynebacterium
Use four different tests:
- sugar ferments (Glu and Mal only w/acid)
- motility (-)
- urease (-)
- nitrate (+)
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Listeria monocytogenes
- where found - tests?
answer
- blood or possibly CSF - if seen, lab must R/O Listeria
- GPR seen, colonies CAN be beta-hemolytic
- Use 4 tests to distinguish between other GPR:
- sugar fermentation (+)
- motility (+)
- urease (-)
- nitrate (-)
(LISTERine at NITe is NEGATIVE because you have no one to spend it on)
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Obligate fermenters
answer
Enterococcus

Strep spp.

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