MCB Exam 3 – Flashcards

question

Strep and Staph are both gram _________.

 

answer
+ Cocci
question
Strep is in _____________ while Staph is in _____________.
answer

Chains

Clusters

question
N. Gonorrhea is classified as a gram _____________
answer
- cocci
question
Why are gram - bacterias harder to trea?
answer
The outer membrane have the porins that make it more resistance to treat because they are so selective and dont allow certain things to get in.
question
________________ and _______________ are examples of Gram + Bacilli.  And are rods in chains.
answer

Bacillius

Clostridium

question
When it comes to O2 source, Bacillus is ________________ while Clostridium is __________.
answer

Aerobic

Oligate Anaerobe (grows in deep body parts)

question
Gram - Bacilli are ___________________that are in short rods that cause many diseases. Example are E.Coli, Shigella, Salmonella.
answer
Enterobacteriaceae
question

Cholera = _______________

Syphillis = _______________

answer

Vibril

Spirochete

question
Streptolysin O lyses ____________ and releases ________________.
answer

RBC

HgB

question
An infection with ______________ will develop an antibody to Streptolysin O and thus will have ____________ RBC.
answer

Strep. Pyogenes

Intact

question
List the Gram + spore-forming anaerobic bacilli..
answer

Clostridium Perfringenes

C.Tetani

C.Botulinum

C. difficile

question
What does CDAD stand for?
answer
Clostridium Difficile-Associated Diarrhea
question
What happens with Pseudomembranous colitits?
answer
The bacteria disrupts the normal flora and colonizes.  It produces Toxin A and B which damages the tissues and causes excessive growth and leads to an enlarged colon.
question
What are some ways to diagnose CDAD?
answer
  1. Endoscopy (for pseudomembranous colitis)
  2. Culture (grow anaerobically to get a + culture)
  3. Cell culture cytotoxin test = filter feces and look for A and B toxin
  4. EIA toxin test
  5. PCR toxin gene detection
question
_____________ may occur in 1/5 of CDAD patients.
answer
Relapse; occurs within 1-3 weeks after termination of Rx and is with the same strain.
question
What are some characteristics of gangrene?
answer
  • Myonecrosis
  • Muscle swelling
  • Severe pain
  • Gas production
  • Sepsis
question
What is the bacteria that causes gas gangrene?
answer
C. perferinges
question
Botulinum is an ________ and _______________ which makes the most toxic compounds.
answer

Exotoxin

Nuerotoxin

question
C.Botulinum causes _______________ whereas C.Tetani causes _______________.
answer

Constant relaxation

Lockjaw = constant contraction

question
Streptococus spp. is classified according to:
answer

Hemolysis pattern on blood agar

Serological properties

Biochemical properties

 

question

Beta hemolysis ____________ lysis RBCs.

Alpha hemolysis ____________ lysis RBCs.

Gamma hemolysis _______________.

answer

Partially

Completely

does not harm.

question
Classification o beta hemolytic Streptococci is based on _______________. There are _____ and ____ groups.
answer

C-carbohydrate (need an antigenic analysis of extracted carbohydrate)

 

A and B groups

question
An example of an A group Streptococci is _______________while an example of a group B Streptococci is _____________.
answer

S.Pyogenes

S. Agalactiae

question
S.Pyogenes is part of the normal flora found in ___________, ___________ and _______.
answer

Mouth

Throat

Resp. tract

question
What type of diseases can occur with a S.Pyogenes infection?
answer

1. Skin infection

2. Respiratory infection

3. Invasive systemic infection (can spread via lympth and cause tissue damage)

question
List some examples of diseases that occur with S.Pyogenes infection.
answer

Pharyngitis (strep throat)

Tonsillitis

Scarlet fever

Rheumatic fever

Impetigo

Cellulitis

Bactermia

Necrotizing fasciitis

question
What are the virulence factors of S.Pyogenes?
answer

1. Pili

2. M protein

3. Capsule

4. Streptolysin S and O

5. Hyaloronidase

6. Pyrogenic extotoxins

7. Bacteremia

question
What is special about the M protein on the S. Pyogenes?
answer
It is anti-phagocytic
question
Hyaloronidase is aka _______________ because they break dwon _____________..
answer

Spreading factor

Connective tissue

question
Pyrogenic exotoxins are responsible for producing a ________ whereas bacterimia spreads the infection thru the ____________.
answer

Fever

Blood system

question
If you have fluid vesicles, pustules, yellowish crust and pus filled lesions you have?
answer
Impetigo
question
Which disease can be caused by both a Strep and Staph infection?
answer
Impetigo
question
If you have a rash, flushed face and witish coating on tongue then you have this?
answer
Scarlet fever
question
If you have carditis, polyarthritis, chorea, subq nodules and can lead to heart problems you have this?
answer
Rheumatic fever
question
If caught early, _____________ works best for treating the flesh eating bacteria.  If not then you have to remove the dead tissue.
answer
Penicillin
question
What are the virulence factors for group B Streptococci?
answer

Petidoglycans

Capsule

Hydrolytic enzymes = Proteases, lipases, amylases that destroy all polymers.

question
What are some diseases that can occur with Group B Strep?
answer

Puerperal sepsis

Pneumonia

Meningitis

question
What is a CAMP test?
answer
A blood test that diagnoses btwn staph and strep. and distinguishes btwn group A and group B strep infections.
question
S.Pneumoniae is ____________ hemolytic and is more _____________- than toxigenic.
answer

