Microbiology Chapter 19 Review
Diphtheria- Disease Table 19.5 Causative Agent: • blank • Gram morphology: _________________________________
Corynebacterium diphtheria Non spore forming gram positive club shaped
Respiratory viruses: • Very blNk causes of community-acquired pneumonia o Either residents of the upper respiratory tract or acquired through blank activities o Is viral pneumonia generally more or less severe than bacterial and fungal pneumonia?
common daily Milder
Influenza Antigenic blank: • RNA exchange between different viruses • Occurs during blank of a host cell • Produces seasonal outbreaks or pandemics?
shift coinfection Pandemics
Influenza Culture and Diagnosis: • Often diagnosed based on blank alone • Culture and non-culture based blank to identify virus subtype causing Infection
symptoms tests
Acute Otitis Media Prevention: blank • blank: targets step pneumoniae • Hib: targets haemop influenza type b
vaccines Prevnar
Pharyngitis: Streptococcus pyogenes Culture and Diagnosis (Remember Ex. 12 in lab?):
-Rapid diagnostic tests o Culturing
Influenza Causative Agents: Influenza blank, blank and blank (What type of pathogens?) _______
A, B, C Viruses
Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia- Transmission: Where do these pathogens usually come from? ___________ ___________________________________ Culture and Diagnosis: Endotracheal blank or bronchoalveolar cultures provide useful information but are blank
Abnormal breathing and aspiration into the lungs tube invasive
Whooping Cough (Pertussis)- Disease Table 19.7 Causative Agent: blank (What type of pathogen is this?) Transmission: blank contact
Bordetella pertussis Droplet
Sinusitis treatment: • blank-spectrum antibiotics for bacterial infection • blank and/or surgery for fungal infection
Broad Antifungals
Second and third lines of defense • blank • Antimicrobial peptides • blanl • Secretory IgA
Complement Macrophages
Diphtheria Transmission: blank contact, blank contact, blank
Droplet direct fomites
Respiratory Syncytial Virus Transmission: • blanl and blanl contact via blank Virulence factor: "blank cell" (syncytia) formation
Droplet Indirect Fomite Giant
Diphtheria Prevention: _____________________ Treatment: (insert 2 components of treatment) 1. _______________________ 2. _______________________________________
Duptheria toxoid vaccine (DTaP) Antitoxin plus penicillins or erythromycin
Secondary (Reactivation) Tuberculosis: Pathogenesis and Virulence Factors: • How is the wall composition a virulence factor? __________________ • Stimulates strong blank-mediated immune response Transmission and Epidemiology:__________________________
Enhances survival in environment and in macrophages cell Trsnsmitted through respiratory droplets
Blamk Tuberculosis: • Infection outside of the lungs: o Lymph nodes, kidneys, bone, genital tract, brain and blank • What groups are most at risk for this?
Extrapulmonary meninges Children/immunocompromised
Histoplasma capsulatum (Type of pathogen?): _______________________ • Highest incidence in blank and central U.S. • Grows most abundantly in moist soils high in bkank content, especially those supplemented with bird droppings • Extremely blank distribution T/F:Most are symptomatic
Fungus eastern nitrogen widespread False
***Pneumocystis (carinii) jiroveci (Type of pathogen?): _______________ • Highly associated with which population subset? ______________ • Likely transmitted through the inhalation of blank • Traditional antifungal drugs are blank because of the chemical makeup of the cell wall.
Fungus ;Pneumocystis pneumonia Aids patients spores ineffective
Pharyngitis: Streptococcus pyogenes • Type of pathogen? Gram morphology? _______________________ • Blank streptococcal throat infections can result in serious complications. o blank: Sandpaper-like rash with high fever o blank: due to an immunologic cross-reaction between streptococcal M proteins and the heart muscle
Gram positive coco that grows in chains _Forms a capsule: most important fector in its ability to cause pneumonia _falcultarive anaerobe _Produces a peroxidase that allows it survive in prescene of oxygen Untreated Scarlet fever Rheumatic fever
Whooping Cough Signs and Symptoms: • blank phase: 3 - 21 days • blank stage: characterized by runny nose, 1-2 weeks • blank stage: bouts of severe coughing (paroxysm) • blank phase: no ongoing symptoms; susceptible to other respiratory infection
Incubation Catarrhal Paroxysmal Convalescent
The Common Cold Transmission: blank contact, blank contact Symptoms: • blank • Scratchy throat • Runny nose • Fever in blank
Indirect droplet Sneezing children
Pharyngitis- Disease Table 19.1 Signs and Symptoms: • blank of the throat • Swollen blank • May also have o blank-smelling breath o Difficulty speaking or blank o Headache o May be blank packets visible on the walls of the throat Sore throats caused by bacteria are more painful than those caused by viruses, and more likely to be accompanied by fever, headache, and nausea.
