The name of the protozoan that causes chills, fever, vomiting, and severe headache that grows by schizogony.
What is Plasmodium?
The microscope used to best see the hemoptysis-causing microorganism with a waxy outer layer.
What is a fluorescent microscope?
The means of survival that are highly durable, dehydrated bodies, with a thick wall that are formed inside of a cell.
What are endospores?
The name of the halogenic disinfectant that contains iodine that will soon be replaced by alexadine.
What is betadine?
The genus and species of the peptidoglycan-lacking, gram-negative bacterium that causes nongonococcal urethritis.
What is Chlamydia Trachomatis?
The condition caused by the microorganism that can travel to the brain of a child through the branches of the olfactory nerves.
The stain used to best see the opportunistic mycosis found in the subarachnoid space of people with AIDS?
What is India ink? (Negative Stain)
The thing that happens to the cancer-causing microbe in a 0.5% saline solution.
What is cytolysis?
The three chemical methods to completely eliminate microbes and their bacterial equivalent to protozoic cysts on heat-labile substances.
What are glutaraldehyde (Cidex), ethylene oxide, and plasma?
A microorganism that has a lipopolysaccharide-phospholipid-lipoprotein layer that produces lipoproteins that cause an inflammatory response instead of producing a toxin.
What is treponema pallidum?
Both of the names for the medication used to treat giardiasis, trichomoniasis, amebiasis, and pelvic inflammatory disease.
What is (oral) metronidazole and flagyl?
The type of microscope used to view a microorganism with axial filaments that is susceptible to heavy metals, the drug that was first used to treat the disease caused by the microorganism, and the scientist that created the drug.
What is a darkfield microscope, what is salvarsan, and who is Paul Erlich?
What is aplastic anemia and pancytopenia?
The name of the substance used by the individual who began the process of reducing pathogens during operations that was also used in the treatment of organic matter with biochemical oxygen demand.
What is phenol?
The oxygen requirements of the sexually-transmitted diplococcus that can cause meningitis, arthritis, and pharyngitis.
What is aerobic?
The drug that can treat the parasite that causes prolonged diarrhea, malaise, nausea, flatulence, weight loss, and abdominal cramps, as well as the diarrhea-causing parasite that can be found in humans, livestock, rodents, dogs, and cats.
What is nitazoxanide?
The possible magnification of the microscope used to view the obligate intracellular parasite resistant to the chemical disinfectant used in contact lens storage solutions.
What is 10,000-10,000,000?
The substance that causes fever, dilation of blood vessels, shock, and coagulation abnormalities produced by the common cause of swimmer's ear, but that is not produced by the bacterium that can cause otitis media and impetigo.
What is endotoxin/lipid A?
The causative agent of mad cow disease that can only be destroyed via a specific form of dry heat sterilization.
What are prions?
The microorganism that uses fimbriae to travel two inches to cause dysuria and pubic pain and that is responsible for the life-threatening condition involving the renal pelvis.
What is Escherichia Coli?
The parasite found in cats and farm animals and the two obligate intracellular parasites that can lead to an increased risk of schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses.
The entire process that turns a heat-sensitive bacterium that has trouble ingesting nutrients red.
What is stain with carbolfuchsin, gently heat, wash, decolorize with acid alcohol, wash, stain with methylene blue, and wash?
(No points for Acid-Fast Stain only)
The substance found in the walls of the microorganism that produces crystalline toxin, but not found in the walls of the microorganism that causes lymph nodes to swell.
What is teichoic acid?
The physical method of microbial control that increases Brownian motion to kill microbes and may sometimes result in the uneven distribution of moisture.
What are microwaves?
The autoimmune condition that can result from an impetigo and sore throat-causing bacterium that tends to be very susceptible to the derivative of Penicillium during the log phase.
What is postinfectious/poststroptococcal glomerulonephritis?