Alpha

Invasive

question
____________ are a major virulence determinant in S.pneumoniae
answer
Capsules
question
What are some predisposing factors for S.pneumoniae disease?
answer

Anything that interferes with:

The cough reflex

the epiglottal reflex

Cilliary action

question
What are some characteristics of enterobacteriaceaes?
answer

1. Non-spore forming

2. Faculative

3. Short rods

4. Gram -

5. Ferment glucose with acid +/- gas

question
Antigenic characteristics of Enterobacteriaceae include:
answer

O = somatic

K = capusle

H = Flagella

question
Name enterbacteriaeae that cause can which disease.
answer

E. coli = GI and UTI infections

Klebsiella = pneumonia, and UTI

Salmonella = Typhoid fever (severe form)

Proteus = UTI

 

question
What is a bacterocult and how do you read results?
answer

Used to detect with pathogen if any caused an UTI infection.

You phenol read indicator if you have a colony <25 then no infection.

if colony 25-50 may have infection

If colony > 50 then def have an infection

question
When using phenol red if you have urea your pH will ___________and you will see a _________ color.  If you have lactose then your pH will ____________ and you see __________ color.
answer

Increase

Pink

Decrease

Yellow

question
Which 3 organisms cause UTI and which is the main one?
answer

E.Coli (main)

Klebsiella

Proteus

question
Which toxins of E.Coli act like virulence factors?
answer

Heat labile (LT1 and II)

Heat stable (STa and STb)

Shiga like (STL I and STL II) = bloody diarrhea

Hemolysin

question
What does ETEC stand for?
answer
Entertoxigenic E.Coli
question
How does ETEC cause watery diarrhea?
answer

Has 2 toxins (LTI n II) and (Sta n b).  LT increase cAMP while St increases GMP these cause ions to be lost and water follows.

 

Both interfere with the uptake of ions

question
Severe diarrhea from E.coli is caused by which toxin?
answer

Shiga like toxin

Can cause bloody diarrhea

question
What does EHEC stand for?
answer
Enterohemorrhagic E.Coli
question
How does the Shiga like toxin work in E.coli?
answer
It is an A- B toxin that disrupts protein synthesis in eukaryotic cells.
question
What is the most serious result of an E.Coli infection?
answer

HUS

Hemolytic Uremic syndrome

question
Which strain of E.Coli is mostly likely cause of HUS?
answer
O157:H7
question
How is Shigella usually transmitted?
answer
Fecal-oral route
question
How does the Shigella disease spread?
answer
Enters the small intestine, multiplies and travels to ileum and colon.  Attaches to invades the M cells of the Peyers patche.  Can spread to cells via epithelial cells.
question

What are the possible pathogenesis outcomes of bacteria transmitted by the enteric route?

answer

1. Mucosal adherence

2. Mucosal invasion

3. Mucosal translocation

question
What are some features of mucosal adherence? And give an example of an organism that does this.
answer

Production of enterotoxin

No invasion or lesions

Watery diarrhea

 

Ex: Vibrio Cholerae

question
What are some features of mucosal invasion and provide an example of an organism that does this.
answer

Cells are invaded, bacteremia is less common

Have observable lesions

Diarrhea with blood or pus is possible

 

Ex: Enteropathogenic E.Coli and Shigella

question
What are some features of mucosal translocation and give an example of an organism that does this?
answer

Bacteria passes thru the mucosal layer

Spreads thru body in macrophages

Symptoms such as fever, shock

 

Ex: Salmonella typhi (survive phagocytosis)

question
What are some methods to detect the presence of an enterotoxin?
answer

1. rabit ileal loop test

2. Infant mouse lethality

3. Enzymatic tests

question
List some methods used to detect invasiness.
answer

1. Production of keatoconjunctivitis (guinea pig eyes)

2. Invasion of cells in tissue culture

question
What type of diseases can Salmonella cause? Which is the mildest? the most severe?
answer

1. Gastroenteritis (mildest)

2. Septicemia

3. Enteric fever (most severe)

question
What are characteristics of extra intestinal disease caused by Salmonella?
answer

Septicemia

Fever, Shock, lesions in the kidneys and lungs

GI symptoms may be low

Pediatric and Geriatric are greater risk

question
What are some characteristics of enteric fever caused by Salmonella?
answer

Most sever form of infection  = Typhoid fever

Invades the Intestinal tract, penetrates the wall enter lymph nodes.  Dont get killed by phagocytes so they multiply and reenter the blood stream (fever, shock from endotoxin). Can reenter intestine and cause diarrhea and infect gall bladder also.

Frequently fatal

question
T/F: There is a vaccine in the form of killed bacteria available for S.typhi.
answer
true
question
Name a disease caused by Klebsiella pneumoniae.
answer

1. UTI

 

2. 1-5% of penumonia

question
What is the major virulence factor of Klebsiella penumoniae?
answer
capsule
question
Proteus make this enzyme _________ that causes the pH to increase.  This favors its growth and makes the symptoms worse.
answer
Urease
question
What is the etiologic agent of plague?
answer
yersinia pestis
question
What are the important features of the diseases caused by Yersinia pestis?
answer

Can be Bubonic, Septicemic and Pneumonic

 

Bubonic = Lympth nodes are infected, usually groins; pain in limbs and get fever

 

Septicemic = Spreads to liver and lungs

 

Pneumonic = Infection of lungs, rapid spread, high fatality rate

question
How is Yersinia pestis transmitted?
answer

Wild rodent---flea----wild rodent

Wild rodent---flea----domestic rodent---humans

 

 

question
What is the significant of Y.Pestis being able to grow at high or low temperature?
answer
In fleas, below 27 C, the bacteria makes coagulase.  This clots the blood and makes fleas feel hungry so they will bite more people.
question
What are the virulence factors for Yersinia pestis?
answer

response is related to the location.

