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1. A. * B. C. D. E. 2. A. B. C. D. * E. 3. A. B. * C. D. E. 4. A. * B. C. D. E. 5. A. B. C. D. * E. 6. A. B. C. D. E. * 7. A. B. C. * D. E. 8. A. B. C. * Which of the following bacteria is cell wall deficient? Mycoplasma. Treponema. Slaphylococcus. Klebsiella. Salmonella Each of the following organisms is an important cause of urinary tract infections EXCEPT: Escherichia coli Proteus mirabilis Klebsiella pneumoniae Bacteroides fragilis Staphylococcus epidermidis Complications of typhoid fever are: liver abscesses intestinal perforation meningitis neurological damage sepsis Shigella is transmitted by alimentary route flies infected dust air dropled louse Antitoxic therapy is useful in: gas gangrene. diphtheria. tetanus all of the above. botulism Haemophilus influenzae needs for growth. blood NAD hemin X factor all of the above Formation of a gummas is a damaged aorta a damaged liver a degenerative lesions the primary lesion of syphilis the result of congenital syphilis The treatment of choice for syphilis is: antiserum aurum drug penicillin D. E. 9. A. B. C. D. E. * 10. A. B. * C. D. E. 11. A. * B. C. D. E. 12. A. B. * C. D. E. 13. A. B. * C. D. E. 14. A. B. * C. D. E. 15. A. B. C. * D. E. 16. A. vaccine tetracycline Which of the treponematoses are not veneral disease, except? bejel pinta yaws endemic syphilis syphilis Lyme disease is caused by ______ and spread by ______. Borrelia recurrentis, lice Borrelia burgdorferi, ticks Borrelia burgdorferi, chiggers Borrelia hermsii, ticks Borrelia recurrentis, ticks Epidemic Relapsing fever is spread by lice ticks flea mosquites animal urine Endemic Relapsing fever is spread by lice ticks flea mosquites animal urine The source of Vibrio cholerae infection is birds carriers, sick persons animals water food The best treatment for cholera is antiserum injection rehydration therapy tetracycline toxoid vaccine Rickettsias and chlamydias are similar in being carried by arthropod vectors free of a cell wall obligate intracellular bacteria produce exotoxin the cause of eye infections Which of the following is/are an arthropod vector of rickettsioses? flea B. C. D. * E. 17. A. B. C. D. E. * 18. A. B. C. D. * E. 19. A. B. C. * D. E. 20. A. * B. C. D. E. 21. A. B. C. D. * E. 22. A. B. C. D. * E. 23. A. B. C. louse tick all of the above mosquito Which organs Chlamydia trachomatis can attack? eye urethra fallopian tubes lungs all of these Each of the following statements concerning neisseriae is correct EXCEPT: They are gram-negative diplococci They produce IgA protease as a virulence factor They are oxidase-positive They grow best under anaerobic conditions They have pili Ornithosis is a _____ infection associated with ______ rickettsial, parrots chlamydial, mice chlamydial, birds rickettsial, flies chlamydial, rats BCG vaccine is a: live attenuated vaccine killed vaccine toxoid vaccine. subcelullar vaccine. recombinant vaccine. Mycoplasmas demage next structure of host cells. nucleus cell walls ribosomes cell membranes mitochondria A child develops pneumonia. The bacterium capsulated Streptococcus pneumoniae is cultured from the patient’s sputum. How did the presence of capsules promote development of serious disease? Prevented binding of antibodies to the bacteria. Prevented initiation of a humoral immune response Prevented activation of helper T cells Prevented phagocytosis by neutrophils. Prevented mast-cell degranulation. Haemolytic uraemic syndrome is caused by: enteropathogenic Escherichia coli enterotoxigenic E. coli. enteroinvasive E. coli D. * E. 24. A. B. C. D. * E. 25. A. * B. C. D. E. 26. A. B. C. D. E. * 27. A. B. C. * D. E. 28. A. B. * C. D. E. 29. A. * B. C. D. E. 30. enterohaemorrhagic E. coli enteroaggregative E. coli. A child under treatment for leukemia is treated with Tetanus immune globulin (human). Which phrase best describes the immunity that is produced? Innate and specific. Innate and humoral. Innate and cell-mediated. Acquired and humoral. Acquired and cell-mediated. Which of the following media is an enrichment medium for the isolation of Shigella? Selenite broth. Tetrathionate broth. Alkaline peptone water Taurocholate peptone transport and enrichment medium Endo medium A ten-year-old girl has dirty, crushing, wounds, received when she fell from a motorcycle. She has never been immunized against Tetanus. Which of the following should you administer? Tetanus immune globulin (human) Tetanus toxoid Tetanus toxoid Tetanus immune globulin (human) mixed and administered as a single injection. No immunization Tetanus toxoid plus Tetanus immune globulin (human), injected at separate sites. An elderly man develops pneumonia and septicemia. Gram stain of sputum contains many neutrophils and Gram-positive cocci, in pairs. Blood and sputum cultures grow out a Gram-positive coccus, α-hemolytic on sheep blood agar, and catalase-negative. Which organism below is most likely? Staphylococcus epidermidis. Staphylococcus aureus. Streptococcus pneumoniae. Streptococcus pyogenes. Streptococcus agalactiae. Staphylococcus aureus is easily transmitted within the hospital environment. Which feature of this bacterium is most largely responsible for its ease of spread? none of the above Ability to colonize the upper respiratory tract. Ability to colonize the digestive tract. Presence of an outer membrane impermeable to most disinfectants.Production of extracellular polysaccharide which allows it to adhere tightly to surfaces. Ability to form spores which are resistant to disinfectants and easily dispersed. Bacteroides fragilis is isolated from an abdominal abscess. Which phrase is the most appropriate? Other species of bacteria are also often present. Initiated by ingestion of spores. Can be successfully treated with aminoglycosides alone. Contracted by the respiratory route. Sexually-transmitted. Which one of the following statements concern ing Legionella pneumophila is CORRECT? A. B. C. D. * E. 31. A. * B. C. D. E. 32. A. B. C. D. E. * 33. A. B. C. * D. E. 34. A. B. C. D. * E. 35. A. * B. C. D. E. 36. A. * B. C. D. E. 37. A. B. It is part of the normal flora of the colon It cannot be grown on laboratory media It does not have a cell wall It is an important cause of pneumonia in renal transplant patients Legionellosis is sexual transmitted disease Morphology of Treponema pallidum is: Spiral-shaped Mold Vibrio Rod Yeast Toxin of Vibrio cholerae is: LPS Toxic shock syndrome toxin Enterotoxins Hemolysins Toxin - activates adenylate cyclase Which statement below most accurately describes the role of M protein in virulence of Group A Streptococci [Streptococcus pyogenes]? Shows no antigenic variation, so is not a target for antibodies. Is a ‘superantigen toxin’ which stimulates TH cells. Stimulates synthesis of antibodies that cross-reacts with heart tissue Binds Fc regions of Immunoglobulin G molecules. Inhibit phagocytosis Which test below would best distinguish S. aureus from one of the less-virulent staphylococci? Production of catalase Colony color when grown on BHI agar Ability to grow on MacConkey agar. Production of coagulase. Type of hemolysis on sheep blood agar. Which of the following staining techniques cannot be used for T. pallidum? Gram staining. Giemsa staining. Silver impregnation staining. Imunofluorescence staining. Burri staining. Louse-borne relapsing fever is caused by: Borrelia recurrentis. B. duttoni. B. burgdorferi. B. parkeri. B. persica Bacterial genus/genera of medical importance which do not produce endospores is/are: . Bacillus. Clostridium. C. D. * E. 38. A. B. C. D. E. * 39. A. * B. C. D. E. 40. A. B. C. D. E. * 41. A. B. C. D. E. * 42. A. * B. C. D. E. 43. A. * B. C. D. E. 44. A. B. C. D. * E. both of the above. Bacteroides none of the above Which of the following bacteria dies quickly after drying? Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Staphylococcus aureus. Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Bacillus anthracis Treponema pallidium Which of the following exotoxins is most toxic? Botulinum toxin. Tetanus toxin. Diphtheria toxin. Cholera toxin. Shigella toxin A person is considered non-immune against tetanus if: he has never had an injection of tetanus toxoid or if he had only one such injection. more than 6 months have passed after a course of 2 injections. five to 10 years have passed after the planned course of three injections. more than 2 months have passed after one an injection of antitetanus serum all are correct. Rickettsia typhi is: Helminths Protozoa Fungi Viruses Bacteria An old man has a urinary tract infection caused by E. coli. By what route are such infections most commonly acquired? Fecal-oral route, followed by colonization of the intestine and then the perineum. Respiratory route, followed by spread from the oro-pharyngeal region Respiratory route, followed by spread from the anterior nares Intestinal infection, followed by spread of bacteria to the urethra via the bloodstream. E. coli spreads from skin The most severe streptococcal diseases are caused by group A streptococci group B streptococci pneumococci group C streptococci enterococci A complication of genital gonorrhea in newborns is infertility pelvic inflammatory disease arthritis blindness urethritis 45. A. B. C. D. E. * 46. A. B. * C. D. E. 47. A. B. C. * D. E. 48. A. * B. C. D. E. 49. A. * B. C. D. E. 50. A. B. C. D. E. * 51. A. B. C. * D. E. 52. A. B. . Which infectious agent of those covered in the chapter would most likely be acquired from a contaminated doorknob? Staphylococcus epidermidis Streptococcus pyogenes Neisseria meningitidis Streptococcus pneumoniae Staphylococcus aureus What is the usual habitat of endospore-forming bacteria that are agents of disease? the intestine of animals soil water foods dust Most Bacillus species are true pathogens opportunistic pathogens nonpathogens commensals saprophyticus Many clostridial diseases require a/an ______ conditions for their development. anaerobic aerobic living tissue low-pH alkaline pH Clostridium perfringens causes myonecrosis, food poisoning enterocolitis, haemorrhagic syndrom antibiotic-induced colitis All of the above both a and b The action of tetanus exotoxin is on the neuromuscular junction sensory neurons nucleus of hypocamp cerebral cortex spinal interneurons An infection peculiar to swine causes _______ when transmitted to humans. anthrax diphtheria erysipeloid plage tuberculosis Tuberculosis is spread by contaminated fomites food C. * D. E. 53. A. B. C. * D. E. 54. A. B. C. * D. E. 55. A. B. C. D. * E. 56. A. B. C. D. E. * 57. A. * B. C. D. E. 58. A. B. C. D. * E. 59. A. * B. C. D. E. respiratory droplets vectors urine Microbial diagnosis of tuberculosis is provided by X ray Mantoux test acid-fast stain tuberculin test allergic test The form of leprosy associated with severe disfigurement of the face is borderline chronic lepromatous papular tuberculoid Group of Candida albicans is: Bacteria Protozoa Viruses Fungi Helminths Which of the following bacteria belong/s to the family Enterobacteriaceae? Shigella. Salmonella. Yersinia. Proteus All answers are corect The bubo of bubonic plague is a/an enlarged lymph node granuloma in the skin infected sebaceous gland tumor of lymph node ulcer where the flea bite occurred Treponema pallidum is cultured in/on blood agar eggs horse serum rabit testis serum broth Water to be used for parenteral injection must sterilized to kill living microbes and then further purified to remove non-living bacterial components. Of those listed below, Lipopolysaccharide. Polysaccharides of capsules Plasma-membrane lipids. Proteins of the outer membrane. Nucleic acids 60. A. B. C. * D. E. 61. A. B. C. D. * E. 62. A. B. * C. D. E. 63. A. * B. C. D. E. 64. A. B. C. * D. E. 65. A. B. C. * D. E. 66. A. B. * C. A child at-risk for Tetanus is treated with Tetanus immune globulin (human). What is a major advantage of this method for immunization over the use of Tetanus toxoid? Poses a reduced risk of serum sickness. Provides longer-lasting immunity Provides protection more rapidly. Results in higher antibody titer. Also provides secretory IgA for mucosal immunity. A 20-year-old student has a deep laceration. He received the standard four-doses of Diphtheria-Pertussis-Tetanus immunizations in infancy, and a booster at age 5, but has had no anti-Tetanus immunization since. Which of the following would it be most appropriate to administer? Tetanus anti-toxin (equine). Tetanus toxoid. Tetanus immune globulin (human). Both Tetanus toxoid and Tetanus immune globulin (human). Both Tetanus toxoid Tetanus anti-toxin (equine). Tetanus is very dangerous disease because Clostridium botulini produces exotoxin. How does this toxin act? Stimulates adenyl cyclase. Neurotoxin which cause flaccid paralyzes. Inhibits guanyl cyclase Cleaves ribosomal RNA. Stimulates production of cytokines. Infective-toxic type of food poisoning is caused by: Clostridium perfringens. Salmonella Enteritidis. Staphylococcus aureus. Yeasts Salmonella Dublin. The symptoms in scarlet fever are due to streptolysin coagulase erythrogenic toxin alpha toxin leucocidin Which of the following agents is the commonest cause of infective endocarditis? . Staphylococcus epidermidis. Candida spp. Viridans group of streptococci. Coliforms. Rickettsia Five days ago a 65-year-old woman with a lower urinary tract infection began taking ampicillin. She now has a fever and severe diarrhea. Of the organisms listed, which one is MOST likely to be the cause of the diarrhea? Bacteroides fragilis Clostridium difficile Proteus mirabilis D. E. 67. A. * B. C. D. E. 68. A. B. * C. D. E. 69. A. B. * C. D. E. 70. A. B. C. D. E. * 71. A. B. C. D. E. * 72. A. * B. C. D. E. 73. A. B. C. * D. E. Bordetella pertussis Vibrio cholerae Human body louse is responsible for transmission of which of the following diseases? Epidemic typhus. Murine typhus Rickettsialpox. Q fever. Typhi fever Which of the following specimens is/are most appropriate for culture of bacteria in first week of enteric fever? Urine. Blood. Faeces. CSF. Bile What is the colour of colonies of C. diphtheriae on blood tellurite agar medium? White. Grey to black. Cream. Yellow. Green Which of the following properties is/are shown by diphtheria toxin? It is a heat-labile protein. It inhibits protein synthesis. It is produced by Corynebacterium diptheriae strains lysogenic for p phage. It is exotoxin All are correct. Penicillin-resistant Staphylococcus can be treated with ______ without sensitivity testing. ampicillin erythromycin methicillin amoxycillin no antibiotic Ascoli's thermoprecipitin test helps in confirming the laboratory diagnosis of: anthrax. tetanus. typhoid. cholera. pertussis Which organs are affected in a patient with rheumatic fever? skin, heart joints, bone marrow heart valves, kidneys brain, kidneys heart, bone marrow 74. A. * B. C. D. E. 75. A. B. C. D. * E. 76. A. B. C. * D. E. 77. A. B. C. D. * E. 78. A. B. * C. D. E. 79. A. * B. C. D. E. 80. A. B. * C. D. E. 81. A. B. ______ hemolysis is the partial lysis of red blood cells due to bacterial hemolysins. Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon An effective vaccine exists to prevent crupouse pneumonia from Staph, aureus Strep. pyogenes K. pneumoniae Strep. pneumoniae N. meningitidis Viridans streptococci commonly cause pneumonia meningitis subacute endocarditis otitis media arthritis Which genus of bacteria has pathogens that can cause blindness in newborn? Branhamella Staphylococcus Streptococcus Neisseria Shigella The skin blotches in meningitis are due to blood clots endotoxins in the blood erysipelas exotoxin in skin skin invasion by N. meningitidis Bubonic plague is transmitted by: . rat flea. inhalation. ingestion. . ticks all of the above routes. The pathogenesis of which one of the following diseases does NOT involve an exotoxin? Scarlet fever Typhoid fever Toxic shock syndrome Botulism Tetanus Regarding the effect of benzylpenicillin (penicillin G) on bacteria, which one of the following organisms is LEAST likely to be resistant? Staphylococcus aureus Enterococcus faecalis C. * D. E. 82. A. B. C. D. E. * 83. A. * B. C. D. E. 84. A. * B. C. D. E. 85. A. * B. C. D. E. 86. A. B. C. * D. E. 87. A. B. * C. D. E. 88. A. Streptococcus pyogenes Neisseria gonorrhoeae Neisseria meningitidis Each of the following statements concerning chlamydia is correct EXCEPT: Obligate intracellular parasite Gramnegative Symptomatic infections can be associated with urethral or cervical discharge containing many polymorphonuclear leukocytes There is no vaccine against these infections Chlamydiae are cultivated onto nutritient media Which one of the following illnesses is NOT a zoonosis? Typhoid fever Q fever Tularemia Rocky Mountain spotted fever Brucelosis Which one of the following is NOT a characteristic of either Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Neisseria meningitidis? A protein Polysaccharide capsule IgA protease Pili Ferments glucose Which one of the following is NOT an important characteristic of Streptococcus pyogenes? Protein A M protein Beta-hemolysin Polysaccharide group-specific substance Produce exotoxins Each of the following statements concerning wound infections caused by Clostridium perfringens is correct EXCEPT: An exotoxin plays a role in pathogenesis Gram-positive rods are found in the exudate The organism grows only in human cell culture Anaerobic culture of the wound site should be ordered The organism has capsule Three organisms, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, and Haemophilus influenzae cause the vast majority of cases of bacterial meningitis. What is the MOST important pathogenic component they share? Protein A Capsule Endotoxin β-Lactamase Exotoxin Each of the following statements concerning Chlamydia trachomatis is correct EXCEPT: It is an important cause of nongonococcal urethritis B. C. * D. E. 89. A. B. * C. D. E. 90. A. B. C. * D. E. 91. A. B. C. D. * E. 92. A. B. * C. D. E. 93. A. B. C. D. * E. 94. A. B. C. D. * E. 95. It is the cause of lymphogranuloma venereum It is an important cause of subacute bacterial