Bacteriology Flashcards

1
Q

Mechanism for MRSA resistance

A

mec gene (mecA) which produces PBP2a. This has a low affinity for beta lactams.

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2
Q

SCCmec type - hospital and community acquired

A

Type 1, 2 and 3 - hospital

Type 4 and 5 - community

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3
Q

MRSA lab definition

A

Oxacillin MIC greater or equal to 4mcg/ml

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4
Q

Catalase positive bacteria

A
Staphylococcus 
Pseudomonas aeroginosa
Aspagillus fumigatus 
Candida albicans
Enterobacteriaceae (Klebsiella, Serratia)
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
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5
Q

What is the Panton-Valentine leukocidin?

A

A toxin produced by S. aureus which is cytolytic to PMNs, macrophages and monocytes

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6
Q

Bacteria classed as Group A strep

A

S. pyrogenes

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7
Q

Toxins involved in scarlet fever

A

Streptococcus pyrogenic exotoxins

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8
Q

Mechanisms Group A Streptococcus uses to avoid phagocytosis

A

M protein

Polysaccharide capsule

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9
Q

Pathogenesis of Scarlet Fever

A

Group A Streptoccocus infection releases the toxin sreptoccocal pyrogenic exotoxins. There is then a hypersensitivity reaction to the toxin leading to the rash

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10
Q

VRE - what organism is it most associated with

A

E. faecium. E. faecalis resistance is significantly more rare

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11
Q

Mechanism of VRE

A

Vancomycin resistance cluster genes coding for a changed binding terminus D-Ala-D-Ala to D-Ala-D-lactate

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12
Q

Cause of tetanus including bacteriology

A

Clostridium tetani. An anaerobic, gram positive spore-forming rod. Disease is caused by exotoxin, transported via peripheral motor neurons to body, crosses to inhibitory interneuron, blocking its neurotransmission.

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13
Q

Signs of tetanus

A

Local - muscle spasms and pain, trismus, difficulty swallowing
Generalised - muscle spasms, loss of airway and breathing, cardiovascular instability, fever, seating, GI stasis

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14
Q

Immediate management of tetanus

A
  • Clean wound + abx
  • Human Tetanus immune globulin (including intrathecal)
  • Support airway and breathing
  • Control spasms with sedation, magnesium sulphate, paralytics
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15
Q

What are the live vaccines?

A
MMR 
BCG 
Varicella 
Zoster 
Rotavirus 
Japanese encephalitis 
Oral typhoid 
Yellow fever
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16
Q

What are the vaccines recommended routinely in the elderly?

A

Yearly influenza
Pneumococcal at 65
Herpes zoster at 70
Boostrix if in contact with children eg grandparents

17
Q

What are the gram positive cocci?

A

Staphylococci - coagulase pos (S. aureus) or neg (other)
Streptococci - alpha haemolytic (viridans, pneumococcus), beta haemolytic (groups A-G)
Enterococcus

18
Q

What type of bacteria are clostridia? What are the subtypes?

A
Gram pos anaerobic rods 
C. perfringens 
C. botulinum 
C. difficile 
C. tetani
19
Q

What type of bacteria are neisseria? What are the subtypes?

A

Gram neg cocci
N. meningitidis
N. gonorrhoea

20
Q

What are the aerobic gram neg rods?

A

Very large group:

  • Enterobbactereaceae
  • Pseudomonads
  • Vibrios
  • Haemophilus
  • Legionella
  • Helicobacter-like
21
Q

What are the HPV oncoviruses?

A

HPV 16 and 18 are the major viruses