Inflammation tonsils Foul swallowing white
Sinusitis: Disease Table 19.3 • ______________________________________________ Causative Agents: • Various blank • Various blank, often a mixed infection • Various blank • Allergies, structural abnormalities are common noninfectious causes • Which is most common cause? ______________________
Inflammation of sinuses fungi bacteria viruses Allergies most common
Influenza Transmission and Epidemiology: • blank of virus-laden aerosols and droplets • T/F: Direct contact with fomites Binds to blank cells of respiratory mucosa
Inhalation False: indirect ciliated
Tuberculosis- Disease Table 19.9 Primary Tuberculosis: • High or low infectious dose? ________________________________ • Bacteria multiply inside blank • Escape leads to cell-mediated attack on blank • Tubercle formation in nlank • blank release enzymes causing necrotic caseous lesions that heal by call
Low only 10 macrophages bacteria lungs Neutrophils
Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis • boa k-TB o Defined as being resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampin o Requires treatment of 18 - 24 blank with 4-6 drugs
MDR months
The Respiratory Tract and Its Defenses Divided into two parts: See Figure 19.1 • Upper respiratory tract: o (List components) • Lower respiratory tract: o (List components)
Mouth, nose, nasal cavity, sinuses, throat, pharynx, epiglottis Teaches bronchi bronchioles, alveoli
Secondary (Reactivation) Tuberculosis: Causative Agent: • blank tuberculosis • Pathogen type: _____________________________________ • List some cellular characteristics: _______________________
Mycobacterium Bacillus Acid fast bacillus Strict aerobe Slow growing
Atypical pneumonias: • blank and blank o Type(s) of pathogen? ____________________________ o Transmitted by blank droplets o "blank pneumonia", Lack of acute illness in most patients
Mycoplasma Chlamydophila Type of pathogen:Prokaryote Bacteria with no cell wall aerosol Walking
Anatomical protection from infection: 1. _____________________________________ 2. ________________________________ 3. _________________________________________
Nasal hairs Cilia propel particles upward Mucus
Whooping Cough Prevention: • Vaccine available? _________________________________ • Antibiotic treatment for contacts • Why is pertussis returning in some populations? ___________________
Prevention: DTaP vaccine, antibiotic treatment for contacts Vaccine does not provide life long immunity Many outbreaks today due to the lack of vaccinations, boosters(tdap)
Influenza- Disease Table 19.6 Signs and Symptoms: -DNA or RNA virus? • Begin in upper/lower respiratory tract • T/F: Can progress to lower tract • blanl, chills, dry cough, body aches, fever, stuffy nose, sore throat, extreme fatigue
RNA Upper True Headache
Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia- Prevention and Treatment: • Elevation of patients' heads to a 45-degree angle helps blanl aspiration of secretions. • Postoperative blamk breathing and frequent coughing can reduce rates. • Proper blank of mechanical ventilators and respiratory therapy equipment • Empiric blank should begin as soon as hospital-associated pneumonia is suspected.
Reduce deep care therapy
Pharyngitis: Streptococcus pyogenes Transmission : Insert 2 routes of transmission o _______________________________________ o _______________________________________
Respiratory droplets Direct contact with mucus secretions
***Tuberculosis Causative Agent: • Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Pathogen type: _____________________________________ • List some cellular characteristics: _______________
Respiratory syncytial virus(RSV)
The Common Cold- Disease Table 19.2 Causative Agent: over 200 different viruses • blank: 99 serotypes • Coronavirus • blank • Respiratory syncytial virus • Which is the most common? ___________________
Rhinoviruses Adenovirus Rhinovirus most common
Pharyngitis Causative Agents: • What types of viruses are common causes? ____________________ • Name at least 2 non-infectious causes of pharyngitis: 1. ______________________ 2. ______________________ • Most serious cases of pharyngitis caused by blank
Same viruses causing the common cold Mechanical irritation from prolonged shouting Drainage from the sinus cavity Streptococcus pyogenes
Blank (Reactivation) Tuberculosis: • Pathogen is reactivated some time after primary episode • Severe symptoms develop: "blank" o Violent blnk with greenish or bloody sputum o Low-grade blank, weight loss, fatigue, chest pain
Secondary consumption coughing fever
Diphtheria Culture/Diagnosis: Selective agar : ________________________
Selective agar: tellurite medium(grey/blank colonies)
Streptococcus pneumoniae: • Gram morphology? _____________________________________ • Factors that favor the ability of the bacterium to cause disease: o List at least 3 predisposing factors for disease: 1. ______________________________________ _ 2. _______________________________________ 3. _______________________________________ • Vaccine available? ____________________________