endocarditis It is an important cause of conjunctivitis There is no vaccine against these infections Which one of the following types of organisms is NOT an obligate intracellular parasite and there fore can replicate on bacteriologic media? Chlamydia Mycoplasma Adenovirus Rickettsia Herpesrirus Tissue-degrading enzymes play an important role in the pathogenesis of several bacteria. Which one of the following is NOT involved in tissue or cell damage? Lecithinase of Clostridium perfringens Hyaluronidase of Streptococcus pyogenes M protein of Streptococcus pneumoniae Leukocidin of Staphylococcus aureus Enterotoxins of Staphylococcus aureus The soil is the natural habitat for certain microorganisms of medical importance. Which one of the following is LEAST likely to reside there? Clostridium tetani Mycobacterium intracellular Bacillus anthracis Chlamydia trachomatis Clostridium perfringens Each of the following statements concerning infection with Chlamydia psittaci is correct EXCEPT: C psittaci can be isolated by growth in cell culture and will not grow in blood agar The organism appears purple in Gram-stained smears of sputum The infection is more readily diagnosed by serologic tests than by isolation of the organism C psittaci forms inclusion in the cells The infection is more commonly acquired from a nonhuman source than from another human Of the organisms listed below, which one is the MOST frequent bacterial cause of pharyngitis? Escherichia coli Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus pyogenes Neisseria meningitidis Each of the following statements concerning exotoxins is correct EXCEPT: Some strains of Escherichia coli produce an enterotoxin that causes diarrhea Cholera toxin acts by stimulating adenylate cyclase Diphtheria is caused by an exotoxin that inhibits protein synthesis by inactivating an elongation factor Botulism is caused by a toxin that hydrolyzes lecithin (lecithinase), thereby destroying nerve cells Botulism, which is caused by ingesting preformed toxin, can be prevented by boiling food prior to eating Each of the following statements concerning the VDRL test for syphilis is correct EXCEPT: A. * B. C. D. E. 96. A. B. * C. D. E. 97. A. B. C. * D. E. 98. A. B. * C. D. E. 99. A. B. C. * D. E. 100. A. B. C. D. E. * 101. A. The antigen is composed of inactivated Treponema pallidum The test is usually positive in secondary syphilis False-positive results are more frequent than with the FTA-ABS test The antibody titer declines with adequate therapy Reagin is detected in patiant‘s serum A stool sample is plated on standard Endo-agar plates. After overnight incubation some of the colonies are dark pink in color, others are pale, nearly colorless. What can you conclude about the bacteria that produced dark-pink colonies? Gram-positive Ferment lactose. Not likely to be ‘normal flora’. Non-motile. Produce capsules. A 35-year-old woman presents with a history of increasing respiratory distress and cough productive of sputum. Chest X-ray shows evidence of bilateral pneumonia. Cultures of blood and sputum on Chocolate agar grow out slender Gram-negative rods; cultures on standard sheep blood agar are negative. Which bacterium is most likely to be the cause of her infection? Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Chlamydia pneumoniae Haemophilus influenzae. Escherichia coli. Streptococcus pneumoniae. In Widal test, the significant titre for О agglutinins is generally: 1: 50 or more. 1:100 or more. 1:200 or more. 1:400 or more. 1:800 or more. Each of the following statements concerning Corynebacterium diphtheriae is correct EXCEPT: C. diphtheriae is a gram-positive rod that does not form spores Toxin production is dependent on the organism's being lysogenized by a bacteriophage Diphtheria toxoid should not be given to children under the age of 3 years because the incidence of complications is too high Antitoxin should be used to treat patients with diphtheria Toxoid is used for active prophylaxis Each of the following statements concerning certain gram-negative rods is correct EXCEPT: Pseudomonas aeruginosa causes wound infections that are characterized by blue-green pus as a result of pyocyanin production Invasive disease caused by Haemophilus influenzae is most often due to strains possessing a type b polysaccharide capsule Legionella pneumophila infection is acquired by inhalation of aerosols from environmental water sources There are different serological types of pathogenic Escherichia coli Whooping cough, which is caused by Bordetella pertussis, is on the rise because changing antigenicity has made the vaccine relatively ineffective Each of the following statements concerning enterotoxins is correct EXCEPT: Enterotoxins are protein substances B. * C. D. E. 102. A. B. C. D. * E. 103. A. B. C. * D. E. 104. A. B. C. D. * E. 105. A. * B. C. D. E. 106. A. B. C. D. * E. 107. A. B. C. * D. E. 108. A. * Enterotoxins typically cause bloody diarrhea with leukocytes in the stool Staphylococcus aureus produces an enterotoxin that causes vomiting and diarrhea Vibrio cholerae causes cholera by producing an enterotoxin that activates adenylate cyclase Escherichia coli enterotoxin mediates ADP-ribosylation of a G protein Each of the following statements concerning plague is correct EXCEPT: Plague is caused by a gram-negative rod that can be cultured on blood agar Plague is transmitted to humans by flea bite The main reservoirs in nature are small rodents Plague is caused by a gram-positive rod that can be cultured on blood agar There are different clinical form of plague (bubonic, pneumonic, skin) Which one of the following statements concerning the organisms that cause brucellosis is CORRECT? Brucellae are transmitted primarily by tick bite The principal reservoirs of brucellae are small rodents Brucellae are found in reticuloendothelial cells and often cause granulomatous lesions Brucellae are obligate intracellular parasites that are usually identified by growth in human cell culture Brucellae are obligate intracellular parasites that are usually identified by growth in human cell culture Each of the following statements concerning epidemic typhus is correct EXCEPT: The disease is characterized by a rash The Weil-Felix test can aid in diagnosis of the disease The disease is caused by a rickettsia The disease is caused by salmonella typhi Vaccine is used for specific prophylaxis Ticks are vectors for the transmission of each of the following diseases EXCEPT: epidemic typhus Tick-borne encephalytis Lyme disease Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever Rocky Mountain spotted fever Each of the following statements concerning pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae is correct EXCEPT: The disease is associated with a rise in the titer of cold agglutinins The disease occurs primarily in immunocompetent individuals The disease is one of the "atypical" pneumonias The organism cannot be cultured in vitro because it has no cell wall Penicicllin is uneffective agains Mycoplasma Each of the following statements concerning Neisseria meningitidis is correct EXCEPT: It is an oxidase-positive, gram-negative diplococcus It contains endotoxin in its cell wall It produces an exotoxin that stimulates adenylate cyclase It has a polysaccharide capsule that is antiphagocytic It can utilize glucose and maltose Each of the following statements concerning Q fever is correct EXCEPT: Rash is a prominent feature B. C. D. E. 109. A. B. C. D. * E. 110. A. B. C. D. * E. 111. A. * B. C. D. E. 112. A. * B. C. D. E. 113. A. * B. C. D. E. 114. A. B. C. D. E. * 115. A. B. C. D. E. * It is transmitted by respiratory aerosol Farm animals are an important reservoir It is intracellular parazite It is caused by Coxiella burnetii Caseous lesions containing inflammatory white blood cells are syphiloma pseudomembranes eschars tubercles papular Which infectious agent cause pseudomembranous collitis? Mycobacterium tuberculosis Corynebacterium diphtheriae Mycobacterium leprae Clostridium difficile Shigella sonnei Treponema pallidum can be cultivated in: rabbit testes. blood agar medium. chocolate agar medium. Thayer-Martin medium. Kitt-Tarozi medium Relapses in relapsing fever occur due to: antigen variation in bacteria. increased toxin production by bacteria. increased invasiveness of bacteria. super infection with viruses. increased fermentative activity of bacteria Sterols are present in the cytoplasmic membrane of: Mycoplasma. Bacillus. Clostridium. Proteus. Rickettsia Which of the following bacteria can grow in alkaline pH? Lactobacilli. Salmonella. Shigella. Neisseria Vibrio cholerae. The causative agent/s of gas gangrene is/are: Clostridium perfringens. C. novyi. С. septicum. C. histolyticum all are correct. 116. A. B. C. D. E. * 117. A. B. * C. D. E. 118. A. * B. C. D. E. 119. A. B. * C. D. E. 120. A. B. C. * D. E. 121. A. * B. C. D. E. 122. A. * B. C. D. E. 123. A. * B. C. Which of the following properties is/are characteristic of tetanospasmin? It is a heat-labile protein. It is a neurotoxin. It can be toxoided. It is exotoxin All of the above. Which of the following exotoxins resembles strychnine in its effect? Botulinum toxin. Tetanus toxin. Diphtheria toxin. None of the above. All of the above. Which of the following bacteria most frequently cause tuberculosis in human? Mycobacterium tuberculosis. M. bovis. M. africanum. M. kansasii All answer are correct. Mycobacterium tuberculosis is pathogenic for: rabbits. guinea-pigs. both of the above. mice rats Dysentery like disease may be caused by enteropathogenic Escherichia colt. enterotoxigenic E. coli. enteroinvasive E. coli. verotoxigenic E. coli. enteroaggregative E. coli. Which of the following bacteria is negative for fermentation of mannitol? Shigella dysenteriae. S. Flexneri. S. boydii. S. sonnei. All of the above. Which of the following bacteria ferment mannitol anaerobically? Staphylococcus aureus. S. epidermidis. S. saprophyticus. S. canis Correct answer. Typical property of obligate anaerobes is, EXCEPT: They generate energy by using the cytochrorne svstem They grow best in the absence of air They lack superoxide dismutase D. E. 124. A. B. C. D. E. * 125. A. * B. C. D. E. 126. A. B. C. * D. E. 127. A. * B. C. D. E. 128. A. B. C. * D. E. 129. A. B. C. D. * E. 130. A. B. C. D. E. * They lack catalase They grow in Kitt-Tarozi medium Which microbes can cause pus-inflamation process? Streptococcus Staphylococcus Pneumococcus Neisseria all of these The coagulase test is used to differentiate Staphylococcus aureus from other staphylococci streptococci micrococci enterococci pneumococci Which infectious agents cause food poising? Bacillus anthracis Clostridium tetani Clostridium botulimum Streptococcus pyogenes all of these Which infection(s) would be categorized as a zoonosis? anthrax gas gangrene diphtheria cholera both a and b The name 'black death' is given to which of the following diseases? Tuberculosis. Diphtheria. Plague. AIDS. Cholera Which of the following tests can differentiate between classical and El Tor biotypes of Vibrio cholerae? Sensitivity to polymyxin B. Agglutination of fowl RBCs. Sensitivity to Mukerjee's group IV phage. All of the above. Antigenic structure Ways of transmition of Brucellae to humans are: direct contact with animal tissues. ingestion of contaminated meat. ingestion of raw infected milk. direct contact with animal placenta all answers are correct. 131. A. B. C. D. E. * 132. A. B. C. * D. E. 133. A. B. C. D. E. * 134. A. * B. C. D. E. 135. A. B. C. * D. E. 136. A. B. * C. D. E. 137. A. B. * C. D. E. 138. A. B. The causative agent/s of non-gonococcal urethritis is/are? Chlamydia trachomatis. Ureaplasmau urealyticum. Mycoplasma hominis. Herpes virus 2 All of the above. A unique characteristic of many isolates of Pseudomonas useful in identification is drug resistance fecal odor green pigment gram staining motility Human brucellosis is also known as Fran's disease Query fever rabbit fever relapsing fever undulant fever A hard chancre is characteristic of: primary syphilis. secondary syphilis. latent syphilis. tertiary syphilis. complication of syphilis The causative agent of Lyme disease is: Borrelia recurrenlis. B. dutioni. B. burgdorferi. B. hermsii B. persica You suspect Chlamydia infection in a sexually-active young woman. Which test would be most likely to provide results which would confirm this diagnosis? Agglutination test for anti-cardiolipin antibodies. PCR test of nucleic acids present in a urine sample. Test of a blood sample for ‘cold agglutinins”. Gram-stained smear of discharge from the cervix. Culture of exudate from the cervix on Thayer-Martin agar. Francisella tularensis has no which portal of entry? tick bite sexual intestinal respiratory only c and d A classic symptom of pertussis is labored breathing convulsions C. D. * E. 139. A. B. C. * D. E. 140. A. B. C. * D. E. 141. A. B. C. D. E. * 142. A. B. C. * D. E. 143. A. B. C. * D. E. 144. A. B. C. D. * E. headache paroxysmal coughing redish of skin The severe symptoms of pertussis are due to what effect? irritation of the glottis by the microbe pneumonia damage of function of the respiratory epithelium blocked airways heart disease For Escherichia coli most impotent which antigens are? capsular Vi somatic flagellar all of these Which of the following bacterium is causative agent of dysenteriae? E. coli Klebsiella Proteus Vibrio Shigella Which of the following represents a major difference between Salmonella and Shigella infections? incubation period mode of transmission place of location in intestine presence/absence of fever and diarrhea the portal of entry A 23-year-old medical student had headache and fever one evening. By the next morning she had become very ill, with high fever, severe headache, and stiff neck. She was admitted to the hospital. Later that day she developed rash, at first petechial and then purpuric. Gram stain of CSF showed many white cells and Gram-negative cocci, many in pairs. Which organism is most likely to be the cause of her infection? Escherichia coli. Haemophilus influenzae. Neisseria meningitidis. Streptococcus agalactiae. Streptococcus pneumoniae. A patient with septicemia goes into septic shock. Blood cultures later showed the pathogen to be Escherichia coli. Which component of the bacteria was most likely to have produced shock? Capsular polysaccharide. Teichoic acid. A superantigen toxin. Lipopolysaccharide [LPS]. Plasma membrane lipids. 145. A. B. C. D. E. * 146. A. B. C. * D. E. 147. A. * B. C. D. E. 148. A. B. C. D. E. * 149. A. B. C. D. * E. 150. A. B. C. A patient has cellulitis of the left arm, persistent fever, and a heart murmur. He is a habitual user of illegal drugs, which he self-administers intravenously. An echocardiogram shows a bacterial vegetation on the aortic valve. Three blood cultures all grow an α-hemolytic Gram-positive coccus, catalasenegative. Which organism is most likely to have caused his infection? Streptococcus pyogenes [Group A]. Streptococcus agalactiae [Group B]. Streptococcus bovis [Group D]. Staphylococcus aureus. A Viridans-group Streptococcus. . Administration of which of the following vaccines would be contra-indicated in an patient with impaired cell-mediated immunity? Pneumococcal vaccine (pediatric). Pneumococcal vaccine (adult). BCG vaccine against tuberculosis. Tetanus toxoid. Acellular Pertussis vaccine. A sexually-active woman develops a urinary tract infection which ascends to the kidneys. Blood culture yields a β-hemolytic Gram-negative rod. In this situation, which pathogen is most common? Escherichia coli. Klebsiella pneumoniae. Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Salmonella enteritidis. Serratia marcescens. A four-year-old boy was brought to the emergency room with a history of bloody diarrhea over the preceding two days. A fecal smear contained numerous red cells and neutrophils. Stool culture on Endo agar produced lactose-negative colonies amid colonies of ‘normal intestinal flora’. Which of the organisms below is most likely to be the cause of his illness? Enteropathogenic E. coli Balantidium coli. Entamoeba histolytica Giardia lamblia. Shigella. A child develops a “cold” which progresses to severe pharyngitis. Pharyngeal exudate forms a tough ‘membrane’, difficult to remove without causing bleeding. Culture of a throat swab on selective tellurite agar produces abundant black colonies. Other cultures produce only normal flora. Which organism is most likely to have caused this infection? Corynebacterium xerosis Bordetella pertussis. Candida albicans. Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Mycobacterium avium/intracellulare. A patient has rapidly spreading soft-tissue infection with gas in infected tissue. Fluid from a blister contains many large Gram-positive rods which grow on sheep blood agar anaerobically but not aerobically. Which pathogen is most consistent with these findings? Bacillus anthracis. Bacillus cereus. Clostridium difficile. D. * E. 151. A. B. C. * D. E. 152. A. B. C. D. * E. 153. A. B. C. D. * E. 154. A. B. C. D. * E. 155. A. * B. C. D. E. 156. A. * B. C. D. Clostridium perfringens. Listeria monocytogenes. Untreated pharyngitis produced by Group A streptococci can result in later development of Acute rheumatic fever, created by cross-reaction of anti-streptococcal antibodies with heart tissue. Which streptococcal antigen stimulates formation of these cross-reactive antibodies? Group A carbohydrate. Flagella. M protein Peptidoglycan. Teichoic acid. A child is diagnosed with Pertussis. How was this infection most likely to have been acquired? Bite of a dog or cat. Consumption of dairy products made from unpasteurized milk Contact with livestock or animal products such as leather or wool. Inhalation of respiratory droplets of another human being. Release of oral flora into the bloodstream by dental work Causative agent of tuberculosis is: Staphylococus aureus Clostridium tetani. Bacilus subtilis Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium africans A mother is worried that the child may have contracted Lyme disease. Which finding would most strongly suggest that she is correct? A disseminated rash, with small papular erythematous lesions. An ulcer and edema at the site of the tick bite. A lesion at the site of the tick bite that develops a thick, black, crusted, scab. A “bull’s-eye” lesion with erythematous periphery and central clearing. A sparse red macular rash, on the palms and soles only. Infections with Salmonella enterica, serotype typhi, spread throughout the body. A key to the ability of serotype typhi to spread systemically is its ability to multiply intracellularly. Multiplication in which cell type(s) is principally responsible for systemic spread? Monocytes/macrophages. Basophils Enterocytes Erythrocytes Neutrophils A 25-year-old female presented with a three-day history of fever, headache and a non-productive cough. X-rays show bilateral diffuse lung infiltrates. Culture of a throat swab (on sheep blood and chocolate agars) revealed only “normal oral flora”. Penicillin G was prescribed and the patient sent home. Her illness did not respond to this antibiotic. She was then successfully treated with erythromycin. Which organism is most likely to have caused her illness? Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Haemophilus influenzae. Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Streptococcus pyogenes. E. 157. A. B. C. D. * E. 158. A. B. C. * D. E. 159. A. B. C. D. * E. 160. A. B. C. D. E. * 161. A. B. C. D. * E. 162. A. Streptococcus pneumoniae. A patient has a positive Rapid Plasma Reagin (RPR) test for ‘non-treponemal antibodies’. A test for specific anti-treponemal antibodies is positive but the patient has no rash, genital lesions, inflammation, or discharge. Which conclusion best follows from these findings The patient does not require antibiotic treatment; absence of symptoms indicates that the positive RPR is a ‘biological false positive”. The patient has Syphilis, but does not require antibiotic treatment, because infections with Treponema pallidum normally resolve spontaneously. The patient has Syphilis, but the diagnosis should be confirmed by culture before antibiotic treatment is started. The patient has Syphilis, and should be treated with Penicillin G none of the above A vacationer has “Traveler’s diarrhea” produced by enterotoxigenic E. coli. His profuse watery diarrhea is produced by a protein exotoxin secreted by this bacterium. Which statement below best describes the effect of this exotoxin? Kills enterocytes and produces ulceration and inflammation. Paralyzes phagocytosis by neutrophils. Blocks adsorption of nutrients by enterocytes.Stimulates ion transport by enterocytes into the intestinal lumen. Blocks adsorption of nutrients by enterocytes. Causes rearrangement of the enterocyte cytoskeleton and disappearance of the brush border. The severe diarrhea of cholera is produced by a protein exotoxin that acts on enterocytes. Which statement below best describes the effect of Cholera toxin? Alters the actin cytoskeleton. Inactivates ribosomes. Proteolytic cleavage of a specific cellular protein. Stimulates adenyl cyclase. Stimulates guanyl cyclase. . A medical student with a three-week history of respiratory illness is treated with erythromycin [a macrolide]. Which phrase best describes the process inhibited by this drug? Transcription by bacterial RNA polymerase. Supercoiling of bacterial DNA. Cross-linking of peptidoglycan. Polymerization of peptidoglycan. Peptide bond formation by bacterial ribosomes. An elderly resident of a nursing home develops pneumococcal pneumonia. This illness might have been prevented had the patient been immunized against this organism. Which antigens of S. pneumoniae are included in the adult vaccine? M-proteins. Intact heat-killed bacteria. Toxoids produced from superantigen toxins. Capsular polysaccharides. Cell-associated (C) carbohydrates. Before the advent of immunization, outbreaks of meningococcal disease were frequent in military camps. A factor in development of such outbreaks is the ability of Neisseria meningitidis to establish an asymptomatic ‘carrier state’. What is the predominant site of carriage of Neisseria? Urethral epithelium. B. C. D. * E. 163. A. B. C. D. * E. 164. A. B. C. * D. E. 165. A. B. C. D. * E. 166. A. B. C. D. * E. 167. A. B. * C. D. E. 168. A. B. C. D. * E. Gall bladder. Large intestine. Nasopharynx. Meninges and choroid plexus When Bacillus anthracis is cultured, the isolate is expected to have all of the following characteristics EXCEPT: Formation of large colonies, which retain their shape when manipulated. Absence of hemolysis on sheep blood agar. Lack of motility in soft-agar testing media. Inability to form spores. Grampositive Antibiotic treatment is absolutely necessary in cutaneous anthrax, to: Prevent progression from vesicle to eschar. Limit the amount of edema surrounding the eschar. Prevent progression to systemic illness. Enable the quick healing of skin lesions. Assure that no permanent scar is formed. The spastic paralysis of Tetanus is the effect of a protein exotoxin. Which phrase below best describes the process directly inhibited by Tetanus toxin? Synthesis of neurotransmitter. Transport of neurotransmitter into vesicles. Calcium influx required for neurotransmitter release. Blocking and fusion of neurotransmitter vesicles with the synaptic membrane. Binding of neurotransmitter molecules to their receptors If you suspect Francisella infection, you should inform the lab when sending a specimen. What is the predominant reason you need to do this? Francisella requires culture in living human cells. Francisella requires culture in living protozoa, such as amoebae. Francisella although biologically Gram-negative, stains Gram-positive unless special technique is used. Francisella is readily transmitted to laboratory workers when cultured. Francisella cannot be cultured on ‘standard media’. Chlamydia trachomatis may be cultured on monolayers of human cells. If infected cells were examined by staining and light microscopy, what would you be most likely to observe? A membrane-bounded inclusion body, within the nucleus. A membrane-bounded inclusion body, within the cytoplasm. Rod shaped Gram-positive bacilli, free within the cytoplasm. Gram-negative cocci, within the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. Cyst forms inside lysosomes. An infant is brought to the emergency room, cyanotic and with poor muscle tone. Which condition is most likely given these findings? Antibiotic-associated colitis. Diphtheria. Anthrax. Botulism. Tetanus. 169. A. B. C. * D. E. 170. A. * B. C. D. E. 171. A. B. C. D. E. * 172. A. B. * C. D. E. 173. A. * B. C. D. E. 174. A. B. C. * D. E. 175. A. B. * In what way do Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria meningitidis, and Streptococcus pneumoniae most closely resemble each other? Lipopolysaccharide in their outer membranes. Teichoic acid in their envelopes. Polysaccharide capsules Thick peptidoglycan in their cell walls. Motility due to flagella. In August, a young man presents with a history of fever for 1 week and a red rash which extends to the palms and soles. IgM titer to Rickettsia rickettsii is 1:640. From which vector was this infection most likely to have been acquired? Dog tick. Mosquito of the genus Anopheles. Blood-sucking sandfly. Flea. Human body louse. The cell tropism of the genus Rickettsia determines the type of disease produced. Which phrase best describes Rickettsial disease? Encephalitis Meningitis. Myocarditis Myositis. Vasculitis. Which characteristic of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is believed to be most essential to its transmission? Anti-phagocytic polysaccharide capsule. Impermeable lipid-rich envelope. Production of protein exotoxins. Rapid growth. Type III secretion system. In a patient with systemic febrile illness, which item in the history would indicate the highest risk for Brucella infection? Contact with livestock or animal products. Recent travel to China. Chronic cardiopulmonary disease. Age less than two years. Drinking unpurified water from a river or stream. A patient becomes infected with Salmonella enterica serotype typhi. Which condition would most strongly favor development of a “chronic carrier state” with this organism? Age over 70 years. Infection via the respiratory route. Gallstones. Kidney stones. Chronic pulmonary disease. A patient has an abscess from which Bacterioides fragilis is isolated. Which condition is most likely to have facilitated infection by this organism? Treatment with trimethoprim/sulfa. Tissue ischemia. C. D. E. 176. A. B. C. D. * E. 177. A. B. C. D. * E. 178. A. B. * C. D. Presence of neutrophils. Antibiotic treatment for another bacterial infection. Colonization of the large intestine with spores of this organism. A patient develops pneumonia caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae. The predominant virulence factor of this organism is a thick capsule . Which phrase best describes the role of this capsule in virulence? Aids in acquisition of iron. Toxic to lung epithelial cells Identical to human polysaccharide, so is non-immunogenic. Reduces phagocytosis by neutrophils. Inhibits activation of Complement. A patient has a peptic ulcer. Which organism is most likely to have created this lesion? Campylobacter jejuni. Enterococcus faecalis. Escherichia coli. Helicobacter pylori Salmonella enteritidis. A 50-year-old woman was treated for cystitis [caused by E. coli] with an oral broad-spectrum antibiotic. Three weeks later she developed abdominal pain and diarrhea. A stained smear of stool contained many neutrophils. Cultures for bacterial pathogens were negative. A serological test of stool for Clostridium difficile toxin was positive. Which of the following is most likely to have been the immediately predisposing cause of this patient’s C. difficile infection? E. 179. A. B. * C. D. E. 180. Colonization of her large intestine by antibiotic-resistant E. coli. Alteration of her intestinal flora by antibiotic treatment. none of the above An allergic response to her antibiotic treatment.Acquisition of an antibiotic-resistance plasmid (R-Factor) by C. difficile. Acquisition of an antibiotic-resistance plasmid (R-Factor) by C. difficile. Chancroid is caused by Treponema pallidum Hemophilus ducreyi Treponema pertenua Clostridium sp. Mycoplasma The symptom of secondary syphilis is A. B. C. D. * E. 181. A. B. * C. D. neurological problems giant lesions affecting many internal organs a hard-based, painless chancre a rash covering all parts of the body Meningitis Which of the following statements best describes Streptococcus pneumoniae? bile soluble, catalase positive, bile soluble, capsulated bile soluble, gramnegative, optochin resistant bile soluble, catalase positive, optochin sensitive E. 182. A. B. C. * D. E. 183. A. B. * C. D. E. 184. A. B. C. D. * E. 185. A. * B. C. D. E. 186. A. B. C. D. E. * 187. A. B. * C. D. E. 188. A. B. C. * D. E. 189. A. bile soluble, catalase negative, motily Which of the following is a pathogen of the oropharynx? Streptococcus faecalis Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus pyogenes Streptococcus bovis Streptococcus viridans What do endotoxins and exotoxins have in common? secreted into the medium cause damage to the host heat stable heat resistent contain polysaccharide Which virulence factor results in the symptoms of Staphylococcal food poisoning? exfoliative exotoxin hyaluronidase endotoxin enterotoxin neurotoxin Which of the following best describes the pathogenesis of acute rheumatic fever? characterized by inflammation of the heart and/or the joints due to an immunologic cross reaction between heart muscle and Staphylococcus aureus involves B-hemolytic Streptococci growing in the heart is a complication of Group A Streptococcal skin disease as well as pharyngitis tonsilitis is first stage of development of rheumatic fever Which of the following statements about gonorrhea is true? Men are frequently asymptomatic carriers. Bacteremia is common. Serologic diagnosis is more reliable than culture. Penicillins are no longer recommended for treatment. Gonococci are within leucocytes in a sample Gonococci are within leucocytes in a sample growth in 6.5% NaCl oxidase positive catalase negative PYR positive motility Which of the following tests may be used to differentiate Salmonella typhi from Shigella species? glucose fermentation gas production from glucose motility citrate utilization color of colonies on Endo medium Which of the following descriptions best fits a typical strain of Escherichia coli? non-motile, aerogenic, lactose fermenting mucoid colony B. C. * D. E. 190. A. B. * C. D. E. 191. A. B. * C. D. E. 192. A. B. C. * D. E. 193. A. B. * C. D. E. 194. A. B. * C. D. E. 195. A. B. C. D. * E. 196. A. * B. C. D. motile, anaerogenic, non-lactose fermenting, indole positive motile, aerogenic, lactose fermenting, indole positive motile, aerogenic, non-lactose fermenting, citrate negative non-motile, ferments lactose slowly, gramnegative Hemolytic uremic syndrome is caused by which of the following bacterium? Campylobacter jejuni Escherichia coli 0157 Helicobacter pylori Salmonella typhi Ureaplasma What is the most common cause of urinary tract infections? Staphylococcus saprophyticus Escherichia coli Enterococcus fecalis Streptococcus bovis Staphylococcus epidermidis Which of the following result(s) best describe(s) the listed organism? Campylobacter jejuni - gram positive gull wings Shigella Sonneii - mannitol negative H2S (wk) E coli 0157 - lactose positive, indole positive Yersinia enterocolitica -sporulated, colony sick yellow Clostridium perfringens - aerobes, sporulated What term refers to a disease that is always out there in low numbers in a given regional area? pandemic endemic epidemic hypodermic case Which of the following tests may be used to differentiate Salmonella paratyphi from Shigella species? Fermentation of glucose gas production from glucose gram staining citrate utilization of Simmons’ citrate agar shape Which of the following descriptions best fits a typical strain of Escherichia coli? motile, aerogenic, non-lactose fermenting, citrate negative non-motile, aerogenic, lactose fermenting mucoid colony motile, anaerogenic, non-lactose fermenting, indole positive motile, aerogenic, lactose fermenting, indole positive motile, anaerogenic, lactose fermenting, sporulated Which one of the following enterobacteriaceae always are causative agents of enteric diseases? Shigella Serratia Klebsiella Citrobacter E. 197. A. B. C. * D. E. 198. A. * B. C. D. E. 199. A. B. * C. D. E. 200. A. B. C. * D. E. 201. A. B. C. D. * E. 202. A. B. C. D. E. * 203. A. B. C. * D. E. 204. A. Proteus Syphilis is caused by which of the following? Helicobacter pylori Proteus mirabilis Treponema pallidum Serratia marcesans Treponema Vincentii Borellia burgdorferi causes which disease? Lyme's Disease Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever Hanta Rabies Relapsing fever How is leptospirosis, caused by Leptospira interrogans, transmitted? Tick bite Contaminated urine in food or water Undercooked meat Inhaled aerosol louse feces What is the most common human pathogen/opportunist? Staphylococcus aureus Steptococcus pneumoniae Pseudomonas aeruginosa Escherichia coli Enterococcus Brucella abortussis, a cause of undulant fever, is transmitted in all but which of the following ways? none of the above Direct contact with infected animals Exposure to animal carcass Exposure to animal feces Drinking unpasteurized milk Which of the following is NOT true about Bordetella pertussis? none of the above Causes Whooping Cough Attaches to ciliated cells with capsules Complications can include pneumonia, brain damage and death Gram negative anaerobe Which of the following is NOT true of Neisseria gonorrhea? produces endotoxin Is a mucosal pathogen Produces exotoxin Can disseminate in the immunosuppressed Complications include ectopic pregnancy, PID and sterility Which of the following is NOT true of Neisseria meningitidis? none of the above B. C. * D. E. 205. Crosses the blood brain barrier Has 3 serotypes - A, B, Y Colonizes nasopharynx Predisposed groups include diabetics Helicobacter pylori, a cause of peptic ulcers and gastric carcinoma, is diagnosed by which of the following methods? A. B. C. D. E. * 206. A. B. * C. D. E. 207. A. B. C. * no correct answer Serology (serum) test Biopsy (invasive) Radioactive isotope C14 test All are correct What is the cause of food toxic poisoning? Clostridium tetani Clostridium botulinum Salmonella enteriditis Escherichia coli Campylobacter jejuni Which of the following members of the Vibrio family cause severe dehydration? none of the above Vibrio vulnificus Virbrio cholerae D. Vibrio parahaemolyticum E. 208. Vibrio alginolyticus What is the incubation period for Shigella dysenteriae? A. B. C. D. * E. 209. none of the above 6 to 8 hours 24 to 48 hours 2 to 4 days 1 to 2 weeks Which of the following does not occur when an individual is infected with Salmonella enteriditis? all Endotoxins cause inflammation and fever Enterotoxins cause diarrhea Cytotoxins lyse endothelial cells lining the intestinal tract Proteolytic enzymes cause necrosis What is the primary cause of death from Salmonella typhi (Typhoid fever)? none of the above Hemorrhaging necrosis DIC (disseminating intravascular coagulation) Toxemia High fever A. B. C. D. E. * 210. A. B. * C. D. E. 211. A. B. C. D. * E. 212. A. B. C. D. * E. 213. A. B. C. D. E. * 214. A. * B. C. D. E. 215. A. * B. C. D. E. 216. A. * B. C. D. E. 217. A. * B. C. D. E. 218. Yersinia pestis causes both the Bubonic Plague and the more deadly Pneumonic Plague. How is Pneumonic Plague transmitted? The bite of lice The bite of a flea Via rodents Air-borne Exchange of bodily fluids Which of the following is NOT true about Mycoplasma hominis? none of the above Synonymous with Ureaplasma urealyticum More prevalent in late summer/early fall Vaccine uses conjugated polysaccharide B Is endemic worldwide Which of the following bacteria is/are primarily human pathogens? Salmonella typhi. S. Paratyphi A. S. Paratyphi B. Shigella All answers are correct. Which of the following media is/are used for blood culture in cases of enteric fever? Bile broth. Tetrathionate broth. Selenite-F broth. Sugar broth. All answers are correct. For determining the serotype of infecting organism, detection of which agglutinins is more important in Widal test? O. H. Fimbrial. M. Vi Bipolar staining is characteristic of: Yersinia pestis. Proteus mirabilis. Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Vibrio cholerae Bacillus anthracis Scalded skin syndrome is due to which toxin of Staphylococcus aureus? Exfoliatin Enterotoxin. Leucocidin. Haemolysin Necrotoxin Isolation of pneumococci from clinical specimens may be attempted by intraperitoneal inoculation A. B. C. * D. E. 219. A. * B. C. D. E. 220. A. B. C. D. * E. 221. A. B. C. * D. E. 222. A. B. C. * D. E. 223. A. * B. C. D. E. 224. A. * B. C. D. E. 225. A. * B. C. D. rabbits. rats mice. sheeps. horses Which biotype/s of Corynebacterium diphtheriae ferment/s starch and glycogen? Gravis. Intermedius. Mitis All of the above. none of the above Diphtheria toxin has a special affinity for which of the following tissue/s? Heart muscles. Nerve endings. Adrenal glands. All are correct no correct answer “Medusa head” appearance of the colonies is characteristic of: Proteus mirabilis. Clostridium tetani. Bacillus anthracis. Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Clostridium botulini Typical drumstick appearance of bacilli is observed in: C. diphtheriae Clostridium perfringens. С. tetani C. histolyticum. C. difficilae Pneumonic plague can be transmitted from man to man by: droplet infection. inoculation. ingestion. flea bite all are correct Common reservoir host/s of Brucella melitensis is/are: sheep and goats. cattle. pigs. dogs all of the above. Which of the following organisms may lead to pseudomembrane formation in the throat? Corynebaclerium diphtheriae Treponema Vinsentii Streptococcus pyogenes. Candida albicans. E. 226. A. B. C. * D. E. 227. A. * B. C. D. E. 228. A. B. * C. D. E. 229. A. B. C. * D. E. 230. A. B. C. D. E. * 231. A. B. C. D. E. * 232. A. B. * C. D. E. 233. A. B. All of the above. All of the following bacteria can cause food poisoning, EXCEPT Salmonella enteritidis. Staphylococcus aureus. Clostridium tetani Clostridium botulinum Listeria monocytogenes A positive Mantoux test is indicated by an area of induration of: 10 mm or more in diameter. 5-9 mm in diameter. 3-4 mm in diameter. 1-2 mm in diameter none of the above. Traveller's diarrhoea is caused by: enteropathogenic Escherichia coli. enterotoxigenic E. coli. enteroinvasive E. coli. enterohaemorrhagic E. coli. enteroaggregative E. coli. Which of the following bacteria is more resistant to unfavorable environmental conditions? Shigella dysenteriae. S. flexneri. C. tetani S. sonnei. C. albicans In enteric fever, Salmonella may be isolated from: urine. faeces. blood. bile all of the above. Which of the following serotypes of Salmonella can cause gastroenteritis? S. Enteritidis. S. Newport. S. Typhimurium. S. cholerae suis All are correct. Plague is transmitted by: sandflies. rat fleas. mites. ticks. louse Bubonic plague can be diagnosed in the laboratory by: demonstration of gram-negative coccobacilli. culture on blood agar. C. D. E. * 234. A. * B. C. D. E. 235. A. B. * C. D. E. 236. A. B. C. * D. E. 237. A. B. C. * D. E. 238. A. * B. C. D. E. 239. A. B. * C. D. E. 240. A. * B. C. D. E. inoculation in guinea-pigs. inoculation in rats all of the above. Most strains of Staphylococcus aureus show: a golden-yellow pigment. β-haemolysis on sheep blood agar. phosphatase production. novobicin resistance all of the above. Thin, slender and gram-positive bacilli possessing metachromatic granules and showing Chinese letter arrangement are characteristic of: Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Bacillus anthracis. Clostridium perfringens. Bordetella pertussis A positive Schick test implies that the person is: healthy immune and non-hypersensitive susceptible and non-hypersensitive. immune and hypersensitive. non-immune and hypersensitive. Malignant pustule is characteristic of: .relapsing fever pulmonary plage cutaneous anthrax leptospirosis all of the above. Cholera toxin resembles which of the following toxins? Labile toxin of Escherichia coli. Stable toxin of E. coli. Diphtheria toxin. Tetanus toxin. Staphylococcus enterotoxin Which of the following Brucella spp. is most pathogenic for man? B. abortus B. melitensis. B. suis. B. canis. B. ovis In which of the following sexually transmitted diseases, ulcer/s is/are painless? Syphilis. Chancroid. Herpes genitalis. None of the above All of the above. 241. A. B. C. * D. E. 242. A. B. * C. D. E. 243. A. B. C. D. E. * 244. A. * B. C. D. E. 245. A. * B. C. D. E. A 35-year-old woman presents with a history of increasing respiratory distress and cough productive of sputum. Chest X-ray shows evidence of bilateral pneumonia. Cultures of blood and sputum on Chocolate agar grow out slender Gram-negative rods; cultures on standard sheep blood agar are negative. Which bacterium is most likely to be the cause of her infection? Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Chlamydia pneumoniae Haemophilus influenzae. Escherichia coli. Streptococcus pneumoniae A lactose-fermenting Gram-negative rod is isolated from the bloody stool of a young child. Which pathogen is most likely? Salmonella enterica Escherichia coli. Vibrio cholerae Shigella dysenteriae Clostridium difficile An 8-year-old boy living in a wooded area of Virginia suddenly developed fever, headache, and myalgia. On physical exam, a rash was noted on his limbs and trunk. Lesions of the rash were red and a few mm in diameter. No organisms were isolated from several blood cultures. The child was treated with tetracycline and recovered. Serological tests of acute and convalescent serum samples from the child are most likely to reveal an increase in antibody titer to... Borrelia burgdorferi Chlamydia pneumoniae Franciscella tularensis Yersinia pestis. Rickettsia rickettsii A 13-year old boy develops pain and marked (10 cm.) swelling in his right inguinal lymph node accompanied by fever of 104oF. He and his family have just returned from a vacation trip to Arizona and New Mexico. Aspirate from the node contains Gram-negative rods. A direct immunofluorescent assay on the aspirate provides a definitive diagnosis. The child is (successfully) treated with streptomycin, and the aspirate is sent for culture to the CDC. Culture yields pale colonies on MacConkey agar. What is the most probable pathogen? Yersinia pestis. Helicobacteri pylori. Franciscella tularensis Coxiella burnetii Klebsiella pneumoniae A 15-year-old female presented with a three-day history of fever, headache and a non-productive cough. Penicillin was prescribed and the patient was sent home. Her illness did not respond to this antibiotic. Gram stain and culture of the patient's sputum and a throat swab revealed only 'normal oral flora'. She was then successfully treated with erythromycin. Which organism below is most likely to have caused her illness? Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Haemophilus influenzae. Mycobacterium tuberculosis Corynebacterium diphtheriae Streptococcus pneumoniae. 246. A. B. * C. D. E. 247. A. B. C. D. * E. 248. A. B. C. D. E. * 249. A. B. C. D. * E. 250. A. B. * C. D. E. 251. A. B. C. * D. Which organism below, if present in only one of three blood cultures from a single patient, is most likely to represent contamination caused by poor antiseptic technique, rather than genuine infection? Escherichia coli. Staphylococcus epidermidis. Streptococcus pneumoniae. Pseudomonas aeruginosa Haemophilus influenzae Which of the following bacteria can be successfully cultured on cell-free medium? Chlamydia trachomatis Coxiella burnetii Mycobacterium leprae Mycoplasma pneumoniae Rickettsia prowazekii. An 81-year-old man with chronic emphysemea and hypertension develops fever, chills, and respiratory distress. X-rays show lobar pneumonia. Sputum smear contains numerous Gram-positive cocci, many of which are in pairs. Sputum culture on Sheep blood agar produces many colonies of an alpha-hemolytic Gram-positive coccus. It is catalase-negative, Bile-esculin negative, and optochin-sensitive. Which of the organisms below is most likely? Streptococcus pyogenes (Group A) Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B) Streptococcus mitis Streptococcus bovis (Group D) Streptococcus pneumoniae . A post-surgical patient develops redness around the incision and a day later pus begins to ooze from the wound. Culture of a swab of pus produces beta-hemolytic colonies on Sheep blood agar. Gram stain shows that the bacteria are Gram-positive cocci. Catalase and coagulase tests are positive. Which of the following organisms is most likely? Streptococcus pyogenes Streptococcus agalactiae Streptococcus mitis Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus epidermidis Vacationer develops watery diarrhea but not chills or fever. In this setting which of the following pathogens is the most common? Salmonella enterica Escherichia coli Staphylococcus aureus Campylobacter jejuni Helicobacter pylori A young woman develops urgency, frequency, and dysuria. Two days later she develops fever, chills, and costovertebral angle tenderness. Tests of urine for leukocyte esterase and nitrate reductase are positive. Urine culture yields a beta-hemolytic Gram-negative rod which forms dark-pink colonies on MacConkey agar. Which of the following organisms is most likely? Pseudomonas aeruginosa Klebsiellla pneumoniae Escherichia coli Staphylococcus saprophyticus E. 252. A. B. C. * D. E. 253. A. B. C. D. * E. 254. A. B. C. D. E. * 255. A. B. * C. D. E. 256. A. B. C. D. Enterobacter, sp. A child develops a "cold" which progresses to severe pharyngitis. Pharyngeal exudate forms a tough 'membrane', difficult to remove without causing bleeding. Culture of a throat swab on selective tellurite agar produces abundant black colonies. Other cultures produce only normal flora. Which organism below is most likely to have caused this infection? Streptococcus pneumoniae. Haemophilus influenzae. Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Bordetella pertussis. Mycobacterium avium/intracellulare. A burn patient develops infection of the burn wound. Culture of exudate on Brain-Heart Infusion agar produces numerous green-pigmented colonies of a Gram-negative rod. The organism grows well aerobically on standard media but shows no evidence of acid production on differential media such as MacConkey, Hektoen Enteric, or Triple-Sugar-Iron agars. What is the most likely organism? Bacteroides fragilis Campylobacter fetus Eschericahia coli Pseudomonas aeruginosa Citrobacter spp. A young man develops peritonitis following abdominal trauma. During surgery foul-smelling purulent material is aspirated from the infected area. Gram stain of this material contains a mixture of Gram-positive cocci, Gram-positive rods, and many Gram-negative rods. Aerobic culture on sheep blood agar yields many colonies of enterococci and a few colonies of E. coli; culture on MacConkey agar produces only E. coli. Anaerobic culture on sheep blood agar produces a few colonies of beta-hemolytic Gram-positive rods and many colonies of slender Gram-negative rods. Which organism is most likely to represent the majority of the Gram-negative rods seen when in peritoneal exudate? Salmonella typhi Clostridium tetani Clostridium perfringens Pseudomonas aeruginosa Bacteroides fragilis An outbreak of sepsis caused by Staphylococcus aureus has occurred in the newborn nursery. You are called upon to investigate. According to your knowledge of the normal flora, what is the MOST likely source of the organism? Colon Nose Throat Vagina All of the above A 75-year-old man reports malaise, headache, and fever. On examination his neck is stiff. Gram stain of CSF reveals neutrophils and numerous Gram-negative cocci, many in pairs. Which organism below is most probable? Pseudomonas aeruginosa Klebsiella pneumoniae Haemophilus influenzae Neisseria gonorrhoeae E. * 257. A. B. C. D. * E. 258. A. B. C. * D. E. 259. A. B. C. D. * E. 260. A. B. * C. D. E. 261. A. B. C. * D. E. 262. A. B. C. D. * E. 263. A. * B. C. Neisseria meningitidis Each of the statements about the classification of streptococci is correct EXCEPT: Pneumococci {Streptococcus pneumoniae) are alpha-hemolytic and can be serotyped on the basis of their polysaccharide capsules Enterococci are group D streptococci and can be classified by their ability to grow in 6.5% sodium chloride Although pneumococci and the viridans streptococci are alpha-hemolytic, they can be differentiated by the bile solubility test and their susceptibility to optochin Viridans streptococci are identified by Lance-field grouping, which is based on the C carbohydrate in the cell wall All of the above Each of the following agents is a recognized cause of diarrhea EXCEPT: All answers are right Clostridium perfringens Enterococcus faecalis Escherichia coli Vibrio cholerae Each of the following organisms is an important cause of urinary tract infections EXCEPT: Escherichia coli Proteus mirabilis Klebsiella pneumoniae Bacteroides fragilis All of the above Your patient is a 30-year-old woman with nonbloody diarrhea for the past 14 hours. Which one of the following organisms is LEAST likely to cause this illness? Clostridium difficile Streptococcus pyogenes Shigella dysenteriae Salmonella enteritidis All of the above Each of the following statements concerning Mycobacterium tuberculosis is correct EXCEPT: After being stained with carbolfuchsin, M. tuberculosis resists decolorization with acid alcohol M. tuberculosis has a large amount of mycolic acid in its cell wall M. tuberculosis appears as a red rod in Gram-stained specimens M. tuberculosis appears as a red rod in acid-fast stained specimens All of the above A 50-year-old man has a fever and is coughing up. The patient has contacted with pigeons. Which one of the following microorganism is MOST likely to be the cause? Listeria monocytogenes Clostridium perfringens Peptostreptococcus intermedins Chlamydia psittaci Fusobacterium nucleatum Which one of the following diseases is BEST diagnosed by serologic means? Q fever Pulmonary tuberculosis Gonorrhea D. E. 264. A. B. C. D. E. * 265. A. B. * C. D. E. 266. A. B. C. * D. E. 267. A. * B. C. D. E. 268. A. B. C. * D. E. 269. A. B. Actinomycosis All answers are right A group of medical students developed nausea, vomiting, and abdominal cramping a few hours after eating sandwiches and potato salad at the school cafeteria. They had no diarrhea. By the next morning they were fatigued but recovered. Which organism is most likely to have caused their illness? Salmonella typhi Borrelia burgdorferi Clostridium botulinum Clostridium perfringens Staphylococcus aureus A 19-year-old man comes to your clinic because of thick purulent discharge from the urethral opening of his penis. On Gram-stain of the discharge huge numbers of neutrophils are seen, a few of which contain intracellular Gram-negative cocci. Many of the cocci are in pairs. What is the most likely organism? Neisseria meningitidis Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Haemophilus ducreyi. Mycoplasma hominis Treponema pallidum. Your patient has subacute bacterial endocarditis caused by a member of the viridans group of streptococci. Which one of the following sites is MOST likely to be the source of the organism? Skin Colon Oropharynx Urethra Nasopharynx A culture of skin lesions from a patient with pyoderma (impetigo) shows numerous colonies surrounded by a zone of beta hemolysis on a blood agar plate. A Gram-stained smear shows gram-positive cocci in chain. If you found the catalase test to be negative, which one of the following organisms would you MOST probably have isolated? Streptococcus pyogenes Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus epidermidis Streptococcus pneumoniae All of the above The coagulase test, in which the bacteria cause plasma to clot, is used to distinguish Streptococcus pyogenes from Enterococcus faecalis Streptococcus pyogenes from Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus aureus from Staphylococcus epidermidis Staphylococcus epidermidis from Neisseria meningitidis All of the above Which one of the following is considered a virulence factor for Staphylococcus aureus? A heat-labile toxin that inhibits glycine release at the internuncial neuron An oxygen-labile hemolysin C. D. * E. 270. A. B. C. D. * E. 271. A. B. C. * D. E. 272. A. B. C. D. * E. 273. A. B. C. D. * E. 274. A. B. * C. D. E. 275. A. B. * C. D. E. 276. A. Resistance to novobiocin Protein A that binds to the Fc portion of IgG All are correct The MOST important protective function of the antibody stimulated by tetanus immunization is To prevent formation of endotoxin by the pathogen To opsonize the pathogen (Clostridium tetani) To prevent growth of the pathogen To neutralize the toxin of the pathogen All of the above Five hours after eating fried rice at a restaurant, a 24-year-old woman and her husband both devel oped nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Which of the following organisms is the MOST likely to be involved? Clostridium perfringens Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli Bacillus cereus Salmonella typhi All are right For which one of the following enteric illnesses is a chronic carrier state MOST likely to develop? Campylobacter enterocolitis Shigella enterocolitis Cholera Typhoid fever All The most important benefit that the human gastrointestinal flora provide for their host is digestion of dietary cellulose a low grade toxemia production of dietary protein antagonism against colonization by potential pathogens production of antibodies The main carrier site on the human body for strains of potentially pathogenic Staphylococcus aureus is the oral cavity throat (posterior nasopharynx) nasal membranes gastrointestinal tract vagina Each of the following statements concerning Mycobacterium leprae is correct EXCEPT: In lepromatous leprosy, large numbers of organisms are usually seen in acid-fast-stained smears The organism will grow on bacteriologic media in 3-6 weeks Prolonged therapy (9 months or longer) is required to prevent recurrence Skin tests for delayed hypersensitivity are useful diagnostically Nine bandad armandrilo may be inoculated with lepra bacilli The carrier site in humans for pathogenic Neisseria meningitidis is the conjunctiva B. * nasopharynx C. D. E. 277. urogenital tract blood meninges This bacterium, although usually not considered as normal flora, frequently colonizes the stomach and is thought to be the cause of gastric and duodenal ulcers. A. B. C. D. E. * 278. A. B. C. * D. E. 279. Lactobacillus acidophilus Pseudomonas aeruginosa Escherichia coli Vibrio cholerae Helicobacter pylori Silver nitrate or an antibiotic is put into the eyes of newborn infants to prevent infection by Doderlein's bacillus (Lactobacillus acidophilus) Herpes simplex virus Neisseria gonorrhoeae Chlamydia trachcomatis two of the above A characteristic of Streptococcus mutans that allows it to initiate dental plaque and dental caries is: A. B. C. D. * E. 280. the ability to attach specifically to the pellicle of the tooth the ability to utilize sucrose as a source of carbon and energy the ability to produce a dextran capsule the ability to produce lactic acid all of the above The fimbriae of enterotoxigenic E. coli are essential to the bacterium when it causes disease because A. * B. they are needed for initial attachment of the bacteria to the gastrointestinal epithelium they activate host adenylate cyclase enzymes leading to disruption of cellular permeability C. they make the bacteria resistant to phagocytic killing and digestion by white blood cells D. they convert GI tract components (bile) to substances which provoke symptoms of disease E. A. they allow the bacteria to swim "upstream" against the peristaltic action of the GI tract thereby remaining established in the GI tract The fibrin coat that can be formed by coagulase-positive staphylococci and the hyaluronic acid capsule of Streptococcus pyogenes are pathogenic strategies to promote colonization of a host B. cause direct damage to host cells during pathogenesis C. hide bacterial antigens from the host immune tissues D. * E. survive as intracellular parasites alter or change their surface antigens within the course of an infection 281. 