 

In fleas = low temp = coagulase = more bites

In blood = Antiphagocytic Fraction 1 Ag = high temp

 

In macrophages = High temp, low Ca2+ = Expression of outer membrane proteins

question
T/F: Penicillin is most effective against Y,pestis.
answer
False; but other antibiotics are effective!
question
Gram - curved bacilli =
answer
Vibrio
question
What are the variants for Vibrio?
answer

Vibrio Cholera = associated wi/epidemics

Vibrio Vulnficus = associated w/wounds

question
Why is Fla a good place for Vibrio to grow?
answer
Multiplies in warm salty water such as the beaches. 
question
How is V.Cholerae transmitted and what happens to the ID if you take an antacid?
answer

Food and Water

 

High ID50> 10^8, but if neutralize pH then ID50 ~ 10^4.  (now more likely to get sick)

question
What are the major virulence factors for V.Cholerae
answer

1. Motility

2. Attachment (to M cells)

3. Enterotoxin production ( A-B toxin)

question
What does halophilic mean?
answer
Salt loving conditions
question
What are the 2 major routes of infections with V. Vulnificus
answer

Wound infections = cuts exposed to contaminated water, shellfish or crabs swelling to necrosis

 

Septicemia = Ingestion of contaminated seafood

question
Campylobacter jejuni is another example of a gram - rod, it has a _______ ID50 and causes gastroenteritis.  What syndrome occurs with this?
answer

low

 

Guillain- Barre Syndrome

question
What are C.Jejuni virulence factors?
answer

Attachment

Toxin

 

(destroys the tight junction and causes the cells to disperse and die)

question
C.Jejuni usually occurs in the ______________ with the ______________ of H2O.
answer

Summer time

Recreational use

question
_______________ is a common skin inhabitant; infects prosthetic parts inserted into humans like valves, catheters, shunts.
answer
Staph Epidermidis
question
Does Staph or Strep like salt?
answer
Staph
question
What enterotoxins does Staph have?
answer

A-E with all similar activities

 

Are super antigens that increase cytokine, nausea, vomitting, and cause severe watery diarrhea with no fever

question
What kind of cells do B toxins of Staph attack?
answer

RBCs

WBCs

Macrophages

Fibroblasts

Platelets

question
Alpha toxin of Staph may be responsible for _____________ during infection. It can cause necrosis.
answer
tissue damage
question
S.Aureus is a ______________ pathogen.
answer
Low grade
question
Exfoliative toxins have 2 forms..both are ___________ and break intracellular bridges in the epidermis.  Produce ______________.
answer

Proteases

Scalded skin syndrome

question
What types of enzymes does Staph possess?
answer

Coagulase

Hyaluronidase

Staphylokinase

Lipases

Nucleases

question
Coagulase is aka _____________ whereas hyaluronidase is aka _____________.
answer

Clotting factor

spreading factor

question
T/F:  Coagulase makes a gel around the bacteria. It insulates it so WBC cant reach the bacteria.
answer
True
question
Staph contains _____________ that binds to Fc portion of an Antibody.  It causes it to ____________ and takes it out of circulation.  Antibodyno longer functions properly.
answer

Protein A

Precipitate

question
________________ is the main component of connective tissue.
answer
Hyaluronic acid
question
Staphylokinase is another example of a ______________ because it dissolves the human clotting components.
answer
Spreading factor
question
What are furuncles?
answer
Raised rash: infection of hair folicles producing areas of raised, painful ndoules with necrotic tissue underneath
question
What are carbuncles?
answer
Fusion of furuncles and invasion of deeper tissue
question
What is TSST?
answer

Toxic Shock Syndrome

 

(Staph infection from tampon causes superantigen = shock)

question
Name diseases caused by Chlamydia trachomatis
answer

1.Chlamydia

2. Trachoma (conjuctivitis)

3. Reiters syndrome

4. PID

5. Lymphogranuloma venerum

question
What are the 2 forms of chlamydiaceae?
answer

1. Infectious elementary bodies

2. Non-infectious reticulate bodies

question
Chlamydia is an _____________ organism with no ___________ and needs __________ from there host cells.
answer

Energy dependent

cell wall

ATP

question
Why was Chlamydia first mistaken as a virus?
answer
Because both are intracellular parasites and require energy from there host and both have no cell walls.
question
T/F: Not all Chlamydia is from an STD.
answer
True
question
T/F: The most commonly reported STD is Gonorrhea.
answer
False; Chlamydia is
question
What are the 3 biological varities of the chlamydia trachomatis?
answer

1. Trachoma

2. Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV)

3. mouse pathogen

question
Trachoma deals with eye infections and venereal diseases.  It is the leading cause for _____________________ and 75% of women are _______________-.
answer

Non traumatic blindness

Asymptomatic

question
Where do men get infections caused by Chlamydia?
answer

Urethra

prostate gland

epididymis

question
What do women get if infected with Chlamydia?
answer

Cervical infection

Inflmmation of the fallopian tubes

 

can lead to sterility or ectopic pregnancy

question
What is salpingitis?
answer
A infection is accomponied by inflammation and necrosis. This can block the egg from the ovaries to enter the uterus.
question
A urogenital infection caused by Chlamydia have ___________ being more asymptomatic.  Some usual symptoms include ______________ with a discharge.
answer

women

urethritis

question
What is the most common direct specimen test to detect Chlamydia?
answer
Frozen antibody
question
Neisseria are gram - cocci that have ____________ instead of LPS.
answer