Small gram positive flattened coccus appears in pairs Old age Season Diabetes Chronic alcohol abuse Yes
Microorganisms of respiratory tract Upper respiratory tract: Lower respiratory tract:
Staph step etc No colonization
Acute Otitis Media Causative agents: • blanl • Haemophilus influenza • Other bacteria/viruses • Mixed blank of bacteria in chronic otitis media • What is the most common bacterial cause? _____________________
Streptococcus pneumoniae biofilm
Tuberculosis: Pathogenesis and Virulence Factors: • How is the wall composition a virulence factor? __________________ • Stimulates strong blank-mediated immune response
Synticia formation cell
Normal Biota of the Respiratory Tract T/F: Some normal biota can cause serious disease The composition of the blank microbiome differs in patients with COPD, asthma, and cystic fibrosis and between smokers and nonsmokers. Normal biota perform the function of blank
True lung microbial antagonism
Secondary (Reactivation) Tuberculosis Culture and Diagnosis: • Clinical diagnosis of disease relies on these techniques: o blank testing o Blood testing o Culture o boank staining
Tuberculin Acid-fast
Influenza Prevention: blank • Several types of influenza vaccine: o T/: All injectable • New vaccine prospects: Target ion-channel proteins to eliminate all blank. • Why are flu vaccines recommended every year? • Can you get the flu from the flu vaccine?
Vaccination True strains Strains change every year No
Acute Otitis Media: Disease Table 19.4 • _______________________________________________ The middle ear is sterile, so how do microbes get there?
Viral infections of the upper rt lead to I imflammtion of eustashian tubes, buildup of fluid, and bacterial multiplication of the fluid
Acute Otitis Media Treatment: • What is "watchful waiting"? ________________________________ • When should antibiotics be used? ___________________________ • Why shouldn't antibiotics be administered as soon as signs and symptoms begin? ________________________________________ • Blank membrane tubes
Waiting symptoms out If bacteria infection Not sure what causing virus Tympanic
The Common Cold Prevention and Treatment: ______________
Wash hands Don't touch face Face mask No cure Get rest Drink fluids
Respiratory Syncytial Virus Prevention: Passive blank for high risk blank
antibody children
Legionella pneumophila: • Gram morphology? ______________________________________ • Widely distributed in blank water, cooling towers, spas, ponds, and other fresh water o Resistant to blank • Released during blank formation and carried blank distances Also named blank djsease
Weekly gram negative bacterium that ranged from coccus to filaments tap chlorine aerosol long Legionnaires
Respiratory Syncytial Virus- Disease Table 19.8 In what season(s) do cases peak? _____________________________ What age group is most at risk for serious illness? _____________________
Winter and early spring Children
Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Blank-TR o MDR-TB strains with resistance to two additional drugs o T/F: Tons of treatment options o Estimated 70% blank rate within months of diagnosis
XDR False; few mortality
Influenza Antigenic blank: • Mutation of glycoprotein (H, N) genes • blank host immune response to virus • Produces seasonal outbreaks or pandemics?
drift Reduced Seasonal outbreaks
Influenza Treatment: • Must be taken blank in the infection • blank and rimantadine o Treat and prevent influenza type blank o T/F: Do not work against influenza type B • Zanamivir (blanl) o Inhaled drug o T/F: Works against only influenza A • Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) o T/F: Resistance does occur
early Amantadine A True Relenza False A and B True
Diphtheria Virulence factor: Diphtheria blanl encoded by a blank
exotoxin bacteriophage
*Secondary (Reactivation) Tuberculosis: Prevention: • Patient isolation in blank-pressure rooms • Vaccine used in the US? ________________________________ • How does vaccine alter/impact testing? ____________________ Treatment: • 3-6 blank given for 6-9 months • Why is noncompliance so common? _________________________
negative No drugs Too long, forgetful etc
Pharyngitis: Streptococcus pyogenes Treatment: blank, azithromycin • Prevention: __________________________________________
penicillins Good hand washing
Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia- Disease Table 19.11 Up to 1% of hospitalized or institutionalized people experience blank: Blank rate: 30 - 50% Most frequent causes: • blank aeruginosa • Acinetobacter baumanii • Streptococcus blank • Klebsiella pneumoniae • S. aureus: HAP caused by blank • Many are blank in origin
pneumonia Mortality Pseudomonas pneumoniae MRSA polymicrobial
Secondary (Reactivation) Tuberculosis: • Pathogen is blank some time after primary episode • Severe symptoms develop: "blank" o Violent blank with greenish or bloody sputum o Low-grade fever, weight loss, blank, chest pain
reactivated consumption coughing fatigue