282. Leukocidins are A. B. C. D. E. * 283. enzymes contained in the lysosomes of phagocytes to kill ingested bacteria proteins produced by bacteria that kill closely-related bacteria proteases produced by bacteria which destroy host immunoglobulins enterotoxins produced by Staphylococcus aureus involved in food-borne disease substances produced by pyogenic bacteria that kill leucocytes The streptococcal invasin which behaves as a "spreading factor" by breaking down the framework of connective tissues is called A. B. collagenase streptokinase C. streptolysin D. E. * 284. erythrogenic toxin (pyogenic exotoxin hyaluronidase . A primary determinant of virulence in Streptococcus pyogenes, which is involved in adherence, resistance to phagocytosis and antigenic variation, is A. B. C. * D. E. streptokinase lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) M-protein coagulase Protein A 285. Which of the following statements that relate to bacterial exotoxins and endotoxins is true? A. * B. C. Exotoxins are proteins; endotoxins are lipopolysaccharides Exotoxins are typically structural (cell wall) components of Gram-positive bacteria Endotoxins can never be released by the cells that produce them. D. Endotoxins cause their toxicity through an enzymatic mechanism of action. E. 286. A. B. C. D. E. * 287. A. In the host, endotoxins are destroyed by the enzyme lysozyme. The substrate for the enzymatic (A) component of diphtheria toxin is NAD cyclic AMP the regulatory proteins of the eukaryotic adenylate cyclase complex ATP elongation factor 2 (EF-2) Why does the large volume of fluid lost by diarrhea during infection with Vibrio cholerae is a consequence of fluid replacement during treatment of the disease and does not result directly from activity of the cholera toxin results from electrolytes binding to the intestinal enterocytes which upsets their water retention capability B. C. is caused when the vibrios bind to the intestinal epithelium and physically or mechanically block the uptake of fluids by the gut epithelial cells D. * follows activation of adenylate cyclase by cholera toxin and the subsequent effect of cyclic AMP on water and salt balances of the host cells E. 288. results from neurotoxic effects of the cholera toxin on the central nervous system The similarity between the toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST), the staph enterotoxins, and the erythrogenic toxin (pyogenic exotoxin) is A. B. * they are all produced by Staphylococcus aureus they stimulate the immune system in a similar manner as superantigens C. the pathology of the diseases that they cause is identical D. they are all neurotoxins E. 289. they are the same (identical) toxin produced by three different organisms Both the botulinum toxin and the tetanus toxin A. B. C. * are produced by Bacillus anthracis act in the central nervous system act in the peripheral nervous system D. E. 290. are Zn++ dependent protease enzymes two of the above Which tissue in a human is free from colonization by microbes (normal flora) because the organisms lack normal access to the tissue? A. * B. blood (vascular system) colon C. D. E. 291. stomach lower respiratory tract urinary tract (urethra) Which tissue is normally free from colonization by microorganisms (normal flora) because of the effectiveness of the host constitutive defenses? A. upper respiratory tract (throat, pharynx) B. * C. lower respiratory tract (lungs) upper gastrointestinal tract D. lower gastrointestinal tract E. 292. A. B. vagina The predominant bacteria in the mouth, GI tract (colon), and skin, respectively, are staphylococci, streptococci, and corynebacteria streptococci, E. coli, and staphylococci C. * D. lactic acid bacteria, Bacteroides, and staphylococci staphylococci, E. coli, and streptococci E. 293. neisseriae, enterococci, and clostridia The predominant bacterium in the GI tract of nursing infants, because mother's milk contains a growth factor that enriches for bacterial growth, is A. B. Enterococcus faecalis Escherichia coli C. D. E. * 294. A. B. Bacteroides fragilis Lactobacillus acidophilus Bifidobacterium bifidum The most important benefit that the human gastrointestinal flora provide for their host is digestion of dietary cellulose production of endotoxin that produces toxemia C. D. * E. 295. production of dietary protein antagonism against colonization by potential pathogens production of antibodies The bacterial product that prevents colonization of the vagina by potentially pathogenic yeasts is A. B. C. D. E. * 296. bacteriocin peroxide TSST toxin lysozyme lactic acid The main carrier site on the human body for strains of potentially pathogenic Neisseria meningitidis is the A. B. * C. nasal membranes throat (posterior nasopharynx oral cavity D. E. 297. gastrointestinal tract vagina In the pathogenesis of Helicobacter pylori what is the colonization site in the host? A. B. * nasal sinuses stomach C. D. lower intestine throat E. 298. A. respiratory tract What is the colonization site of Corynebacterium diphtheriae, the agent of diphtheria? skin B. urethra C. eye D. * E. 299. A. B. C. D. * throat none of the above Characteristics of Streptococcus mutans which allow it to initiate dental caries include the ability to attach specifically to the pellicle of the tooth the ability to produce lactic acid from sucrose, glucose and fructose the ability to form and grow in a biofilm on the enamel of the tooth all are correct E. 300. none of the above A determinant of virulence of Streptococcus pneumoniae which allows the bacteria to resist engulfment by phagocytes is A. fimbriae B. * C. a polysaccharide capsule coagulase D. E. 301. production of TSST exotoxin neuraminidase The fimbriae of pathogenic Neisseria gonorrhoeae are apparently essential to the bacterium when it produces the disease gonorrhea because A. * B. C. D. they are responsible for initial attachment of the bacteria to the urethral or cervical epithelium they cause the production of pus which is characteristic of gonorrhea they make the bacteria resistant to phagocytic killing and digestion by white blood cells they convert urinary tract components (urine) to substances which provoke symptoms of disease E. 302. A. B. C. * D. E. 303. A. B. they allow the bacteria to swim "upstream" against the flow of urine and thereby remain established in the urinary tract Which bacterial invasin is mismatched with its activity in the host? staphylokinase: degrades fibrin coagulase: clots fibrin hyaluronidase: degrades the ground substance of connective tissue streptolysin: lyses neutrophil membranes none of the above The clostridial invasin that dissolves the framework of muscle is botulinum toxin tetanus toxin C. * hyaluronic acid D. E. collagenase neuraminidase 304. Choose among listed the part of anthrax toxin: A. Leukocidin B. Enterotoxin C. D. * Haemolysin Edema toxin E. 305. Tetanospasmin Leukocidins are A. B. enzymes contained in the lysosomes of phagocytes to kill ingested bacteria proteins produced by bacteria that kill closely-related bacteria C. D. E. * 306. proteases produced by bacteria which destroy host immunoglobulins superantigens produced by Staphylococcus aureus substances produced by pyogenic bacteria that kill phagocytes Which of the following statements about bacterial endotoxins is true? A. B. * C. D. They usually act at a tissue site in the host that is removed from the site of bacterial growth They are nonantigenic. They typically have an enzymatic (specific) type of activity They can be converted into toxoids. E. 307. A. B. C. D. * E. 308. none of the above Bacterial endotoxins and exotoxins both share this property. They are proteins They are structural components of the bacterial cell wall They have an enzymatic type of activity They are toxic to animals. none of the above Which of the following statements characterizes the mechanism of action of diphtheria toxin? A. * B. C. inhibits protein synthesis in susceptible cells causes an increase in cAMP in cells resulting in severe edema causes an increase in cAMP in cells leading to diarrhea D. E. 309. interferes with the transmission of neurotransmitters at stimulatory neuromuscular synapse interferes with secretion of neurotransmitters at an inhibitory neural synapse in the central nervous system Both the botulinum toxin and the tetanus toxin are A. B. C. superantigens enterotoxins adenylate cyclase enzymes D. * protease enzymes E. 310. A. * B. C. D. none of the above Mechanism of action of tetanotoxin? block the release of neurotransmitters across a neural synapse up-regulate the production of cAMP in affected cells cause the ADP ribosylation of neuron gangliosides block protein synthesis in target cells E. 311. A. B. * cleave neuraminic acid in the intercellular space Both the cholera toxin and the E. coli LT toxin have an A+B subunit arrangement are identical in their primary structure C. D. E. 312. are ADP-ribosylating toxins have an enzymatic mechanism of action all of the above The main effect of E. coli and Vibrio cholerae enterotoxin on host cells of the gastrointestinal tract that leads to the pathology of the diseases, is to A. inhibit protein synthesis B. * C. D. E. 313. cause fluid and electrolyte imbalance cleave host cell membranes act as superantigens to trigger an overwhelming immunological reaction initiate a localized inflammatory response in the intestine The portion of the bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that is responsible for the toxicity of the molecule is A. * B. C. D. E. 314. lipid A lipoteichoic acid O polysaccharide Omp A N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) The portion of lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) molecule that is responsible for a bacterium’s antigenic specificity, as well as the existence of multiple serotypes (serovars) among Gram-negative pathogens, is A. lipid A B. Capsulare C. * D. E. 315. O polysaccharide R antigen H antigen What bacterial structure or substance is primarily associated with antigenic variation in the Group A streptococci? A. outer membrane protein (omp) B. streptokinase C. D. * E. 316. hyaluronic acid capsule Polysaccharide M-protein A reason not to administer beta lactam antibiotics for a Gram-negative septicemia (blood-borne infection), unless there is no other alternative, is A. the antibiotic eliminates the normal flora B. * C. D. E. 317. beta lactam antibiotics are ineffective against Gram-negative bacteria the lysis of bacterial cells increases the activity of bacterial LPS Complement activation cannot occur in the presence of the antibiotic the antibiotic suppresses the immune response necessary to eliminate the pathogen Which of the following bacterial toxins behaves as a superantigen through its stimulation of a very large fraction of the host T-cell population? A. B. C. D. * E. 318. A. B. C. D. * E. 319. Streptococcal streptolysin Salmonella LPS (endotoxin Pseudomonas Exotoxin A Staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome toxin E. coli O157 H:7 shiga toxin Passive immunity to tetanus in a susceptible host would be accomplished by recovery from the disease tetanus injection with tetanus toxin injection with tetanus toxoid (as in the DPT vaccine administration of donor’s antitetanus immunoglobulin foxoid administration Active artificial immunity to diphtheria is accomplished by A. B. * C. D. E. 320. A. B. C. D. E. * 321. diphththeria antitoxin (antiserum) administration vaccination with diphtheria toxoid recovery from the disease diphtheria all of the above none of the above Which test you can use for detect in patient latent Syphilis? Gram stain of material from a skin lesion. Physical exam to detect characteristic neurological symptoms. . Dark field microscopy of CSF. Culture of the organism from blood and CSF. Tests for ‘non-treponemal’ and ‘anti-treponemal’ antibodies in serum. An outbreak of sepsis caused by Staphylococcus aureus has occurred in the newborn nursery. You are called upon to investigate. According to your knowledge of the normal flora, what is the MOST likely source of the organism? Colon A. B. C. * D. E. 322. A. B. C. D. E. * 323. A. B. C. * D. E. 324. A. B. * C. D. E. 325. A. B. C. D. E. * 326. A. * B. C. D. E. 327. A. B. * C. D. E. 328. Mouth Nose Skin Vagina Each of the statements about the classification of streptococci is correct EXCEPT: Pneumococci {Streptococcus pneumoniae) are alpha-hemolytic and can be serotyped on the basis of their polysaccharide capsules Enterococci are group D streptococci and can be classified by their ability to grow in 6.5% sodium chloride Streptococci are classificate on basis on haemolytic properties Although pneumococci and the viridans streptococci are alpha-hemolytic, they can be differentiated by the bile solubility test and their susceptibility to optochin Viridans streptococci are identified by Lancefield grouping, which is based on the C carbohydrate in the cell wall Each of the following agents is a recognized cause of diarrhea EXCEPT Streptococcus epidermidis Clostridium perfringens Enterococcus faecalis Escherichia coli Vibrio cholerae Your patient is a 30-year-old woman with nonbloody diarrhea for the past 14 hours. Which one of the following organisms is LEAST likely to cause this illness? Clostridium difficile Streptococcus pyogenes Shigella dysenteriae Salmonella enteritidis Shigella boydii Each of the following statements concerning Mycobacterium tuberculosis is correct EXCEPT: After being stained with carbolfuchsin, M. tuberculosis resists decolorization with acid alcohol M. tuberculosis has a large amount of mycolic acid in its cell wall M. tuberculosis appears as a violet rod in Gram-stained specimens M. tuberculosis appears as a red rod in acid-fast stained specimens M. tuberculosis appears as a blue rod in acid-fast stained specimens Which one of the following diseases is BEST diagnosed by serologic means? Q fever Pulmonary tuberculosis Gonorrhea Actinomycosis Sepsis Your patient has subacute bacterial endocarditis caused by a member of the viridans group of streptococci. Which one of the following sites is MOST likely to be the source of the organism? Skin Oropharynx Colon Mucose Urethra Corynebacterium diphtheriae produces exotoxin if: A. B. * C. D. E. 329. A. * B. C. D. E. 330. A. B. C. * D. E. 331. A. B. C. * D. E. 332. A. * B. C. D. E. 333. A. B. C. D. * E. 334. A. B. Corynebacterium diphtheriae grows in Loeffler’s medium Corynebacterium diphtheriae is lysogenic culture Corynebacterium diphtheriae grows on tellurite agar Corynebacterium diphtheriae is resistant to -lactame antibiotics Corynebacterium diphtheriae has volutin granules. A culture of skin lesions from a patient with pyoderma (impetigo) shows numerous colonies surrounded by a zone of beta hemolysis on a blood agar plate. A Gram-stained smear shows gram-positive cocci. If you found the catalase test to be negative, which one of the following organisms would you MOST probably have isolated? Streptococcus pyogenes Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus epidermidis Streptococcus pneumoniae Staphylococcus saprophyticus The coagulase test, in which the bacteria cause plasma to clot, is used to distinguish Streptococcus pyogenes from Enterococcus faecalis Streptococcus pyogenes from Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus aureus from Staphylococcus epidermidis Staphylococcus epidermidis from Neisseria meningitidis Neisseria gonorrhoae The MOST important protective function of the antibody stimulated by tetanus immunization is To opsonize the pathogen (Clostridium tetani) To prevent growth of the pathogen To neutralize the toxin of the