LOS

LipoOligosaccharides

question
Neisseria are non motile and _____________.
answer
Aerobic
question
T/F: Neisseria meningitidis only affects humans and transmission is by contact.
answer
False; it does only affect humans, but trasmission is by aerosols
question
What are the virulence factors for N.Meningitidis?
answer

1. Capsules = antiphagocytic

2. Endotoxin = LOS

3. IgA proteases

4. Transferrin = steals Fe from host

question
What is Petechiae?
answer

Small, purplish hemorrhagic spots on the skin that appear in certain severe fevers; they are indicative of great prostration.

 

(skin infection from N.meningitidis)

question
What are the important characteristics of N. meningitides?
answer

Colonize in the nasal passage

In 7-10 bactercidial Ab is made and bacteria spreads

(Carrier state persists for days to months)

Mild fever, pharyngitis

Septicemia w/fever and shock because of LOS

Inflammation of brain and spinal cord

question
Why do some people get the N.Meningitidis disease whereas others become carriers?
answer
Individuals with disease were more likely to have  a defect in their complement system: C8 was low.  This lead to a 5000-10000x increase in sensitivity to disease.
question
What results from a lowered complement component?
answer
Phagocytosis is normal but  extracellular killing is reduced
question
Penicillin can corss the BBF during inflammation but does not eliminate the carrier state.  Which antibiotic does tho?
answer
Rifampin or Chloramphenicol
question
N.gonorrhoeae is ______________ to environmental stress.
answer

Not resistant

 

Sensitive to sun, heat and cold

question
What type of virulence factors does N.gonorrhoae has and which is the most important?
answer

1. Pilli= usually attach to urinary tract (MOST IMPORTANT)

2. Opa proteins = mediate binding to cells

3. Tbps and Lbp = Tranferrin/ Lactoferrin

4. LOS = with Lipid A and endotoxin activity

question

 What are the possible complications of disseminated gonococcal infection

answer

Baacterimia leading to disseminated gonococcal infection.

Infection in the joints can lead to arthritis

Newborns can get severe eye infections that can lead to blindness.

question
Men have a _______ chance of being infected, but if they are infected _______will show clinical symptoms.
answer

1/5

95%

question
What are some complications of Gonorrhea in men?
answer
Infection of the prostate and infection with other bacteria
question
How does gonorrhea affect women?
answer

Most are asymptomatic

Bacteria attaches to columnar epithelium cells and some are engulfed and transported into the submucossal area and causes irritation and some clinical symtpoms such as pain with pee, vaginal discharge and ab pain.

question

What other antibiotics are used to treat gonorrhea?

answer
Quinolones
question
Why is it difficult to develop a vaccine for gonorrhea?
answer
because of antigenic variability
question

What are the chances of gonorrheal infection after a single exposure for male and female?

answer

Men = 1/5

Women = 1/2

question

Which diseases discussed in class are zoonotic diseases? And what does zoonotic mean?

answer

Bacillus Anthracis

 

Affects domestic and wild animals

question
Bacillis and Clostridium are similar in morphology but Bacillus is _____________while Clostridium is an ____________.
answer

Facilitated anaerobe

Obligate anaerobe

question
What are the common routes of transmission of Bacillus anthracis?
answer

1. Cutaneous (most common)

2. Inhalation (lethal)

question
What are some characteristics of TB?
answer

Slender rod shaped

Gram +

Non spore forming

nonmotile

Aerobic or faculative anaerobic bacilli

Has capsules but are not effective so get ingested in to macrophages but survive due to

high lipid content on cell wall (allows survival in harsh conditions)

 

question
What is the significance of the cell wall of the TB agent?
answer
Has a high lipid content so allows survival of harsh conditions.  Makes resistant from drying and from drugs
question

What is the mechanism of pathogenesity of TB agent?

answer
TB microbe prevents the fusion of the lysosome with the phagosome so it becomes an intracellular pathogen
question
What is a tubercle?
answer
An alveolar macrophage with a live bacteria in it
question

What are the main clinical manifestation of TB?

answer

Productive, persistent cough

Weight loss

fatigue

night sweats

question

 What are the characteristics of TB skin test? What material is used in the test

answer

Intracutaneous injection.  Read it 48-72 hrs later. (hypersensitivity rxn) Results vary. either you have it, had it, or have a vaccine for it.

 

they inject the mycobacterium.

question
T/F: TB has a long generation time.
answer
True
question
What is cell mediated failure?
answer
The hard shell breaks down and the tubercle escapes and multipies.  The disease is now developed.  Occurs once the bacilli are uncontrolled by the immune system.
question
What vaccine is used to prevent TB?
answer
BCG = Bacilli Calmete Guerin
question
What are some characteristics of Myco.Leprae?
answer

Gram + bacilli

Obligate intracellular parasite

Non toxic

Acid fast

question
What is the pathogenesis for Leprosy?
answer

Destroys schwann cells and axons

 

Degenerative myelination and axon degeneration

question
T/F: Leprosy can be cured with an antibiotic
answer

False

There is no cure no vaccine

question
How do you treat leprosy?
answer

Improve their symptoms, but little to none in nerve damage.

