Typhoid fever is caused by the bacterium
a. Esherichia coli
b. Salmonella enterica
c. Clostridium tetani
d. Staphylococcus aureus
b. salmonella enterica
A 58-year old lawyer, Peter, presents in the emergency room with his jaw feeling weird, a headache, irritability, generalized muscle pain and uncontrollable back spasms. He has become very restless and worried because he has had the back spasms all through his court case that afternoon and they became extremely painful. In his history, the lawyer states that he has a very busy practice. He is on medication for high blood pressure (beta blocker) and has mild asthma. He injured himself about 10 days earlier, puncturing his left arm from an old barn nail. The wound has produced moderate quantities of pus, but he has it wrapped up. When asked, he said he was immunized to everything as a kid. The wound was sampled for microscopic examination and showed Gram positive rods. The back appears to have very tight contractions and spasms. The patient is in obvious agonizing pain.
What is your diagnosis? (Disease and causative agent name)
Disease: Tetanus
Causative agent: Clostridium tetani
Which symptom is commonly associated with early Lyme disease?
A. Erythema migrans
B. Muscle paralysis
C. Bloody diarrhea
D. Gas formation in tissues
A. Erythema migrans
Staphylococcal Enterotoxicosis:
1. Is it an infection or intoxication?
2. What's the name of the causative agent?
3. How is it spread?
4. What are the main symptoms?
5. How is it treated?
6. How is it prevented?
1. intoxication
2. staphylococcus aureus
3. the bacteria grow in food and produces an enterotoxin
4. vomiting, diarrhea, cramping
5. it is usually self-limiting
6. maintain foods at their proper temperatures, basic food safety
Cholera is a serious gastrointestinal illness caused by bacteria of the genus:
a. escherichia
b salmonella
c. vibrio
d. acinetobacter
c. vibrio
A wound infection caused by bacteria entering through a cut is an example of:
A. A nosocomial infection
B. A portal of entry infection
C. A vector-borne infection
D. A zoonotic infection
B. A portal of entry infection
A patient develops an expanding “bull’s-eye” rash several days after a tick bite. Which pathogen is most likely responsible?
A. Yersinia pestis
B. Borrelia burgdorferi
C. Rickettsia rickettsii
D. Clostridium perfringens
B. Borrelia burgdorferi
1. Clostridium perfringens is the causative agent of what skin and wound disease?
2. What can cause ischemia?
3. Symptoms?
4. Treatment?
1. Gas gangrene
2. Diabetes, blood vessel diseases, injury or surgery, smoking, obesity, immunosuppression, medications (warfarin)
3. Skin that is purplish and gray, foul-smelling, may make a crackling sound when pressed on
4. Surgical debridement or amputation in some cases, antibiotics, hyperbaric oxygen chamber
Botulism is a disease caused by the production of a potent neurotoxin by bacteria of the genus:
a. staphlococcus
b. klebsiella
c. salmonella
d. clostridium
d. clostridium
The toxin produced by Clostridium tetani causes:
A. Flaccid paralysis
B. Muscle rigidity and spasms
C. Severe diarrhea
D. Red blood cell destruction
B. Muscle rigidity and spasms
A patient presents with fever, swollen painful lymph nodes, and a history of flea exposure. Which disease is suspected?
A. Lyme disease
B. Rocky Mountain spotted fever
C. Bubonic plague
D. Malaria
C. Bubonic plague
H. pylori:
1. How does it survive the acidic environment of the stomach?
2. What major/primary symptom does it produce?
3. What are the other symptoms related to the primary symptom?
4. What are the different ways to diagnose H. pylori?
5. How is it treated?
Jim just went to his family reunion. He was excited to have Aunt Rosie's fried chicken and potato salad. After lunch everyone went to play kickball. Later Jim went back for seconds on the food. About 2 hours later he found himself afebrile with abdominal cramps, vomiting, and diarrhea. What organism is most likely causing his suffering?
a. Salmonella
b. Clostridium botulinum
c. Staphylococcus aureus
d. Helicobacter pylori
c. Staphylococcus aureus
The “gas” produced in gas gangrene is caused by:
A. Viral replication inside muscle cells
B. Bacterial fermentation producing gas bubbles
C. The immune system releasing oxygen
D. Fungal spores multiplying in tissue
B. Bacterial fermentation producing gas bubbles
Rocky Mountain spotted fever is caused by:
A. Borrelia burgdorferi
B. Yersinia pestis
C. Rickettsia rickettsii
D. Plasmodium vivax
C. Rickettsia rickettsii
1. Salmonella are what type of bacteria?
2. What are common sources of salmonella?
3. Explain the pathogenesis of salmonella
4. How is it treated?
5. How is it prevented?
A patient complains of diarrhea not long after starting a new antibiotic. What organism is most likely infecting this patient?
a. Vibrio cholerae
b. Clostridium difficile
c. Escherichia coli
d. Campylobacter jejuni
b. Clostridium difficile
Which virulence factor of Clostridium perfringens contributes to tissue destruction?
A. Capsule formation only
B. Alpha toxin (lecithinase)
C. Endotoxin from a cell wall
D. Flagella movement
E. Enterotoxin
B. Alpha toxin (lecithinase)
Which disease is caused by an obligate intracellular bacterium?
A. Lyme disease
B. Rocky Mountain spotted fever
C. Tetanus
D. Gas gangrene
B. Rocky Mountain spotted fever