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Medical Microbiology
ONU Medical Microbiology with Rod Anderson
93
Medical
Undergraduate 2
10/21/2009

Additional Medical Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What are the 3 common diseases of the Lower Respiratory Tract?
Definition

Bronchitis

 

Bronchiolitis

 

Pneumonia

Term
What are the 3 viral pathogens that cause Bronchitis?
Definition

Coronaviruses

 

Adenoviruses

 

Influenza viruses

Term
What is the bacterial pathogen which causes bronchitis?
Definition
Mycoplasma Pneumoniae
Term
What are the signs and symptoms of Bronchitis?
Definition

Cough

 

Phlegm

 

Fever

Term
What kind of treatment is available for Viral bronchitis?  Bacterial?
Definition

Bronchitis caused by viruses can only be treated symptomatically

 

Bronchitis caused by bacteria (Mycoplasma Pneumoniae) is treated with Macrolides like erythromycin, or tetracyclines (but not in children or pregnant women).

Term
What type of pathogen causes bronchiolitis?  What is it's name?
Definition

Virus

 

Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV)

Term
Who suffers from bronchiolitis and what are the signs and symptoms?
Definition

Infants <2 years old

 

Cough

 

Difficulty Breathing

 

Cyanosis

 

Fever

Term
What is the treatment for bronchiolitis?
Definition

Hospitalization with O2 support

 

fluids and electrolytes

 

maybe ribavarin

Term
What are the signs and symptoms of pneumonia?
Definition
Fatigue, malaise, fever, cough, chest pain during breathing, shortness of breath, rales (crackling sounds while breathing), and shadows on a chest x-ray.
Term
When does treatment for pneumonia begin? What is the treatment for Pneumonia?
Definition
Treatment begins before lab tests confirm what pathogen is causing it.  It is treated with ampicillin and erythromycin at the same time, but is altered after the pathogen has been identified.
Term
What does ampicillin treat?  What does erythromycin treat?
Definition
Ampicillin treats gram positive bacterial infections, while erythromycin treats infections of gram negative bacteria as well as any walless pathogen.
Term
What are the viral pathogens which can cause pneumonia?
Definition

Parainfluenza viruses

 

Adenoviruses

 

Influenza A

 

Measles Virus

Term
What is the fungal pathogen which can cause pneumonia?  Who can catch this pathogen?
Definition

Pneumocytis Jirovecii

 

Immunocomrpomised individuals

Term
What bacterial pathogens can cause pneumonia in non-predisposed individuals?
Definition

Streptococcus Pneumoniae

 

Mycoplasma Pneumoniae

 

Chalmydia Pneumoniae

Term
What bacterial agents can cause pneumonia in predisposed individuals based on occupation?  What are these occupational factors?
Definition

Legionella Pneumophillia (water cooled air conditioners)

 

Bacillus anthracis (Wool Sorting)

 

Chlamydia psittaci (sick birds)

 

Coxiella burnetii (Farm animals)

 

Brucella spp (Farm animals

 

Term
What bacterial pneumonias infect people who have the influenza A virus? What is the disease caused by the influenza A virus' primary infection?
Definition

Acute Lung disease is caused by Influenza A's primary infection, leading to infection by:

 

Streptococcus pneumoniae

 

Staphylococcus Aureus

Term
What bacterial pneumonia infections afflict those with chronic lung disease?  what diseases cause chronic lung disease?
Definition

Cystic Fibrosis and COPD cause chronic lung disease which leads to pneumonia infections by:

 

Pseudomonas Aeruginosa

 

Staphylococcus pneumoniae

Term
What forms of bacterial pneumonia evince themselves in the immunocompromised? Specifically what predisposes one to these pathogens?
Definition

Alcoholics and vagrants are predisposed to:

 

Klebsiella pneumoniae

 

Mycobaterium tuberculosis

 

HIV/Aids patients are predisposed to:

 

Mycobacterium avium

 

Pneumocytis jirovecii

Term
Describe the characteristics of staphylococcus aureus.
Definition

Gram positive

 

Staphylococcus

 

common drug resistance

 

Coagulase positive

Term
Describe the characteristics of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Definition

Gram negative

 

Rod shapped monopolar

 

No fermentation pathways

 

Oxidase positive

Term
Describe the characteristics of Legionella Pneumophilia
Definition

Gram positive

 

Rod Shaped

 

Fastideous growth

Term
Describe the characteristics of Klebsiella Pneumoniae
Definition

Gram negative enteric

 

Rod shaped

 

Ferments Lactose

 

Facultatively anaerobic

 

Highly mucoid colonies

Term
Describe the characteristics of Pneumocytis jirovecii
Definition

Fungal pathogen

 

Identified by biopsy and light microscopy

Term
Mycobacterium Tuberculosis
Definition

Acit fast bacteria

 

Rod shaped

 

Forms cords in sputum

 