Multi antibiotic therapy is needed

1 of

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question

Strep and Staph are both gram _________.

 

answer
+ Cocci
question
Strep is in _____________ while Staph is in _____________.
answer

Chains

Clusters

question
N. Gonorrhea is classified as a gram _____________
answer
- cocci
question
Why are gram - bacterias harder to trea?
answer
The outer membrane have the porins that make it more resistance to treat because they are so selective and dont allow certain things to get in.
question
________________ and _______________ are examples of Gram + Bacilli.  And are rods in chains.
answer

Bacillius

Clostridium

question
When it comes to O2 source, Bacillus is ________________ while Clostridium is __________.
answer

Aerobic

Oligate Anaerobe (grows in deep body parts)

question
Gram - Bacilli are ___________________that are in short rods that cause many diseases. Example are E.Coli, Shigella, Salmonella.
answer
Enterobacteriaceae
question

Cholera = _______________

Syphillis = _______________

answer

Vibril

Spirochete

question
Streptolysin O lyses ____________ and releases ________________.
answer

RBC

HgB

question
An infection with ______________ will develop an antibody to Streptolysin O and thus will have ____________ RBC.
answer

Strep. Pyogenes

Intact

question
List the Gram + spore-forming anaerobic bacilli..
answer

Clostridium Perfringenes

C.Tetani

C.Botulinum

C. difficile

question
What does CDAD stand for?
answer
Clostridium Difficile-Associated Diarrhea
question
What happens with Pseudomembranous colitits?
answer
The bacteria disrupts the normal flora and colonizes.  It produces Toxin A and B which damages the tissues and causes excessive growth and leads to an enlarged colon.
question
What are some ways to diagnose CDAD?
answer
  1. Endoscopy (for pseudomembranous colitis)
  2. Culture (grow anaerobically to get a + culture)
  3. Cell culture cytotoxin test = filter feces and look for A and B toxin
  4. EIA toxin test
  5. PCR toxin gene detection
question
_____________ may occur in 1/5 of CDAD patients.
answer
Relapse; occurs within 1-3 weeks after termination of Rx and is with the same strain.
question
What are some characteristics of gangrene?
answer
  • Myonecrosis
  • Muscle swelling
  • Severe pain
  • Gas production
  • Sepsis
question
What is the bacteria that causes gas gangrene?
answer
C. perferinges
question
Botulinum is an ________ and _______________ which makes the most toxic compounds.
answer

Exotoxin

Nuerotoxin

question
C.Botulinum causes _______________ whereas C.Tetani causes _______________.
answer

Constant relaxation

Lockjaw = constant contraction

question
Streptococus spp. is classified according to:
answer

Hemolysis pattern on blood agar

Serological properties

Biochemical properties

 

question

Beta hemolysis ____________ lysis RBCs.

Alpha hemolysis ____________ lysis RBCs.

Gamma hemolysis _______________.

answer

Partially

Completely

does not harm.

question
Classification o beta hemolytic Streptococci is based on _______________. There are _____ and ____ groups.
answer

C-carbohydrate (need an antigenic analysis of extracted carbohydrate)

 

A and B groups

question
An example of an A group Streptococci is _______________while an example of a group B Streptococci is _____________.
answer

S.Pyogenes

S. Agalactiae

question
S.Pyogenes is part of the normal flora found in ___________, ___________ and _______.
answer

Mouth

Throat

Resp. tract

question
What type of diseases can occur with a S.Pyogenes infection?
answer

1. Skin infection

2. Respiratory infection

3. Invasive systemic infection (can spread via lympth and cause tissue damage)

question
List some examples of diseases that occur with S.Pyogenes infection.
answer

Pharyngitis (strep throat)

Tonsillitis

Scarlet fever

Rheumatic fever

Impetigo

Cellulitis

Bactermia

Necrotizing fasciitis

question
What are the virulence factors of S.Pyogenes?
answer

1. Pili

2. M protein

3. Capsule

4. Streptolysin S and O

5. Hyaloronidase

6. Pyrogenic extotoxins

7. Bacteremia

question
What is special about the M protein on the S. Pyogenes?
answer
It is anti-phagocytic
question
Hyaloronidase is aka _______________ because they break dwon _____________..
answer

Spreading factor

Connective tissue

question
Pyrogenic exotoxins are responsible for producing a ________ whereas bacterimia spreads the infection thru the ____________.
answer

Fever

Blood system

question
If you have fluid vesicles, pustules, yellowish crust and pus filled lesions you have?
answer
Impetigo
question
Which disease can be caused by both a Strep and Staph infection?
answer
Impetigo
question
If you have a rash, flushed face and witish coating on tongue then you have this?
answer
Scarlet fever
question
If you have carditis, polyarthritis, chorea, subq nodules and can lead to heart problems you have this?
answer
Rheumatic fever
question
If caught early, _____________ works best for treating the flesh eating bacteria.  If not then you have to remove the dead tissue.
answer
Penicillin
question
What are the virulence factors for group B Streptococci?
answer

Petidoglycans

Capsule

Hydrolytic enzymes = Proteases, lipases, amylases that destroy all polymers.

question
What are some diseases that can occur with Group B Strep?
answer

Puerperal sepsis

Pneumonia

Meningitis

question
What is a CAMP test?
answer
A blood test that diagnoses btwn staph and strep. and distinguishes btwn group A and group B strep infections.
question
S.Pneumoniae is ____________ hemolytic and is more _____________- than toxigenic.
answer

