Stains
Pop. Growth
Classes of bacteria
Patterns of infection
Portals of entery/exit
100

What is a simple stain?

Dye that reveals the shape, size, and arrangement of the cell.

100

What is the growth curve?

Populations displayed a predictable pattern over time.

100

This causes common STDs and can spread through sexual contact.

Proteobacteria

100

What is a primary infection?

This is the initial infection.

100

An example of an entry for a pathogen is what?

Respiratory, Skin, Fecal, Urogenital, Blood.

200

What is a structural stain?

It reveals certain cell parts not revealed by conventional methods.

200

What is the lag phase?

The "flat" period of adjustment, enlargement, and little growth.

200

This bacteria is a gram-negative, prokaryote, and does photosynthesis.

Cyanobacteria

200

What is a secondary infection?

An infection is caused by an opportunistic pathogen after the primary infection has weakened the body.

200

An example of a pathogen exit is...

Respiratory, Skin, Fecal, Urogenital, Blood.

300

What is an endospore stain?

This stain distinguishes between endospores which hold the stain and vegetative cells.

300

What is the exponential growth phase?

The period of maximum growth will continue as long as cells have nutrients and a favorable environment.

300

This bacteria lives inside a eukaryotic host cell and causes trachoma and nongonococcal urethritis.

Chlamydias

300

What is an acute infection?

An infection that comes on rapidly, is severe but is short-lived.

300

How can a pathogen enter and exit through the respiratory system?

Mucus, sputum, nasal drainage, and saliva.

400

What are the 3 differential stains?

Gram stain, Acid-fast stain, and Endospore stain.

400

What is the stationary phase?

The rate of cell growth equals the rate of cell death that is caused by depleted nutrients/oxygen, organic acids, and pollution.

400

This type of bacteria has axal filaments and it causes Syphilis and Lyme disease.

Spirochetes

400

What is a chronic infection?

This infection progresses slowly, less severe, but is persistent over a long period of time.

400

T/F: Pathogens can enter and exit the same way.

True

500

What are the steps to a Gram stain? How can you tell if it's gram-negative?

Primary stain (crystal violet), Mordant (iodine), Decolorizing agent (alcohol-acetone), and Counterstain (safranin). The stain is gram-negative if the decolorizing agent is colorless and if the counterstain is red.

500

What is the death phase?

The limiting factors intensify and cells die exponentially.

500

This is a gram-positive bacteria and it includes actinomycetes and streptomycin.

Gram-Positive bacteria

500

Tuberculosis is an example of what kind of infection.

Chronic infection

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