Microbiology lab practical 3
Bacteria commonly causing urinary tract infections are:
1) members of the family, enterobacteriaceae, used in this excersie. 2) pseudomonas aeruginosa 3) staphylococcus aureus
The enterotube is a manual procedure that uses _________________ and ___________ to detect changes due to metabolic activity. The tube simultaneously tests for 15 biochemical reactions.
12 media, color indicators
Definition: antigen:
A molecule (I.e. Protein or sugar) that triggers and immune response (I.e. Protein a in staph aureus, antigen a in strep pyrogens.)
Definition: antibody
A protein molecule secreted by b plasma cells which bind to specific antigens.
Why does the doctor need a list of several antibiotics to choose from?
Allergies, alternatives to resistance, patient history
Each Utis bacteria must not only be identified, but the tested for _____________, because the bacteria causing one infection may have different resistance genes than the same kind of bacteria causing the next infection. This is BECAUSE of ___________ picked up from other bacteria.
Antibiotic sensitivity, plasmids
In real-life, ___________________ are used to identify bacteria.
Automated analyzers
You will know the _________, and the disks will tell you the ___________ you are looking at. You need both pieces of information to use the table in lab manual.
Bacteria, antibiotic
__________ are antibiotics that work against several types of bacteria. Can kill normal flora.
Broadspectrum
Step 1 urine culture
Collect clean catch, catheter, or bag
Group b: strep agalactiae-
Commonly colonies the vagina, and can be passed on to newborns. #semmelweiss. OBGYNS test for this in 3rd trimester pregnant women and treat to prevent meningitis in newborn.
When possible infections should be _______ and tested for _________ _________.
Cultured, antibiotic sensitivity
Step 7 urine culture
Determine antibiotic sensitivity, to be sure the medication will cure the infection
The Kirby bauer method is a _________________, the same as antiseptic lab.
Disc diffusion
We will be using bacteria from the family ____________________. These bacteria are _________________ and often found in the intestines. These are commonly sources of Utis due to proximity of the urethra ________.
Enterobacteriaceae, gram negative, portal of exit
Hospital acquired mrsa
Found internally, after a surgery
Community acquired mrsa:
Found on the skin, such as a boil.
Non-grouped (no reactive antigens membrane): strep pneumonia-
Frequent cause of bacterial pneumonia with high death rate in elderly. Confirmed by p disc (optichin) sensitivity.
General characteristics of staphylococci
Gram positive, cocci Progenitor (puss forming) Form clusters of cells, like grapes
Step 3 urine culture
Gram stain. This tells you which antibiotics may be good choices to start. Also tells you the shape of the bacteria.
Step 6 urine culture
Identification (enterotube), to know which is the problem organism.
The big picture for enterotube identification:
Inoculate, incubate, read color reactions --> 5 digit code, look up in book
Staphylococcus epidermidis is a normal flora on the skin. It is pathogenic when it is _______ the body.
Inside
Step 5 urine culture
Isolate pathogen, pure culture, because bacteria exsist in mixed populations.
Staphylococcus aureus with resistance genes is ______________. Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus. Resistant to all the -Illins.
MRSA
The agar we will use, for the Kirby bauer test, is the _______________. The oatmeal base does not interfere with antibiotics (chemically).
Mueller Hinton ii
Utis ______________ addressed because bacteria in the kidneys can lead to life-threatening blood infections.
Must be
_________ kill specific bacteria.
Narrow spectrum
Step 4 urine culture
Perform colony count and determine if an infection is present. An infection is greater than or equal to 100,000 crus/mls
The staphyloslide test is a test for the presence of _______. It is a _______________.
Protein a - antigen, serological test
Step 2 urine culture
Refrigerate it or plate it because after 2 hours at room temperature the lab rejects the urine. In 2 hours, bacteria can reproduce several times, leading to a false positive. For example, the generation time for E. coli. Is about 40 minutes.
What is the enterotube looking for?
Sugars, amino acids, enzyme activity, and gas production.
Definition: intermediate:
The bacteria has some resistance, and this antibiotics is not the best choice.
Definition: resistance:
The bacteria is resistant, and this antibiotic will not cure the infection.
Definitions: sensitive:
The bacteria is sensitive to the antibiotic.
Definition: agglutination test:
The clumping of bacterial cells in the presence of an antibody.
Group D enterococcus: enterococcus faecalis, enterococcus faecium-
They carry antibioic resistance genes and pass plasmids around.
Staphylococcus saphrophyticus can cause ___________.
Utis
Group a: strep pyogenes-
Which is responsible for 25% of upper respiratory infections. Other s. Pyogenes strains cause "flesh-eating strep". This has antigen a.