Alpha

Invasive

question
____________ are a major virulence determinant in S.pneumoniae
answer
Capsules
question
What are some predisposing factors for S.pneumoniae disease?
answer

Anything that interferes with:

The cough reflex

the epiglottal reflex

Cilliary action

question
What are some characteristics of enterobacteriaceaes?
answer

1. Non-spore forming

2. Faculative

3. Short rods

4. Gram -

5. Ferment glucose with acid +/- gas

question
Antigenic characteristics of Enterobacteriaceae include:
answer

O = somatic

K = capusle

H = Flagella

question
Name enterbacteriaeae that cause can which disease.
answer

E. coli = GI and UTI infections

Klebsiella = pneumonia, and UTI

Salmonella = Typhoid fever (severe form)

Proteus = UTI

 

question
What is a bacterocult and how do you read results?
answer

Used to detect with pathogen if any caused an UTI infection.

You phenol read indicator if you have a colony <25 then no infection.

if colony 25-50 may have infection

If colony > 50 then def have an infection

question
When using phenol red if you have urea your pH will ___________and you will see a _________ color.  If you have lactose then your pH will ____________ and you see __________ color.
answer

Increase

Pink

Decrease

Yellow

question
Which 3 organisms cause UTI and which is the main one?
answer

E.Coli (main)

Klebsiella

Proteus

question
Which toxins of E.Coli act like virulence factors?
answer

Heat labile (LT1 and II)

Heat stable (STa and STb)

Shiga like (STL I and STL II) = bloody diarrhea

Hemolysin

question
What does ETEC stand for?
answer
Entertoxigenic E.Coli
question
How does ETEC cause watery diarrhea?
answer

Has 2 toxins (LTI n II) and (Sta n b).  LT increase cAMP while St increases GMP these cause ions to be lost and water follows.

 

Both interfere with the uptake of ions

question
Severe diarrhea from E.coli is caused by which toxin?
answer

Shiga like toxin

Can cause bloody diarrhea

question
What does EHEC stand for?
answer
Enterohemorrhagic E.Coli
question
How does the Shiga like toxin work in E.coli?
answer
It is an A- B toxin that disrupts protein synthesis in eukaryotic cells.
question
What is the most serious result of an E.Coli infection?
answer

HUS

Hemolytic Uremic syndrome

question
Which strain of E.Coli is mostly likely cause of HUS?
answer
O157:H7
question
How is Shigella usually transmitted?
answer
Fecal-oral route
question
How does the Shigella disease spread?
answer
Enters the small intestine, multiplies and travels to ileum and colon.  Attaches to invades the M cells of the Peyers patche.  Can spread to cells via epithelial cells.
question

What are the possible pathogenesis outcomes of bacteria transmitted by the enteric route?

answer

1. Mucosal adherence

2. Mucosal invasion

3. Mucosal translocation

question
What are some features of mucosal adherence? And give an example of an organism that does this.
answer

Production of enterotoxin

No invasion or lesions

Watery diarrhea

 

Ex: Vibrio Cholerae

question
What are some features of mucosal invasion and provide an example of an organism that does this.
answer

Cells are invaded, bacteremia is less common

Have observable lesions

Diarrhea with blood or pus is possible

 

Ex: Enteropathogenic E.Coli and Shigella

question
What are some features of mucosal translocation and give an example of an organism that does this?
answer

Bacteria passes thru the mucosal layer

Spreads thru body in macrophages

Symptoms such as fever, shock

 

Ex: Salmonella typhi (survive phagocytosis)

question
What are some methods to detect the presence of an enterotoxin?
answer

1. rabit ileal loop test

2. Infant mouse lethality

3. Enzymatic tests

question
List some methods used to detect invasiness.
answer

1. Production of keatoconjunctivitis (guinea pig eyes)

2. Invasion of cells in tissue culture

question
What type of diseases can Salmonella cause? Which is the mildest? the most severe?
answer

1. Gastroenteritis (mildest)

2. Septicemia

3. Enteric fever (most severe)

question
What are characteristics of extra intestinal disease caused by Salmonella?
answer

Septicemia

Fever, Shock, lesions in the kidneys and lungs

GI symptoms may be low

Pediatric and Geriatric are greater risk

question
What are some characteristics of enteric fever caused by Salmonella?
answer

Most sever form of infection  = Typhoid fever

Invades the Intestinal tract, penetrates the wall enter lymph nodes.  Dont get killed by phagocytes so they multiply and reenter the blood stream (fever, shock from endotoxin). Can reenter intestine and cause diarrhea and infect gall bladder also.

Frequently fatal

question
T/F: There is a vaccine in the form of killed bacteria available for S.typhi.
answer
true
question
Name a disease caused by Klebsiella pneumoniae.
answer

1. UTI

 

2. 1-5% of penumonia

question
What is the major virulence factor of Klebsiella penumoniae?
answer
capsule
question
Proteus make this enzyme _________ that causes the pH to increase.  This favors its growth and makes the symptoms worse.
answer
Urease
question
What is the etiologic agent of plague?
answer
yersinia pestis
question
What are the important features of the diseases caused by Yersinia pestis?
answer

Can be Bubonic, Septicemic and Pneumonic

 

Bubonic = Lympth nodes are infected, usually groins; pain in limbs and get fever

 

Septicemic = Spreads to liver and lungs

 

Pneumonic = Infection of lungs, rapid spread, high fatality rate

question
How is Yersinia pestis transmitted?
answer

Wild rodent---flea----wild rodent

Wild rodent---flea----domestic rodent---humans

 

 

question
What is the significant of Y.Pestis being able to grow at high or low temperature?
answer
In fleas, below 27 C, the bacteria makes coagulase.  This clots the blood and makes fleas feel hungry so they will bite more people.
question
What are the virulence factors for Yersinia pestis?
answer

response is related to the location.