pathogen To prevent adherence of the pathogen To prevent inflammation of tissues Five hours after eating fried rice at a restaurant, a 24-year-old woman and her husband both developed nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Which of the following organisms is the MOST likely to be involved? Staphylococcus aureus Clostridium perfringens Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli Bacillus cereus Salmonella typhi For which one of the following enteric illnesses is a chronic carrier state MOST likely to develop? Campylobacter enterocolitis Shigella enterocolitis Cholera Typhoid fever Sepsis Which one of the following zoonotic illnesses has NO arthropod vector? Plague Lyme disease C. * D. E. 335. A. B. * C. D. E. 336. A. B. C. D. E. * 337. A. * B. C. D. E. 338. A. B. C. D. * E. 339. A. B. * C. D. E. 340. A. B. C. D. * E. 341. A. B. C. D. Brucellosis Epidemic typhus Anthrax Which one of the following organisms principally infects vascular endothelial cells? Salmonella typhi Rickettsia typhi Haemophilus influenzae Coxiella burnetii Bordetella pertussis A child has Pertussis. How was this infection most likely to have been acquired? Release of oral flora into the bloodstream by dental work. Bite of a dog or cat. Contact with livestock, or animal products such as leather or wool. Consumption of dairy products made from unpasteurized milk Inhalation of respiratory droplets from another person. A patient is diagnosed with Clostridium difficile colitis. Which item would represent a known risk factor for such infections? Been treated with antibiotics. Consumed unpurified water. Visited the southwestern United States. Eaten undercooked fried rice. Been in contact with livestock Each of the following statements concerning chlamydiae is correct EXCEPT Chlamydiae are strict intracellular parasites because they cannot synthesize sufficient ATP Chlamydiae possess both DNA and RNA and are bounded by a cell wall C. trachomatis has multiple serotypes, but C psittaci has only one serotype Most chlamydiae are transmitted by arthropods Chlamydiae aren‘t cultivated onto nutritient media For which one of the following bacterial vaccines are toxic side effects an important concern? The vaccine containing pneumococcal polysaccharide The vaccine containing pneumococcal polysaccharide The vaccine containing tetanus toxoid The vaccine containing diphtheria toxoid The vaccine containing botulinum toxoid Each of the following statements concerning Staphylococcus aureus is correct EXCEPT Gram-positive cocci in grapelike clusters are seen on Gram-stained smear The coagulase test is positive Treatment should include a (3-lactamase-resistant penicillin Endotoxin is an important pathogenetic factor It produce exotoxins In the immune response to invasive infections by Streptococcus pneumoniae, antibodies are required for effective defense. Antibodies to which antigen are most important? Teichoic acid. Type III secretion system. Peptidoglycan. C-carbohydrate. E. * 342. A. * B. C. D. E. 343. A. B. * C. D. E. 344. A. B. * C. D. E. 345. A. B. C. * D. E. 346. A. B. C. * D. E. 347. A. B. C. * D. Polysaccharide capsule. Your patient is a 70-year-old man who under went bowel surgery for colon cancer 3 days ago. He now has a fever and abdominal pain. You are concerned that he may have peritonitis. Which one of the following pairs of organisms is MOST likely to be the cause? Bacteroides fragilis and Klebsiella pneumoniae Bordetella pertussis and Salmonella enteritidis Actinomyces israelii and Campylobacter jejuni Clostridium botulinum and Shigella dysenteriae Salmonella typhimuruim and Shigella boydii A 65-year-old man develops dysuria and hematuria. A Gram stain of a urine sample shows gram-negative rods. Culture of the urine on EMB agar reveals lactose-negative colonies with out evidence of swarming motility. Which one of the following organisms is MOST likely to be the cause of his urinary tract infection? Enterococcusfaecalis Proteus vulgaris Pseudomonas aeruginosa Escherichia coli Staphylococcus epidermidis A 25-year-old man complains of a urethral discharge. You perform a Gram stain on a specimen of the discharge and see neutrophils but no bacteria. Of the organisms listed, the one MOST likely to cause the discharge is Treponema pallidum Chlamydia trachomatis Candida albicans Coxiella burnetii Neisseria gonorrheae Two hours after a delicious Thanksgiving dinner of barley soup, roast turkey, stuffing, sweet potato, green beans, cranberry sauce, and pump kin pie topped with whipped cream, the Smith family of four experience vomiting and diarrhea. Which one of the following organisms is MOST likely to cause these symptoms? Shigella flexneri Helicobacter pylori Campylobacter jejuni Salmonella enteritidis Vibrio cholerae The MOST important contribution of the capsule of Streptococcus pneumoniae to virulence is To prevent dehydration of the organisms on mucosal surfaces To survive in the environment To retard phagocytosis by polymorphonuclear leukocytes To inhibit polymorphonuclear leukocyte chemo taxis To accelerate tissue invasion by its collage-naselike activity The MOST important way the host circumvents the function of the pneumococcal polysaccharide capsule is via T lymphocytes sensitized to polysaccharide antigens Polysaccharide-degrading enzymes Anticapsular antibody Activated macrophages E. 348. A. B. * C. D. E. 349. A. B. C. D. * E. 350. A. * B. C. D. E. 351. A. B. C. * D. E. 352. A. B. * C. D. E. 353. A. B. C. D. * E. 354. A. B. C. Activated B-lymphocytes The pathogenesis of which one of the following organisms is MOST likely to involve invasion of the intestinal mucosa? Vibrio cholerae Shigella sonnei Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli Clostridium botulinum Salmonella typhi Which one of the following organisms that in fects the gastrointestinal tract is the MOST frequent cause of bacteremia? Shigella flexneri Campylobacter jejuni Vibrio cholerae Salmonella typhi Shigella sonnei Each of the following statements concerning Treponema is correct EXCEPT: T. pallidum produces an exotoxin that stimulates adenylate cyclase Treponema are motile T. pallidum cannot be grown on conventional laboratory media Treponemes are members of the normal flora of the human oropharynx Patients infected with T. pallidum produce antibodies that react with beef heart cardiolipin Each of the following statements concerning Clostridia is correct EXCEPT: Pathogenic Clostridia are found both in the soil and in the normal flora of the colon Antibiotic-associated (pseudomembranous) colitis is due to a toxin produced by Clostridium difficile Anaerobic conditions at the wound site are not required to cause tetanus, because spores will form in the presence of oxygen Botulism, which is caused by ingesting preformed toxin, can be prevented by boiling food prior to eating Clostridia are spore-forming bacteria Each of the following statements concerning Bacteroides fragilis is correct EXCEPT: B. fragilis is a gram-negative rod that is a part of the normal flora of the colon B. fragilis forms endospores, which allow it to survive in the soil The capsule of B. fragilis is an important virulence factor B. fragilis infections are characterized by foul-smelling pus B. fragilis is anaerobic bacterium Each of the following statements concerning staphylococci is correct EXCEPT: S. aureus is differentiated from S. epidermidis by the production of coagulase S. aureus infections are often associated with abscess formation The majority of clinical isolates of S. aureus elaborate penicillinase; therefore, presumptive antibiotic therapy for S. aureus infections should not consist of penicillin G Scalded skin syndrome caused by S. aureus is due to enzymatic degradation of epidermal desmosomes by catalase Gram-positive cocci in grapelike clusters are seen on Gram-stained smear Each of the following statements concerning gram-negative rods is correct EXCEPT: E. coli ferments lactose, whereas the enteric pathogens Shigella and Salmonella do not Salmonella typhi cause bactereamia Klebsiella pneumoniae, although a cause of pneumonia, is part of the normal flora of the colon D. E. * 355. A. * B. C. D. E. 356. A. B. C. D. * E. 357. A. B. C. * D. E. 358. A. B. C. * D. E. 359. A. B. * C. D. E. 360. A. B. C. D. * E. Proteus species are highly motile organisms that are found in the human colon and cause urinary tract infections Escherichia coli is part of the normal flora of the colon; therefore, it does not cause diarrhea Which one of the following organisms causes diarrhea by producing an enterotoxin that activates adenylate cyclase? Escherichia coli Bacteroides fragilis Staphylococcus aureus Enterococcus faecalis Costridium difficilae Each of the following statements concerning Clostridium perfringens is correct EXCEPT: It causes gas gangrene It causes food poisoning It produces an exotoxin that degrades lecithin and causes necrosis and hemolysis It is a gram-negative rod that does not ferment lactose It causes experimental infection in animals Each of the following statements concerning Clostridium tetani is correct EXCEPT: It is a gram-positive, spore-forming rod Pathogenesis is due to the production of an exotoxin that blocks inhibitory neurotransmitters It is a facultative organism; it will grow on a blood agar plate in the presence of room air Its natural habitat is primarily the soil It is motile rod Each of the following statements concerning spirochetes is correct EXCEPT: Species of Treponema are part of the normal flora of the mouth Species of Borrelia cause a tick-borne disease called relapsing fever The species of Leptospira that cause leptospirosis grow primarily in humans and are usually transmitted by human-to-human contact Species of Treponema cause syphilis and yaws Borrelia burgdorferi causes Lyma disease Each of the following statements concerning Mycobacterium tuberculosis is correct EXCEPT: Some strains isolated from individuals with previously untreated cases of tuberculosis are resistant to isoniazid M. tuberculosis contains a small amount of lipid in its cell wall and therefore stains poorly with the Gram stain The organism grows slowly, often requiring 3-6 weeks before colonies appear The antigen in the skin test is a protein extracted from the organism Mantoux test is used for allergic diagnosis Which one of the following statements concerning immunization against diseases caused by Clostridia is CORRECT? Antitoxin against tetanus protects against botulism as well, because the two toxins share antigenic sites Vaccines containing alpha toxin (lecithinase) are effective in protecting against gas gangrene The toxoid vaccine against Clostridium difficile infection should be administered to immunocompromised patients Immunization with tetanus toxoid induces effective protection against tetanus toxin Attenuated vaccines are used for specific prophylaxis of infections, caused by Clostridia 361. A. * B. C. D. E. 362. A. B. C. * D. E. 363. A. B. C. * D. E. 364. A. B. * C. D. E. 365. A. * B. C. D. E. 366. A. B. C. * D. When ampicillin was first introduced, most E. coli isolates were clinically sensitive. Many isolates are now ampicillin-resistant because they produce β-lactamases. Which phrase below most accurately describes these enzymes? Genes which encode them are often present on conjugative plasmids . Although they are produced by many isolates of E. coli, such β-lactamases are not produced by other Gram-negative rods. They inactivate all β-lactam antibiotics They cause resistance to aminoglycosides as well as b-lactams They have spread from Gram-negatives like E. coli to Gram-positive pathogens like Staphylococcus aureus. Many isolates of E. coli are now ampicillin-resistant because they produce β-lactamases. Which sentence below most accurately describes these enzymes? They inactivate all β-lactam antibiotics. Although they are produced by many isolates of E. coli, such β-lactamases are not produced by other Gram-negative rods. Genes which encode them are often present on conjugative plasmids They cause resistance to aminoglycosides as well as b-lactams. They have spread from Gram-negatives like E. coli to Gram-positive pathogens like Staphylococcus aureus. A patient complains of abdominal pain and you suspect gastritis caused by Helicobacter pylori. Of the tests below, which would it be best to order, to confirm your diagnosis? Sputum culture. Blood culture on special selective medium. Conversion of 14C-labeled urea to carbon dioxide. Measurement of urea concentration in exhaled breath. Measurement of urea concentration in a stool sample. A man suffers many month from gastritis caused by Helicobacter pylori . Of the tests below, which would it be best to order, to confirm your diagnosis? Measurement of urea concentration in a stool sample. Conversion of 14C-labeled urea to carbon dioxide. Blood culture on special selective medium. Sputum culture. Measurement of urea concentration in exhaled breath. Epidemiologists (using the Kauffman-White classification) report that an outbreak has been caused by Salmonella enterica, serotype Newport. Structure of which pair of antigens determined the serotype as Newport? Flagella and O-antigen. . Peptidoglycan and teichoic acid. Heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins. Pili and capsular polysaccharide. Hemolysin and cell-wall-associated carbohydrate Bacteriologists (using the Kauffman-White classification) made conclusion that outbreak has been caused by Salmonella enterica, serotype Anatum. Structure of which pair of antigens determined the serotype as Anatum? Heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins. Peptidoglycan and teichoic acid. Flagella and O-antigen. Pili and capsular polysaccharide. E. 367. A. B. C. * D. E. 368. A. B. C. * D. E. 369. A. B. * C. D. E. 370. A. B. * C. D. E. 371. A. B. C. D. E. * 372. A. B. * C. D. E. 373. Hemolysin and cell-wall-associated carbohydrate. A patient with a bacterial infection is treated with a bacteriostatic inhibitor of 70S ribosomes.Which drug below best fits this description? Rifampin. A fluoroquinolone. Tetracycline. An aminoglycoside. Erythromycin. The young man was injuring in car accident. The affected area of the leg is painful, red, and swollen. During the next 12 hours the swelling increases markedly, the skin of the leg becomes discolored, and fluid-filled blisters appear on the skin. Gram stain of fluid aspirated from a blister reveals large Gram-positive rods. Which organism below is most likely to have caused this infection? Clostridium difficile. Clostridium botulinum Clostridium perfringens. Clostridium tetani. Listeria monocytogenes A bacillus cultured from stool produces dark pink colonies on Endo agar. Which of the following organisms is most likely? Shigella dysenteriae Escherichia coli Salmonella enterica Listeria monocytogenes Shigella sonnei Which bacteria can produce on Endo’s medium dark pink colonies? Salmonella enterica Escherichia coli Listeria monocytogenes Shigella sonnei Shigella dysenteriae A patient is diagnosed with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), you suspect caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. If you wished to confirm C. trachomatis, which test below should you use? Culture of urine on broth-based agar at 20ºC. Culture of cervical exudate on chocolate agar in elevated CO2. Microscopic examination of a stained smear of peripheral blood. Gram stain of exudate from the cervix. PCR-based nucleic-acid amplification test of a cervical swab. An HIV-positive patient develops mycobacterial infection. Two likely possibilities are Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. How would these bacteria be best distinguished in the laboratory? One is Gram-positive, the other is acid-fast. Nucleic acid from one hybridizes to a specific DNA probe, nucleic acid from the other does not. One is a rod, the other is a coccus. One grows on Jensen-Lowenstein agar, the other does not One grows in the BACTEC system, the other does not. A patient with upper respiratory disease is observed to have a thick grey ‘pseudomembrane’ lining the upper respiratory tract. Which organism below is most likely in this case? A. B. * C. D. E. 374. A. B. C. * D. E. 375. A. B. C. D. E. * 376. A. B. C. * D. E. 377. A. B. C. D. * E. 378. A. * B. C. D. E. 379. A. B. C. * D. E. Mycobacterium tuberculosis Corynebacterium diphtheriae Legionella pneumophilia. Pseudomonas aeruginosa Nocardia asteroids A listless child with extremely poor muscle tone is brought to the Hospital. Which condition is most likely, given this presentation? Lyme Disease Tetanus Botulism Rocky Mountain spotted fever Rheumatic fever An epidemic typhus occurs in a refugee camp. What vectors spread the infections? Rat fleas. Dog ticks. Deer ticks. Mosquitos. Human body lice. What vectors are spread an epidemic typhus? Rat fleas. Dog ticks. Human body lice. Mosquitos. Deer ticks. A patient has a large carbuncles you suspect is caused by Bacillus anthracis. In this case, which of the following would you expect to see in a Gram-stained smear of pus from the carbuncles? Slender spirochetes. Small Gram-positive cocci, in pairs. Gram-negative rods of variable length. Large Gram-positive rods. Gram-negative coccobacilli. A young man has urethritis. Titer of Complement-fixing (CF) antibody to Chlamydia trachomatis, in a serum sample taken on the day on which treatment was initiated, is 1:64. A second CF titer, taken two weeks later, is 1:640. Which conclusion below best follows from the antibody titers? The patient’s urethritis was caused by C. trachomatis Although the patient’s condition may appear to be improving, in fact his infection is getting worse. The patient is not infected with C. trachomatis. The patient has made a Type I hypersensitivity response to C. trachomatis antigens. The patient’s C. trachomatis isolate was resistant to tetracyclines Clostridium tetani produces disease by the production of a protein exotoxin. How does this toxin act? Stimulates adenyl cyclase. Inhibits guanyl cyclase. Blocks synaptic transmission. Cleaves ribosomal RNA. Stimulates production of cytokines. 