Bacteria and viruses
Diseases
Pharmacology
H&S
random *_*
100

Name 2 structures that can be present in bacteria but  are always absent in viruses 

-ribosomes
-cell wall
-plasmids
-flagella

100

Explain the difference between vehicle- and vector-borne  mode of disease transmission 

vehicle-borne - through non living substance

vector-borne - living organism transmitting an  infection

100

Explain the difference between bactericidal and bacteriostatic antibiotics 

bactericidal - kills bacteria
bacteriostatic - inhibits growth

100

What diseases does MenACWY vaccine protect against 

meningitis
sepsis

100

Define pyknosis

irreversible condensation of chromatin in the nucleus  when a cell undergoes apoptosis

200

Give 2x examples of functions of gut microbiome

Possible answers:
-protection against pathogens
-vitamin synthesis (K, B12)
-immune system development
-modulation of CNS (gut-brain axis)
-SCFA production
-fat storage promotion

200

Give 3 examples of pathophysiological processes in sepsis which lead to multiple organ failure 

complement activation
coagulation dysfunction
endothelial activation
microvascular dysfunction  

200

Give 2 examples of penicillin medications 

Amoxicillin
Flucloxacillin
Temocillin
Ampicillin

200

Give 2x important guidelines in terms of antibiotic prescription 

possible answers:

-Document the indication for antibiotic prescription
-Prescribe the shortest possible antibiotic course which is mostly likely to be effective
-Identify and eliminate the source of infection or reduce bacterial load

200

Explain mechanism of action of quinolones 

inhibit DNA replication
target gyrases, topoisomerases critical in this process

300

What is the structural difference between Gram+ and – bacteria?

Gram-: 2x membranes; periplasm inbetween containing peptidoglycan; LPS outside

Gram+: 1x membrane; thick peptidoglycan

300

Name 3 symptoms of meningitis 

Neck stiffness, photophobia, fever, headache

300

Compare mechanism of action of glycopeptides and beta-lactams 

Glycopeptides - bind to cell wall subunit and blocks new linkages

Beta-lactams - inhibit PBP enzyme needed for transpeptidation

300

Give 3 reasons a doctor would prescribe a combination antibiotic therapy

-synergistic effect (work better together)
-broaden spectrum of microbial cover
-prevent resistance
-reduce adverse effects

300

Explain difference between the terms metaplasia, dysplasia, neoplasia 

Metaplasia - one cell type converts into another (benign, reversible)

Dysplasia-  irreversible condition where cells have abnormal cellular structure
Neoplasia - new, uncontrolled group not under physiological control

500

Give 3x examples of bacteria that have developed resistance to many antibiotics

MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus)
VRE (vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus)
Clostridium difficili
bacteria which cause multi drug resistant TB

500

Name types of pneumonia and give 2 examples of causative microorganisms to any of them 

-community-acquired
-hospital-acquired
-viral (influenza virus, adenovirus)
-bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, Mycoplasma pneumoniae)
-fungal (Candida species, Histoplasma capsulatum)

500

Give 4 examples of antibiotic classes that can interfere with protein synthesis. Give 1 example of such antibiotic 

30s inhibitors
50s inhibitors

tRNA inhibitors
EF-G elongation factor

examples: tetracyclin, erythromycin, puromycin

500

Identify ways outbreaks of diseases can be identified 

Lab reports
Clinical notifications
Public concerns
Demand for related service

500

Name all the layers above brain starting from skin and ending with pia mater. 

Skin --> Periosteum --> Cranium -->
Epidural space --> Dura mater (periosteal + meningeal layers) --> Subdural space --> Arachnoid mater --> Subarachnoid space --> Pia mater (has epipial and intima layers)

1000

Give 3x examples of bacterial diseases, 3x of viral  and 3x of fungal ones 

Bacterial:
-Tuberculosis
-tetanus
-Lyme disease
-Legionnaire's disease
Viral:
-common cold
-influenza
-COVID-19
Fungal:
-athlete's foot
-candidiasis
-Pneumocytis pneumonia

1000

Explain pathophysiology of pneumonia

-macrophages engulf the pathogen and trigger inflammatory reactions
-macrophages activate cytokines eg TNF-a, IL-8 which recruit inflammatory cells to the site of infection
-they also present these antigens to T cells triggering cellular and humoral defense mechanisms, activate complement and form antibodies
-inflammation of lung parenchyma occurs and makes the lining capillaries leaky
-this leads to exudative congestion

1000

Outline what happens during the penicillin allergy 

-mediated by type I hypersensitivity - anaphylaxis
-IgE antibodies bind to mast cells resulting in degranulation (release of histamine etc..)
-signs of anaphylaxis - urticaria, flushing, dyspnea, bronchospasm with wheezing, hypotension, tachycardia

1000

Identify 5 healthcare acquired infections 

C. difficile
MRSA
Norovirus
Blood borne viruses (hep. B,C, HIV)
UTI (catheter associated)  

1000

Outline 3 ways antibiotic resistance develops in some bacteria 

Intrinsic -  evolution
Acquired + genetic - mutation
DNA transfer - HGT, conjugation, transduction, transformation 


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