 

In fleas = low temp = coagulase = more bites

In blood = Antiphagocytic Fraction 1 Ag = high temp

 

In macrophages = High temp, low Ca2+ = Expression of outer membrane proteins

question
T/F: Penicillin is most effective against Y,pestis.
answer
False; but other antibiotics are effective!
question
Gram - curved bacilli =
answer
Vibrio
question
What are the variants for Vibrio?
answer

Vibrio Cholera = associated wi/epidemics

Vibrio Vulnficus = associated w/wounds

question
Why is Fla a good place for Vibrio to grow?
answer
Multiplies in warm salty water such as the beaches. 
question
How is V.Cholerae transmitted and what happens to the ID if you take an antacid?
answer

Food and Water

 

High ID50> 10^8, but if neutralize pH then ID50 ~ 10^4.  (now more likely to get sick)

question
What are the major virulence factors for V.Cholerae
answer

1. Motility

2. Attachment (to M cells)

3. Enterotoxin production ( A-B toxin)

question
What does halophilic mean?
answer
Salt loving conditions
question
What are the 2 major routes of infections with V. Vulnificus
answer

Wound infections = cuts exposed to contaminated water, shellfish or crabs swelling to necrosis

 

Septicemia = Ingestion of contaminated seafood

question
Campylobacter jejuni is another example of a gram - rod, it has a _______ ID50 and causes gastroenteritis.  What syndrome occurs with this?
answer

low

 

Guillain- Barre Syndrome

question
What are C.Jejuni virulence factors?
answer

Attachment

Toxin

 

(destroys the tight junction and causes the cells to disperse and die)

question
C.Jejuni usually occurs in the ______________ with the ______________ of H2O.
answer

Summer time

Recreational use

question
_______________ is a common skin inhabitant; infects prosthetic parts inserted into humans like valves, catheters, shunts.
answer
Staph Epidermidis
question
Does Staph or Strep like salt?
answer
Staph
question
What enterotoxins does Staph have?
answer

A-E with all similar activities

 

Are super antigens that increase cytokine, nausea, vomitting, and cause severe watery diarrhea with no fever

question
What kind of cells do B toxins of Staph attack?
answer

RBCs

WBCs

Macrophages

Fibroblasts

Platelets

question
Alpha toxin of Staph may be responsible for _____________ during infection. It can cause necrosis.
answer
tissue damage
question
S.Aureus is a ______________ pathogen.
answer
Low grade
question
Exfoliative toxins have 2 forms..both are ___________ and break intracellular bridges in the epidermis.  Produce ______________.
answer

Proteases

Scalded skin syndrome

question
What types of enzymes does Staph possess?
answer

Coagulase

Hyaluronidase

Staphylokinase

Lipases

Nucleases

question
Coagulase is aka _____________ whereas hyaluronidase is aka _____________.
answer

Clotting factor

spreading factor

question
T/F:  Coagulase makes a gel around the bacteria. It insulates it so WBC cant reach the bacteria.
answer
True
question
Staph contains _____________ that binds to Fc portion of an Antibody.  It causes it to ____________ and takes it out of circulation.  Antibodyno longer functions properly.
answer

Protein A

Precipitate

question
________________ is the main component of connective tissue.
answer
Hyaluronic acid
question
Staphylokinase is another example of a ______________ because it dissolves the human clotting components.
answer
Spreading factor
question
What are furuncles?
answer
Raised rash: infection of hair folicles producing areas of raised, painful ndoules with necrotic tissue underneath
question
What are carbuncles?
answer
Fusion of furuncles and invasion of deeper tissue
question
What is TSST?
answer

Toxic Shock Syndrome

 

(Staph infection from tampon causes superantigen = shock)

question
Name diseases caused by Chlamydia trachomatis
answer

1.Chlamydia

2. Trachoma (conjuctivitis)

3. Reiters syndrome

4. PID

5. Lymphogranuloma venerum

question
What are the 2 forms of chlamydiaceae?
answer

1. Infectious elementary bodies

2. Non-infectious reticulate bodies

question
Chlamydia is an _____________ organism with no ___________ and needs __________ from there host cells.
answer

Energy dependent

cell wall

ATP

question
Why was Chlamydia first mistaken as a virus?
answer
Because both are intracellular parasites and require energy from there host and both have no cell walls.
question
T/F: Not all Chlamydia is from an STD.
answer
True
question
T/F: The most commonly reported STD is Gonorrhea.
answer
False; Chlamydia is
question
What are the 3 biological varities of the chlamydia trachomatis?
answer

1. Trachoma

2. Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV)

3. mouse pathogen

question
Trachoma deals with eye infections and venereal diseases.  It is the leading cause for _____________________ and 75% of women are _______________-.
answer

Non traumatic blindness

Asymptomatic

question
Where do men get infections caused by Chlamydia?
answer

Urethra

prostate gland

epididymis

question
What do women get if infected with Chlamydia?
answer

Cervical infection

Inflmmation of the fallopian tubes

 

can lead to sterility or ectopic pregnancy

question
What is salpingitis?
answer
A infection is accomponied by inflammation and necrosis. This can block the egg from the ovaries to enter the uterus.
question
A urogenital infection caused by Chlamydia have ___________ being more asymptomatic.  Some usual symptoms include ______________ with a discharge.
answer

women

urethritis

question
What is the most common direct specimen test to detect Chlamydia?
answer
Frozen antibody
question
Neisseria are gram - cocci that have ____________ instead of LPS.
answer

