Introduction to medical microbiology Flashcards

1
Q

What are possible infecting agents

A
  • bacteria ,viruses ,fungi ,prions ,parasites
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2
Q

What are some sterile sites found in the body?

A

-blood, CSF, lungs and bladder

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3
Q

What are some non-sterile sites found in the body?

A

-nasopharynx, gut,, skin, urethra

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4
Q

What does an organism found in a sterile area indicate?

A

It means the organism is related to the organism causing the disease/infection since sterile sites don’t contain pathogens naturally

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5
Q

What are the specimen collections for bacterial culture for: UTI, chest infection, tonsillitis/ pharyngitis, wound or site infection, diarrhoea, bacteraemia, and meningitis

A
UTI - mid-stream urine 
chest infection = sputum (saliva+mucus) 
tonsilitis/ pharyngitis = throat swab 
wound or site of infection= swab or pus 
diarrhoea- faeces 
bacteraemia - blood 
meningitis - CSF (cerebro spinal fluid)
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6
Q

What is unstained microscopy used for? (2)

A
  1. to see pus in urine or CSF

2. to see parasites in faeces

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7
Q

What is gram stain used for?

A

To see bacteria and yeast/fungi

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8
Q

What is ZN stain (or auramine stain) used for?

A

To see mycobacteria e.g. TB

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9
Q

What are main properties of gram stain?

A
  • Very rapid diagnosis due to bacteria shape (telephone urgent information)
  • Not sensitive
  • Can’t usually identify particular species
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10
Q

What are the main properties of bacterial culture?

A
  • slow (can take days)
  • sensitive (large volumes can be used)
  • culture conditions need to be suitable for expected species (type of media (non-selective, selective), atmosphere, temperature and duration of incubation
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11
Q

What is an example of a non-selective media?

A
  • blood chocolate for specialised mycobacteria
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12
Q

What is an example of a selective media?

A

MacConkey:nutrient agar with bile salts which supress the growth of gut bacteria but allows growth of bacteria such as e.coli (diarrhoea patients use this to suppress the growth of gut bacteria in natural body flora to identify harmful organism)

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13
Q

What is alphahemolysis?

A

darker in colour, streptococcus pneumonia displays this, hydrogen peroxide in the bacteria oxidises the haemoglobin to green methemoglobin (breaks down RBCs to classify organism)

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14
Q

What is betahemolysis?

A

lighter in colour, Streptolysin, an exotoxin, is the enzyme produced by the bacteria which causes the complete lysis of red blood cells

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15
Q

What are some diagnostic methods for viruses? (5)

A
  1. serology (study of blood serum for antibodies/immunity)
  2. antigen detection
  3. nucleic acid detection (sensitive)
  4. more rare methods e.g. electron microscopy or tissue culture
  5. molecular methods e.g. PCR (amplification of DNA)
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16
Q

What are the 3 classification of parasites?

A
  1. protozoa (malaria, amoebae, flagellates)
  2. Helminths/ worms (flatworm, tapeworm, flukes)
  3. Arthropods (lice, mites, ticks)
17
Q

What are the main diagnostic principles of parasitology? (2)

A
  • microscopy of different stages (parasites, cysts and ova (POC) in faeces and blow films for malaria)
    -serology sometimes useful
    (culture difficult as complex life cycle)
18
Q

What are some examples of hospital acquired infections? (4)

A
  • noravirus
  • clostridium difficile
  • MRSA (methicillin resistant staph aureus), +ve
  • ESBLs:Organisms with Extended Spectrum β-lactamases (include variants of e.coli)