380. A. B. * C. D. E. 381. A. B. C. * D. E. 382. A. B. C. * D. E. 383. A. B. C. D. * E. 384. A. B. C. * D. E. 385. A. B. C. * D. E. You suspect that a patient’s respiratory illness may be due to infection by Mycoplasma pneumoniae. If this is true, which antibiotic below should you expect to be most effective? Penicillin G. Erythromycin. Vancomycin. A third-generation cephalosporin. An ‘extended-spectrum’ penicillin. Which antibiotic below should you expect to be most effective for therapy Mycoplasma pneumoniae respiratory infection? . Penicillin G. Vancomycin. Erythromycin. A third-generation cephalosporin. An ‘extended-spectrum’ penicillin. A young man complaines on pain on urination and profuse purulent discharge from his urethral opening. Gram stain of the discharge revealed large numbers Gram-negative cocci, mostly in pairs within neutrophils. Which bacterium is most likely to have caused his infection? Mycoplasma hominis Chlamydia trachomatis Neisseria gonorrhoeae Ureaplasma urealyticum Treponema pallidum Members of a family suffer acute attacks of nausea and vomiting a few hours after returning from a daylong picnic, at which they ate hamburgers, potato salad, and custard pie. By morning all are feeling better. Which bacterial toxin is most likely to have caused their symptoms? Clostridium difficile Cytotoxin. Escherichia coli Labile Toxin Escherichia coli Stable Toxin. Staphylococcus aureus Enterotoxin. Helicobacteri pylori Cytotoxin. A mother brings her 12-year-old son to your office because he has a skin lesion on his back. It is 20 cm in diameter, with a red inflamed border and a red center, with a paler ring between the red areas. The mother says it has expanded rapidly over the last few days. Which of the following would be most likely to cause such a lesion? Rickettsia rickettsii Treponema pallidum . Borrelia burgdorferi . Chlamydia psittaci Streptococcus pyogenes A young man has a large pus-filled abscess on his upper arm but does not go to a doctor. Several days later he is brought to the Emergency Room with fever, hypotension, and multiple organ failure. Which of the following is most likely to be responsible? Streptococcus pyogenes Erythrogenic toxin. Clostridium perfringens α-toxin. Staphylococcus aureus Toxic Shock Syndrome Toxin-1. Shigella dysenteriae Shiga Toxin. Escherichia coli Heat-labile Toxin (ST). 386. A. B. * C. D. E. 387. A. B. C. * D. E. 388. A. B. C. D. * E. 389. A. B. C. D. * E. 390. A. * B. C. D. E. 391. A. B. C. * D. E. _____ The laboratory informs you that an isolate of Staphylococcus aureus is ‘methicillin-resistant’. Which phrase below best describes such isolates? Although resistant to methicillin, nearly all are sensitive to cephalosporins. They are resistant to both ‘anti-staph’ penicillins and cephalosporins. They are seldom resistant to antibiotics other than β-lactams. They produce a β-lactamase active on both cephalosporins and penicillins. The ‘methicillin-resistance’ gene also confers resistance to vancomycin. Gram stain of CSF sediment from a patient with meningitis contains Gram-negative cocci, many in pairs. Which organism below is most probable? Streptococcus pneumoniae Haemophilus influenzae Neisseria meningitidis Pseudomonas aeruginosa Escherichia coli A nine years-old child develops high fever and stiff neck. A spinal tap is performed. A Gram-stained smear of cerebrospinal fluid reveals many neutrophils and Gram-negative cocci that resemble paired kidney beans within leucocytes. Which organism below is most likely to have caused this infection? Escherichia coli Haemophilus influenzae Listeria monocytogenes Neisseria meningitidis Streptococcus agalactiae Group A b-hemolytic streptococci are cultured from a throat swab of a febrile child with severe purulent pharyngitis. Structure of which antigen determined that the bacteria belonged to Lancefield group A? . Capsular polysaccharide Side chains of peptidoglycan. Fimbrae proteins Cell-wall-associated with carbohydrate Streptolysin O. Structure of which antigen b-hemolytic streptococci determined that the bacteria belonged to Lancefield group A? Cell-wall-associated with carbohydrate. Side chains of peptidoglycan. Fimbrae proteins Capsular polysaccharide. Streptolysin O. Residents of an assisted-living facility are offered immunization against Streptococcus pneumoniae. What is the antigenic constituent of this vaccine? Killed whole cells. Live cells of an attenuated bacterium. Purified capsular polysaccharides. Proteins produced by genetic engineering. A toxoid (formaldehyde-inactivated toxin). 392. A. B. C. * D. E. 393. A. B. C. D. E. * 394. A. B. C. * D. E. 395. A. B. * C. D. E. 396. A. B. * C. D. E. 397. A. B. C. D. E. * A child develops ‘strep throat’ (pharyngitis caused by Streptococcus pyogenes). The pediatrician explains to the child’s mother that the pharyngitis normally resolves spontaneously but nevertheless it is important the patient take a full course of Penicillin G. Why is this antibiotic treatment recommended in this situation? Shortens the course of the infection. Prevents spread of the infection to adjacent sites. Prevents sequellae such as acute rheumatic fever. Stimulates development of protective immunity Prevents spread of the infection to others. A patient has endocarditis produced by an a-hemolytic Streptococcus. This usually reflects spread of normal flora to the bloodstream. From which site is this isolate most likely to have spread? Anterior nares. Facial skin. Lower respiratory tract. Distal urethra. Oropharynx. From which site is L(alpha)-hemolytic Streptococcus isolate most likely to have spread in blood? Facial skin. Anterior nares. Oropharynx. Lower respiratory tract. Distal urethra. An elderly man develops pneumonia and septicemia. Gram stain of sputum contains many neutrophils and Gram-positive cocci, in pairs. Blood and sputum cultures grow out a Gram-positive coccus, alpha-hemolytic on sheep blood agar, and catalase-negative. Which organism below is most likely? Staphylococcus epidermidis Streptococcus pneumoniae Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus agalactiae Streptococcus pyogenes Infections with Staphylococcus aureus are on average more severe than infections with other Staphylococci. What test result distinguishes S. aureus from other members of this genus? Blackening of a bile-esculin slant. Coagulation of citrate-treated plasma. Beta-hemolysis on sheep blood agar. Blackening of an oxidase-test disc placed on a colony. Resistance to bacitracin. A 17-year-old sexually-active male presents with a four-day history of pain on urination and profuse purulent discharge from his urethral opening. Gram stain of the discharge revealed large numbers of neutrophils. A small fraction of neutrophils contained Gram-negative cocci, mostly in pairs. Which bacterium is most likely to have caused his infection? Mycoplasma hominis Chlamydia trachomatis Treponema pallidum Ureaplasma urealyticum Neisseria gonorrhoeae 398. A. B. C. D. E. * 399. A. B. C. * D. E. 400. A. B. C. * D. E. 401. A. B. C. D. * E. 402. A. B. C. D. * E. 403. A. * B. C. D. E. In October a young man comes to your office with two ulcers on his right hand. His history includes the fact that he is an avid hunter, and has been rabbit hunting in southern New Jersey every weekend for the last several months. Which organism should his hobby cause you to add to the list of possible causes of his illness? Yersinia pestis. Coxiella burnetii. Listeria monocytogenes. A member of the genus Brucella. Francisella tularensis. Bacteroides fragilis is isolated from an operative wound. Which sentence below best describes such infection? Can be successfully treated with aminoglycosides alone Initiated by ingestion of spores. Can be successfully treated with metronidazole alone. Contracted by the respiratory route. Sexually-transmitted. A patient with urethritis is treated with tetracycline. A direct fluorescent antibody test of a smear of exudate is equivocal. Titer of Complement-fixing (CF) antibody to Chlamydia trachomatis, in a serum sample taken on the day on which treatment was initiated, is 1:32. A second CF titer, taken two weeks later, is 1:640. Which conclusion below best follows from the antibody titers? The patient is not infected with C. trachomatis. Although the patient’s condition may appear to be improving, in fact his infection is getting worse. The patient’s urethritis was caused by C. trachomatis. The patient has made a Type I hypersensitivity response to C. trachomatis antigens. The patient’s C. trachomatis isolate was resistant to tetracyclines Residents of an assisted-living facility are immunized against Streptococcus pneumoniae. What is the antigenic component of the vaccine? A protein toxoid. Killed whole bacteria. Purified toxin. Purified capsular polysaccharides. Live bacteria of attenuated virulence In the upper respiratory tract of patient doctor observed thick grey ‘pseudomembrane’ formation. Which organism can cause this symptoms? Mycobacterium tuberculosis Legionella pneumophilia. Streptococcus mitis Corynebacterium diphtheriae Pseudomonas aeruginosa Staphylococcus aureus is easily transmitted within the hospital environment. Which feature of this bacterium is most largely responsible for its ease of spread? Resistance to heat, cold, and drying. Ability to colonize the digestive tract. Presence of an outer membrane impermeable to most disinfectants. Production of extracellular polysaccharide which allows bacteria to adhere tightly to surfaces. Formation of spores which are resistant to disinfectants and easily dispersed. 404. A. B. * C. D. E. 405. A. * B. C. D. E. 406. A. * B. C. D. E. 407. A. * B. C. D. E. 408. A. * B. C. D. E. 409. A beta-hemolytic streptococcus is isolated from an infected neonate. Such isolates are often members of Lancefield Group B. The antigenic structure of which bacterial component defines Lancefield Groups? Capsule polysaccharide. Cell-associated or C-carbohydrate. Wall and membrane teichoic acids. Beta-hemolysins. Filamentous proteins of the cell envelope. An important virulence factor of coagulase-positive staphylococci is Protein A. How does Protein A aid in virulence? Binds the Fc region of IgG, decreases opsonization. Hydrolyzes secretory IgA. Binds Factor H, prevents activation of complement. Extracts iron from plasma proteins. Promotes tight binding of bacteria to extracellular matrix. A post-surgical patient develops fever and there is redness and swelling around the surgical incision. A day later pus begins to flow from the incision; Gram stain of pus shows large numbers of neutrophils and many Gram-positive cocci, some in clusters. The organism is beta-hemolytic on blood agar, and is coagulase- and catalase-positive.Which organism is most likely? Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus epidermidis Streptococcus pyogenes (Group A) Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B) Streptococcus pneumoniae A five-day-old child develops high fever and stiff neck. A spinal tap is performed. A Gram-stained smear of cerebrospinal fluid reveals many neutrophils and short, thick, Gram-negative rods of uniform length. This microbes can ferment lactose.Which organism below is most likely to have caused this infection? Escherichia coli Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus agalactiae Haemophilus influenzae Neisseria meningitidis After Gram stain of spinal fluid sample from a patient with meningitis Medical personal during microscopy examination detected Gram-negative cocci, many in pairs. Which organism below is most probable? Neisseria meningitidis Haemophilus influenzae Streptococcus pneumoniae Pseudomonas aeruginosa Escherichia coli A patient presented with upper back pain. MRI imaging demonstrated inflammation of the T8-T9 vertebral bodies consistent with osteomyelitis. A bone marrow biopsy, when cultured, produced colonies of Gram-positive cocci.Colonies on Sheep blood agar were 3-4 mm in diameter, off-white and beta-hemolytic. Colonies on Brain-heart infusion (BHI) agar were 2-3 mm in diameter and golden-yellow. Catalase and coagulase tests were positive. What was the most likely pathogen? A. * B. C. D. E. 410. A. B. * C. D. E. 411. A. B. C. D. E. * 412. A. B. C. * D. E. 413. A. B. C. D. * E. 414. A. * B. C. Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus epidermidis Streptococcus pyogenes Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus mitis A 20-year-old women presents at a local clinic with fever and abdominal tenderness. She reports having had unprotected sexual intercourse a few weeks earlier. Gram-negative diplococci are seen in a Gram stain of vaginal secretions; many of the bacteria are inside polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Which virulence factor is most important in aiding this bacterium to initiate infection? Ability to invade cells. Adhesive pili. Anti-phagocytic capsule. Endotoxin. Flagella. Heavily-encapsulated strains of Neisseria meningitidis are far more virulent than non-encapsulated isolates. How does a capsule enhance virulence? Binds to the Fc region of some subclasses of human IgG. Prevents activation of complement by the classical pathway. Enables bacteria to adhere tightly to mammalian cells. Reduces access of antibiotics to the bacterial membrane. Inhibits phagocytosis by neutrophils Before the advent of immunization, outbreaks of meningococcal disease were frequent in military camps. A factor in development of such outbreaks is the ability of Neisseria meningitidis to establish an asymptomatic 'carrier state'. What is the predominant site of carriage of meningococci? Urethral epithelium. Gall bladder. Nasopharynx. Large intestine. Meninges and choroid plexus. A 23-year-old medical student had headache and fever one evening. By the next morning she had become very ill, with high fever, severe headache, and stiff neck. She was admitted to the hospital. Later that day she developed rash, first petechial and then pupuric. Her white count was 26,000/ull, with 80% neutrophils and 10% 'bands'. Gram stain ofCSF showed many white cells and numerous bacteria. If the pathogen is Neisseria meningitidis, how would you expect it to appear on Gram stain? Gram-positive cocci, many in pairs. Gram-positive cocci, many in clusters. Isolated Gram-positive cocci. Gram-negative cocci, many in pairs. Gram-negative cocci, many in clusters. A patient with septicemia goes into septic shock. Blood cultures later show the pathogen to be Neisseria meningitidis. Which component of the bacteria was most likely to be responsible for producing shock? Lipopolysaccharide [LPS]. Teichoic acid. A superantigen toxin. D. E. 415. A. B. * C. D. E. 416. A. B. * C. D. E. 417. A. B. * C. D. E. 418. A. * B. C. D. E. 419. A. B. C. * D. E. 420. A. B. C. Capsular polysaccharide. Plasma membrane lipids. A stool sample is plated on standard MacConkey-agar plates. After overnight incubation some of the colonies are dark pink in color, others are pale, nearly colorless. What can you conclude about the bacteria that produced dark- pink colonies? Gram-positive. Ferment lactose. Not likely to be 'normal flora'. Non-motile. Produce capsules. A strain of bacteria produced color colonies when cultured on standard MacConkey agar. It was then used to inoculate a Kligler's Iron Agar (KIA). After overnight incubation, the tube was entirely yellow and there were numerous bubbles inside the agar. There is no black precipitate. Which of the following descriptions most accurately describes the metabolic reasons for these observations? Produces H2S and gas Ferments lactose and produces gas Ferments neither lactose nor sucrose. Ferments glucose only Ferments sucrose and produces gas. The classic cause of epidemic cholera is Vibrio cholerae O1. The designation "O1" refers to the antigenic structure of an important component of the bacterial envelope. What is this component? Capsule. Carbohydrate chains of LPS. Flagella Pili. Teichoic acid. A common serotype of enterohemorrhagic E. coli is O157:H7. To which bacterial structure does the "H7" correspond? Flagella. Pili. Capsule. LPS core polysaccharide. Porins. An engineer recently returned from visiting his family in India develops severe diarrhea. He in fact has cholera. His diarrhea is produced by a protein exotoxin secreted by Vibrio cholerae. How does this toxin act? ADP-ribosylates a chloride transporter. Inhibits a G protein that inhibits adenyl cyclase. Stimulates a G protein that activates adenyl cyclase. Stimulates guanyl cyclase. Inhibits guanyl cyclase. A vacationing couple both develop severe watery diarrhea which lasts three days. Which organism is the most common etiologic agent of such infections? Shigella sonnei. Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Salmonella typhi. D. E. * 421. A. B. * C. D. E. 422. A. B. C. D. * E. 423. A. B. C. D. E. * 424. A. B. * C. D. E. 425. A. B. C. D. * E. 426. A. B. Campylobacter jejuni. Escherichia coli. During a vacation at a Caribbean resort, a 26-year-old executive develops profuse watery diarrhea. If his illness is produced by E. coli, which virulence factor of this organism is most likely to be responsible for the diarrhea? A conjugative plasmid that contains antibiotic-resistance transposons. A plasmid-borne gene which encodes a heat-stable peptide toxin that stimulates guanyl cyclase. A pathogenicity island which enables E. coli to invade mammalian cells. A toxin that cleaves ribosomal RNA's. An iron-transport system more efficient than that present in non-pathogenic E. coli. Several medical students go to Cancun over spring break. One evening, at a local bar, they drink several pitchers of Margaritas made with crushed ice. They spend the next two days in their hotel room with severe watery diarrhea, but no chills or fever. By the third day they recover completely. Which organism is most likely to have been the cause of their illness? Non-typhoidal Salmonella. Helicobacter pylori. Campylobacter jejuni. Enterotoxigenic E. coli. Non-cholera Vibrio. A sexually-active woman develops a urinary tract infection which ascends to the kidneys (pyelonephritis). Blood culture yields a beta-hemolytic Gram-negative rod. In this situation, which pathogen below is most common? Salmonella enteritidis. Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Serratia marcescens. Klebsiella pneumoniae. Escherichia coli. 23-year-old woman comes to your office because, for 3 days, she has experienced burning with urination, increased frequency of urination, and a continual feeling that she needs to urinate. She does not have vaginal discharge, fever, or flank pain. Rapid 'dipstick' urine tests are consistent with uncomplicated cystitis. Culture of urine on standard media produces a lactose-fermenting Gram-negative rod.In situations such as this, what is the most likely Enterobacter pathogen? faecium Escherichia coli Proteus vulgaris Klebsiella pneumoniae Pseudomonas aeruginosa A young child develops bloody diarrhea, produced by Shigella infection. From which source was this infection most likely to have been contracted? Cow, horse, or sheep. Rare hamburger. Dog or cat. Another sick child. Spores present in soil. A patient becomes infected with Salmonella enterica serotype typhi. Which condition would most strongly favor development of a "chronic carrier state" with this organism? Age over 70 years. Infection via the respiratory route. C. * D. E. 427. A. B. * C. D. E. 428. A. B. * C. D. E. 429. A. * B. C. D. E. 430. A. B. C. D. * E. 431. A. B. C. D. E. * 432. A. * B. C. Presence of gallstones. Presence of kidney stones. Chronic pulmonary disease. Which phrase best describes typical infections by Campylobacter jejuni? Non-inflammatory enteritis Inflammatory enteritis Systemic infection Urinary tract infection Meningitis A patient has chronic gastritis. Which of the following organisms is most likely? A non-cholera Vibrio. Helicobacter pylori. Campylobacter fetus. Campylobacter jejuni. Escherichia coli. Gastroscopy reveals that a patient with stomach pain has a large ulceration of his gastric mucosa. During the procedure a biopsy of the stomach epithelium is obtained. Which observation would suggest Helicobacter pylori as the cause of illness? Curved or spiral bacteria are seen in the biopsy after silver staining. Biopsy shows infiltration of gastric epithelium by lymphocytes. pH of stomach fluid is equal to 1 (normal), rather than decreased. Ingested isotope-labeled nitrate is converted to nitrite in the stomach. Bacteria are found in stomach fluid, but not in contact with the gastric epithelium A patient with systemic febrile illness is found to have an infection with Brucella abortus. Which item in his history represents a known risk factor for such infections? Recently visited Grand Canyon National Park. Keeps numerous pet reptiles including two pythons and an alligator. Has two young children who attend day care. Works as a butcher for a supermarket chain. Has an acquarium at home, with numerous tropical fish. A 22-year-old develops an abscess in his peritoneum following rupture of his appendix. Gram stain of exudate from his foul-smelling abscess reveals numerous polymorphonuclear leukocytes, Gram-positive cocci, Gram-positive rods, and Gram-negative rods. Aerobic culture of the exudate at 37oC on blood and MacConkey agar yields only Enterococci.. Which of the bacteria below is most likely to be the Gram-negative rods seen in the stained smear? Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Proteus mirabilis. Klebsiella pneumoniae Prevotella melaninogenica. Bacteroides fragilis. In Europe human Tetanus is now a rare disease. Which measure below has been most important in preventing it? Immunization of humans with a toxoid-containing vaccine. Eradication of the organism from the environment. Vaccination of livestock, especially cattle, with a killed-organism vaccine D. E. 433. A. B. C. D. E. * 434. A. B. C. * D. E. 435. A. B. C. D. E. * 436. A. B. C. * D. E. 437. A. B. * C. D. E. 438. A. B. * C. Sewage treatment and purification of water supplies. Antibiotic treatment of contacts of patients with C. tetani infections. Why tetanus is now a rare disease. Which factors below has been most important in preventing it? Eradication of the organism from the environment. Sewage treatment and purification of water supplies. v Vaccination of livestock, especially cattle, with a killed-organism vaccine Antibiotic treatment of contacts of patients with C. tetani infections. Immunization of humans with a toxoid-containing vaccine. A 61-year-old diabetic man is admitted to the hospital for severe pain in his right leg; the diagnosis is obstruction of the femoral artery. The affected area of the leg is painful, red, and swollen. During the next 12 hours the swelling increases markedly, the skin of the leg becomes discolored, and fluid-filled blisters appear on the skin. Gram stain of fluid aspirated from a blister reveals large Gram-positive rods. Which organism below is most likely to have caused this infection? Clostridium botulinum. Clostridium difficile. Clostridium perfringens. Clostridium tetani. Listeria monocytogenes How we can distinguish S. aureus from staphylococci epidermidis? Colony color when grown on BHI agar. Production of catalase. Ability to grow on MacConkey agar. Type of hemolysis on sheep blood agar. Production of coagulase. Which line below correctly pairs a bacterial group or species with an antibiotic that currently inhibits enough of its members to be used against it, before results of sensitivity testing are received? The majority is... Staphylococcus aureus Penicillin G . Enterobacteriaceae Penicillin G Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isoniazid Obligate anaerobes Aminoglycosides Obligate aerobes Metronidazole 16-year-old boy has a skin lesion on his back. It is 20 cm in diameter, with a red inflamed border and a red center, with a paler ring between the red areas. He says it has expanded rapidly over the last few days after tick bite. Which of the following would be most likely to cause such a lesion? Rickettsia rickettsii Borrelia burgdorferi Treponema pallidum Chlamydia psittaci Streptococcus pyogenes Five young men suffer acute attacks of nausea and vomiting a few hours after returning from a student’s party, at which they ate hamburgers, potato salad, and custard pie. By morning all are feeling better. Which bacterial toxin is most likely to have caused their symptoms? Helicobacteri pylori Cytotoxin. . Staphylococcus aureus Enterotoxin. Escherichia coli Labile Toxin D. E. 439. A. B. * C. D. E. 444. Escherichia coli Stable Toxin. Clostridium difficile Cytotoxin. A febrile patient with E. coli sepsis develops ‘septic shock’. Which of the following is likely to have played largest role in this reaction? A humoral immune response to bacterial surface antigens. A cell-mediated immune response to bacteria. Secretion of cytokines by monocytes in response to stimulation by LPS [endotoxin]. Release of granule contents by mast cells and basophils. Secretion of a bacterial superantigen toxin that activates TH cells. A patient with Cystic fibrosis develops pneumonia. A Gram-negative rod is cultured from her respiratory tract. On nutrient-poor media it grows well and secretes large amounts of bright green pigment. It produces acid from none of the sugars on which it was tested (including lactose and sucrose). Which organism below is most appropriate? . Shigella sonnei Salmonella typhi Pseudomonas aeruginosa Escherichia coli Klebsiella pneumoniae E. coli and Neisseria meningitidis isolated from blood cultures often have transport systems (for acquiring metal ions from the environment) lacking in their less-virulent relatives. Which metal is acquired by the majority of these systems? Copper Potassium Sodium Magnesium Iron A 25-year-old woman presents with a swollen, warm, painful knee. Aspirated joint fluid is cloudy and when cultured on chocolate agar gives rise to oxidase-positive colonies of Gram-negative diplococci. Which bacterium is most likely to be the cause of this infection? Haemophilus influenzae Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus pneumoniae Neisseria gonorrhoeae Nocardia asteroides In cervical specimens of 21-year-old woman presents gram-negative diplococci within leucocytes. Which bacterium is most likely to be the cause of this infection? Haemophilus influenzae Neisseria gonorrhoeae Streptococcus pneumoniae Staphylococcus aureus Nocardia asteroides You suspect that a patient might have latent Syphilis. Which test below would most reliably detect it? A. B. C. * D. Physical exam to detect characteristic neurological symptoms Dark field microscopy of CSF. Tests for ‘non-treponemal’ and ‘anti-treponemal’ antibodies in serum. Culture of the organism from blood and CSF. A. B. C. * D. E. 440. A. B. C. * D. E. 441. A. B. C. D. E. * 442. A. B. C. D. * E. 443. E. 445. A. * B. C. D. E. 446. A. B. * C. D. E. 447. A. * B. C. D. E. 448. A. B. C. * D. E. 449. A. B. C. D. * E. 450. A. B. C. D. Gram stain of material from a skin lesion. An 18-year-old high school student has a large pus-filled lesion on the left forearm, tender, red, and swollen. It is incised, drained, washed, and bandaged. A smear of the pus is Gram-stained. Many neutrophils are seen, also many Gram-positive cocci, most in large clusters. The organism is b-hemolytic on sheep blood agar. Colonies are pale-yellow, opaque, and shiny, with neat round outlines. Of the bacteria listed below, which is most likely to have produced the abscess? Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus bovis Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus mitis Enterococcus faecalis A workman has a large pus-filled lesion on the left forearm, tender, red, and swollen. It is incised. A smear of the pus is Gram-stained. Many neutrophils are seen, also many Gram-positive cocci, most in large clusters. The organism is b-hemolytic on sheep blood agar. Colonies are pale-yellow, opaque, and shiny, with neat round outlines. Of the bacteria listed below, which is most likely to have produced the abscess? Enterococcus faecalis Staphilococcus aureus Streptococcus bovis Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus mitis A cyanotic, listless, infant with extremely poor muscle tone is brought to the Emergency Room. Which condition is most likely, given this presentation? Botulism Tetanus Lyme Disease Rocky Mountain spotted fever Rheumatic fever A patient has a skin ulcer you suspect is caused by Bacillus anthracis. If your hypothesis is true, which of the following would you expect to see in a Gram-stained smear of exudate from the wound? Slender spirochetes. Small Gram-positive cocci, in pairs. Large Gram-positive rods. Gram-negative rods of variable length. Gram-negative coccobacilli. Bordetella pertussis is: Gram "+" Modified acid fast "+" Acid fast "+" Gram "-" Urease "+" Which disease is caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae? Nasopharyngeal carcinoma Toxic shock syndrome Reiter's syndrome Scrub typhus E. * 451. A. B. C. * D. E. 452. A. * B. C. D. E. 453. A. B. C. * D. E. 454. A. B. C. D. * E. 455. A. B. C. * D. E. 456. A. * B. C. D. E. 457. A. B. C. * D. E. Pneumonia Phenotypic properties of Streptococcus pyogenes is: Urease "+" dsDNA Catalase "-" H2S "-" Coagulase "-" Which of the following are true according to Streptococcus agalactiae A. Normal vaginal flora A. Botulism symptoms include descending paralysis, dry mouth, constipation, and urinary retention. A. Yeast form - in tissues; hyphae and pseudohyphae - both in tissues and in nature (temperature/nutrition dependent) A. Exposure to antibiotics - major risk factor. N. asteroides & N. caviae - pulmonary infections; N. brasiliensis - skin infections. Rare in immunocompetent. Neisseria gonorrhoeae Fungi Helminths Bacteria Viruses Protozoa Oxygen requirements of Staphylococcus epidermidis is: Aerobic Obligate anaerobe Microaerophilic Facultative anaerobe Capnophilic Staphylococcus epidermidis is: Aerobic Obligate anaerobe Facultative anaerobe Microaerophilic Obligate aerobic Which of the following statements refers to Coxiella burnetii : May include pneumonia, hepatitis, and endocarditis. Masseter muscles are often the first to be affected producing trismus (lockjaw). Strains A-C: trachoma. Strains D-K: genital infections. Strains L1-L3: lymphogranuloma venereum. Receptor - CD21 (complement receptor type 2) Disease is mostly caused by O1 Classic and El Tor strains; recently also O139 What is correct about Coxiella burnetii Masseter muscles are often the first to be affected producing trismus (lockjaw) Can cause diplopia,disphagia, disphonia May include pneumonia, hepatitis, and endocarditis Disease is mostly caused by O1 Classic and El Tor strains; recently also O139 Can be transmitted by the bites of foxes 458. A. B. C. D. * E. 459. A. B. C. D. * E. 460. A. B. C. * D. E. 461. A. B. C. * D. E. 462. A. B. C. D. E. * 463. A. B. C. * D. E. 464. A. B. C. * D. E. 465. A. Morbidity of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is: Lymphogranuloma venereum Enteric fever Necrotising faciitis Sepsis Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis What disease can cause Salmonella typhi? Lymphogranuloma venereum Sepsis Necrotising faciitis Enteric fever Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis Helicobacter pylori is: Vibrio Mold Spiral-shaped Rod Yeast Therapy of Candida albicans is: Antitoxin Cefotetan Nystatin Ketoconazole Penicillin What medicine is use for therapy of Candida albicans infection Penicillin Ketoconazole Antitoxin Cefotetan Nystatin Morbidity of Clostridium tetani is: Cholera gravis Pelvic inflammatory disease Tetanus Wound infection Parotitis Clostridium perfringens is сausative agent of: Cholera gravis Pelvic inflammatory disease Wound infection Parotitis Tetanus Which of the following statements refers to Clostridium botulinum Includes S. typhimurium, S. dublin, S. enteritidis, S. hadar - enteritis; S. typhi, S. paratyphi - enteric fever, possible intracellular infection. B. C. D. E. * 466. A. B. C. * D. E. 467. A. B. * C. D. E. 468. A. B. * C. D. E. 469. A. B. C. * D. E. 470. A. B. C. D. * E. 471. A. * B. C. D. E. 472. A. B. Group is determined base on polysaccharide C; type - based on M-protein; strain - based on T antigen. Toxins: Stx - EHEC; ShET2 - EIEC. Exposure to antibiotics - major risk factor Botulism symptoms include descending paralysis, dry mouth, constipation, and urinary retention. Find the correct sentence according to Clostridium botulinum Includes S. typhimurium, S. dublin, S. enteritidis, S. hadar - enteritis; S. typhi, S. paratyphi - enteric fever, possible intracellular infection. Group is determined base on polysaccharide C; type - based on M-protein; strain - based on T antigen. Botulism symptoms include descending paralysis, dry mouth, constipation, and urinary retention Exposure to antibiotics - major risk factor. . Produce endotoxin and coagulase. Phenotypic characteristic of Chlamydia pneumoniae is: ssDNA Obligate intracellular parasite ssRNA Coagulase "+" streptobacillus Chlamydia pneumoniae is: ssDNA Obligate intracellular parasite It grows onto nutrient media Coagulase "+" Acid fast "+" Toxicogenity of Vibrio cholerae is accociated with: LPS Toxic shock syndrome toxin Toxin - activates adenylate cyclase Enterotoxins Hemolysins Phenotypic characteristic of Staphylococcus epidermidis is: Optochin sensitive Non-enveloped Motility "+" Coagulase "-" Oxidase "+" One of the phenotypic characteristic of Staphylococcus epidermidis is: Coagulase "-" Optochin sensitive Non-enveloped Oxidase "+" Motility "+" Normal microflora of water? Staphylococcus aureus E.coli C. * D. E. 473. A. B. C. * D. E. 474. A. B. C. D. E. * 475. A. B. C. D. * E. 476. A. B. C. D. * E. 477. A. * B. C. D. E. 478. A. * B. C. D. E. 479. A. B. C. D. * E. 480. Micrococcus roseus Salmonella typhy Bacillus subtilis Morphology of Yersinia enterocolitica is: Mold Cocci in chains Rod Cocci in clusters Branching beaded rods Morphology of Pneumococcus is: Rod Cocci in chains Cyst Spiral-shaped Diplococci Morbidity of Treponema pallium is: Meningitis Enteritis Hepatitis Syphilis Food poisoning Morbidity of Escherichia coli is: Myocarditis Fe deficiency anemia Carbuncles Sepsis Pharyngitis Group of Rickettsia prowazekii is: Bacteria Protozoa Helminths Fungi Viruses Group of Klebsiella spp is: Bacteria Helminths Protozoa Fungi Viruses Stain of Shigella spp. is: Gram "+" Modified acid fast "+" Acid fast "+" Gram "-" Hinse Group of Clostridium botulinum is: A. * B. C. D. E. 481. A. B. C. D. * E. 482. A. B. C. D. E. * 483. A. B. C. D. E. * 484. A. B. C. D. * E. 485. A. B. C. D. * E. 486. A. B. C. D. E. * 487. A. B. C. * Bacteria Protozoa Fungi Helminths Viruses Which of the following statements refers to Rickettsia rickettsii Normal flora of the oral cavity DNA homology studies indicate that only a single Brucella species, Brucella melitensis, is justified, but the names Brucella abortus and Brucella suis (now considered biovars) are still in use. Envelope consists of HBsAg Pathogenesis - vasculitis Toxin can be chronically produced in infant's colon causing infant botulism. What is true according to Rickettsia rickettsii Normal flora of the oral cavity DNA homology studies indicate that only a single Brucella species, Brucella melitensis, is justified Toxin can be chronically produced in infant's colon causing infant botulism. Envelope consists of HBsAg Pathogenesis - vasculitis Morbidity of Candida albicans is Endocarditis Pneumonia Bronchopneumonia Bladder carcinoma Systemic candidiasis Morbidity of Klebsiella spp. is: Rhinocerebral disease Hemorrhagic cystitis Enteritis Urinary tract infections Cervicitis Group of Bordetella pertussis is: Protozoa Viruses Fungi Bacteria Helminths Phenotypic characteristic of Staphylococcus aureus is: Enveloped Motility "+" ssRNAOxidase "-" Coagulase "+" Toxin of Chlamydia psittaci is: Cholera toxin - activates adenylate cyclase Exotoxin A - inhibits protein synthesis LPS D. E. 488. A. B. C. D. * E. Elastase - hemorrage Hemolysin Mode of transmission of Herpes simplex virus is: Mosquito bites Perinatal Droplet nuclei Direct contact Sexual