LOS

LipoOligosaccharides

question
Neisseria are non motile and _____________.
answer
Aerobic
question
T/F: Neisseria meningitidis only affects humans and transmission is by contact.
answer
False; it does only affect humans, but trasmission is by aerosols
question
What are the virulence factors for N.Meningitidis?
answer

1. Capsules = antiphagocytic

2. Endotoxin = LOS

3. IgA proteases

4. Transferrin = steals Fe from host

question
What is Petechiae?
answer

Small, purplish hemorrhagic spots on the skin that appear in certain severe fevers; they are indicative of great prostration.

 

(skin infection from N.meningitidis)

question
What are the important characteristics of N. meningitides?
answer

Colonize in the nasal passage

In 7-10 bactercidial Ab is made and bacteria spreads

(Carrier state persists for days to months)

Mild fever, pharyngitis

Septicemia w/fever and shock because of LOS

Inflammation of brain and spinal cord

question
Why do some people get the N.Meningitidis disease whereas others become carriers?
answer
Individuals with disease were more likely to have  a defect in their complement system: C8 was low.  This lead to a 5000-10000x increase in sensitivity to disease.
question
What results from a lowered complement component?
answer
Phagocytosis is normal but  extracellular killing is reduced
question
Penicillin can corss the BBF during inflammation but does not eliminate the carrier state.  Which antibiotic does tho?
answer
Rifampin or Chloramphenicol
question
N.gonorrhoeae is ______________ to environmental stress.
answer

Not resistant

 

Sensitive to sun, heat and cold

question
What type of virulence factors does N.gonorrhoae has and which is the most important?
answer

1. Pilli= usually attach to urinary tract (MOST IMPORTANT)

2. Opa proteins = mediate binding to cells

3. Tbps and Lbp = Tranferrin/ Lactoferrin

4. LOS = with Lipid A and endotoxin activity

question

 What are the possible complications of disseminated gonococcal infection

answer

Baacterimia leading to disseminated gonococcal infection.

Infection in the joints can lead to arthritis

Newborns can get severe eye infections that can lead to blindness.

question
Men have a _______ chance of being infected, but if they are infected _______will show clinical symptoms.
answer

1/5

95%

question
What are some complications of Gonorrhea in men?
answer
Infection of the prostate and infection with other bacteria
question
How does gonorrhea affect women?
answer

Most are asymptomatic

Bacteria attaches to columnar epithelium cells and some are engulfed and transported into the submucossal area and causes irritation and some clinical symtpoms such as pain with pee, vaginal discharge and ab pain.

question

What other antibiotics are used to treat gonorrhea?

answer
Quinolones
question
Why is it difficult to develop a vaccine for gonorrhea?
answer
because of antigenic variability
question

What are the chances of gonorrheal infection after a single exposure for male and female?

answer

Men = 1/5

Women = 1/2

question

Which diseases discussed in class are zoonotic diseases? And what does zoonotic mean?

answer

Bacillus Anthracis

 

Affects domestic and wild animals

question
Bacillis and Clostridium are similar in morphology but Bacillus is _____________while Clostridium is an ____________.
answer

Facilitated anaerobe

Obligate anaerobe

question
What are the common routes of transmission of Bacillus anthracis?
answer

1. Cutaneous (most common)

2. Inhalation (lethal)

question
What are some characteristics of TB?
answer

Slender rod shaped

Gram +

Non spore forming

nonmotile

Aerobic or faculative anaerobic bacilli

Has capsules but are not effective so get ingested in to macrophages but survive due to

high lipid content on cell wall (allows survival in harsh conditions)

 

question
What is the significance of the cell wall of the TB agent?
answer
Has a high lipid content so allows survival of harsh conditions.  Makes resistant from drying and from drugs
question

What is the mechanism of pathogenesity of TB agent?

answer
TB microbe prevents the fusion of the lysosome with the phagosome so it becomes an intracellular pathogen
question
What is a tubercle?
answer
An alveolar macrophage with a live bacteria in it
question

What are the main clinical manifestation of TB?

answer

Productive, persistent cough

Weight loss

fatigue

night sweats

question

 What are the characteristics of TB skin test? What material is used in the test

answer

Intracutaneous injection.  Read it 48-72 hrs later. (hypersensitivity rxn) Results vary. either you have it, had it, or have a vaccine for it.

 

they inject the mycobacterium.

question
T/F: TB has a long generation time.
answer
True
question
What is cell mediated failure?
answer
The hard shell breaks down and the tubercle escapes and multipies.  The disease is now developed.  Occurs once the bacilli are uncontrolled by the immune system.
question
What vaccine is used to prevent TB?
answer
BCG = Bacilli Calmete Guerin
question
What are some characteristics of Myco.Leprae?
answer

Gram + bacilli

Obligate intracellular parasite

Non toxic

Acid fast

question
What is the pathogenesis for Leprosy?
answer

Destroys schwann cells and axons

 

Degenerative myelination and axon degeneration

question
T/F: Leprosy can be cured with an antibiotic
answer

False

There is no cure no vaccine

question
How do you treat leprosy?
answer

Improve their symptoms, but little to none in nerve damage.

Multi antibiotic therapy is needed

Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New