Increasing problem of drug resistance

Term
Streptococcus pneumoniae is treated with
Definition
Ampicillin
Term
Mycoplasma, legionella, chlamydia, coxiella are all treated with
Definition
Erythromycin
Term
staphylococcus aureus is treated with
Definition
Flucloxacillin
Term
Mycobacterium is treated with
Definition
Isoniazid, pyrazinamide, rifampicin and either ethambutol or streptomyacin
Term
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is treated with
Definition
piperacillin and tazobactum (a PA penicillinase inhibitor)
Term
Mycobacterium tuberculosis avoids host defenses by
Definition
being enveloped by the aveolar macrophages
Term
Damage: The body reacts to Mycobacterium tuberculosis by ______
Definition
Containing the organism within tubercles, which are small granulomas.  Tubercles can block avioli and bronchioles, which eventually can overcome the immune system.
Term
If the organisms are not contained, they'll spread to the rest of the body causing ____
Definition
miliary tuberculosis
Term
~ __% of people develope TB disease
Definition
10
Term
Matoux tuberculin skin test
Definition
inject small amount of PPD tuberculin into surface of skin, 48-72 hours later the injection should swell with redness larger than 15mm in a healthy person
Term
what is used to prevent TB in countries with a high rate of it?
Definition
Bacillus Calmette Guérin A.k.a. BCG
Term
The rotavirus' physical characteristics are:
Definition

no envelope

Icosahedral capsid

multiple segments of dsRNA

Acid resistant

Term
Rotavirus' attachment:
Definition
VP4 spike protien in outer capsid attatches to integrin proteins and sailic acid containing glycoproteins and glycolipids
Term
Rotavirus causes damage because:
Definition
NsP4 acts as an enterotoxin, and it damages cells causing shortenning of villi causing less fluids to be absorbed.
Term
Rotavirus vaccine:
Definition
rotateq
Term
Norovirus etiology:
Definition

ssRNA

polyhedral capsid

no envelope

Term
norovirus causes damage through
Definition
it's lytic cycle, and the inflammatory response to its pressence
Term
Method of diagnosis for norovirus:
Definition

Species collection (feces or vomitus) and then Reverse Transcriptase-Polymerase Chain Reaction

RT-PCR

Term
How does MacConkey Agar work?
Definition
It contains peptone and lactose, with bile salts and a neutral red dye (turns red at ~5 ph or lower).  If a pathogen is gram positive, it won't grow due to the bile salts, but if it does and thrives on peptone, then the colony will remain white, but if it ferments lactose then the colonies will turn red due to the dye.
Term
Ecoli's physical characteristics:
Definition

Gram negative rod

peritrichous flagella

lactose fermentation

anaerobic

Term
Enterotoxigenic ecoli causes
Definition
watery diarrhea
Term
Enterohemorhagic Ecoli causes
Definition
bloody diarrhea and Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS)
Term
Enteroinvasive ecoli causes
Definition
bloody diarrhea along with tissue disruption and inflammation
Term
ELISA stands for____ and is performed by:
Definition

Enzyme linked Immonoabsorbent Assay:

 

Creating an agar with specific antibodies in it, then exposing it to a sample, rinsing, then adding a second antibody with an enzyme attached, then rinsing again, and then using a colormetric substrate which the enzyme breaks down causing a color (if the pathogen is there that's what will happen)

Term
Hemolytic uremic syndrome is a result of, and causes...
Definition
infrequent urination, causing tiredness, and losing the pink color in your cheeks and lower eyelids.  People with HUS should be hospitalised because their kidneys may stop working and they might develope serious complications.
Term
salmonella's physical characteristics:
Definition

gram negative rod

motile

no lactose fermentation

H2S production

Term
salmonella can cause...
Definition
ulcers in peyers patches , causing typhoid fever
Term
Shigella's physical characteristics:
Definition

Gram negative rod

nonmotile

no lactose fermentation

Term
Clostridium difficile's physical characeristics:
Definition

gram positive rod

endospore forming

anaerobic

Term
Clostridium difficile is found in ____ and treated with ____
Definition
soil; Oral Vancomycin
Term
Vibrio cholarae's physical characteristics:
Definition

Gram negative curved rod

Monopolar flagellum

can live in aquatic environments

Term
Vibrio cholarae causes:
Definition
rice water stools, and has a 50% mortality rate if untreated due to dehydration
Term
Vibrio cholarae can be found in humans and...
Definition
ocean epidemics
Term
staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin's physical characteristics:
Definition
heat stable, acid stable
Term
Staphylococcus aureus is found in one's ____ and stimulates ______
Definition
nose; vomiting reflex
Term
Helicobacter pylori's physical features:
Definition

curved rod

Produces Urease (breaks urea into NH3 neutralizing acids)

causitive agent of pyloric ulcers

Term
Enatomoeba histolytica vs Giardia lamblia vs cryptosporidium physical characteristics
Definition
Round cysts vs oval cysts vs acid fast, chlorine resistant, unfilterable
Term
Enatomoeba histolytica vs Giardia lamblia vs cryptosporidium treatment
Definition
metronidazole vs quinacrine hydrochloride vs spiramycin (only for immunocompromised)
Term
Describe the pathogen that causes gonorrhea
Definition

Neisseria ghonorrheae

Eubacterial pathogen

Gram negative

diplococcus

Term
Vertical transmission of ghonorrhea can result in ________
Definition
conjunctivitis
Term
Advanced symptoms of Gonorrhea are:
Definition

Abdominal pain

bleeding between menstrual periods

vomiting

fever

Pelvic inflamatory disease PID

Term
Gonorrhea & HIV...
Definition
Gonorrhea increases the chance of catching HIV
Term
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease is characterized by:
Definition

Fever

possibly internal abscesses, long lasting pelvic pain, infertility (10%), ectopic pregnancy

Term
Noncultural Ghonorreea is diagnosed by:
Definition

PCR using gonorrheae specific primers

 

Gram staining pus for gram negative diplococci in leucocytes (only accurate to 50% if women)

Term
Cultural gonorrhea is diagnosed by:
Definition

Taking a sample of a cervical swap or pus

 

Using a thayer martin media chocolate agar with antifungal agents, anti ram positive agents and anti gram negative enterics.

Term
penicillin resistant cases of gonorrhea are treated with...
Definition

ceftriaxone IM single dose

 

Orally: cefixime, ciprofloxacin, or ofloxacin

Term
gonorrhea can also pair with a _________ infection, and so doctors usually _________
Definition
chlamydial; prescribe a combination of antibiotics
Term
Describe the pathogen that causes nongonococcal urethritis
Definition

chlamydia trachomatis

 

gram negative bacillus

obligate intracellular pathogen

Term
Chlamydia causes damage by:
Definition
direct damage through celly lycsis and inflammatory response
Term
__% of women and __% of men are asymptomatic of chlamydia
Definition
75;50
Term
Describe the course of chlamydia in symptomatic females:
Definition

14 day incubation, followed by increased abnormal vaginal discharge.  Strong vaginal odor, painful urination, unusual vaginal bleeding, low abdominal pain, cervix inflamation, and PID follow.

 

HIV risk increased by 3-5 times.

Term
40% of untreated women with chlamydia develope ___, and of those 40%, __% become infertile, __% experience debilitating, chronic ______ pain, and _% will have a life threatening tubal pregnancy.
Definition
PID; 20; 18; 9
Term
Non cultural techniques for diagnosis are:
Definition
Polymerase chain reaction with chlamydia trachomatis specific primers and the direct flourescent antibody test.
Term
chalmydia is treated with:
Definition

Doxycycline

+

Azythromycin

Term
Describe the pathogen that causes Syphilis:
Definition

Treponema palidum

Eubacterial pathogen

Gram negative

spirochete

motile

Term
The clinical features of primary syphilis are:
Definition
Spntaneously healing chancre sores and enlarged inguinal nodes.
Term
The features of secondary syphilis occur ______ and include:
Definition

1-3 months later;

 

flu like illness, myalgia, headache, fever, mucocutaneous rash (great pox), swollen lymph glands, sore throat, patchy hair loss, weight loss, muscle aches, and tiredness with spontaneous resoultion.

Term
Tertiary syphillis occurs _____________ and manifests:
Definition

3-30 years after primary infection:

 

neurosyphilis (insanity, cardiovascular syphilis (aortic lesions and heart failure), and gummas (multi-organ failure)

Term
Describe the attachment of treponema palidum:
Definition
The ends of the bacteria attach to hyaluronic acid-containing extra cellular matrix that joins capillary and endothelial cells.
Term
Treponema Palidum avoids host defenses by:
Definition
being rich in lipids and therefore antigenically uncreative
Term
The test for primary syphillis is _______________ and the test for later stages is _____________
Definition

Dark field microscopy of chancre scraping to see spirochetes;

 

Treonemal antigens from specimen detected using monoclonal antibodies

Term
Treatment of syphillis is ___________ for ____ and in later stages _____________ for _____.  If allergic _________ is used instead, and if pregnant ____________
Definition

Penicillin G; 7-10 days

 

Penicillin G; 21 days

 

a tetracycline; ceftriaxone

Term
Etiology of Herpes simplex virus type II:
Definition

Enveloped

polyhedral capsid

dsDNA

Large size

Form proviruses in neurons

can reactivate to cause recurrent infections (5-8/year)

Term
Symptoms of primary herpes infection:
Definition
sores, fever, malaise
Term
Rare complication of herpes:
Definition
Encephalitis
Term
Etiology of HPV:
Definition

dsDNA

Polyhedral capsid

Nonenveloped

Term
Vertical transmission of HPV causes...
Definition
juvinile onset of recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP)
Term

What is the treatment of cimple cystitis? (Uncomplicated UTI)

 

If resistant?

 

If pseudomonas?

Definition

trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole orally for 3 days

 

quinolone or ampicillin if resistant

 

Drug resistance test required to see if it's pseudomonas

Term
Etiology of staphylococcus saprophyticus:
Definition

Gram positive staphylococci

 

Found primarily in sexually active females

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