Fun with oral
Poopy pants
Yowza, where tf is the bathroom!?
GAHDAMN what was in that jambalaya
I got 99 problems and micro is one
100

What organism causes oral thrush? What does it look like?

BONUS: Can you scrape it off?

Candida Albicans

Oval yeast with a single bud of varying size. Forms both elongated pseudohyphae and true hyphae

Yes! You can scrape it off

100

What are the viral characteristics of reovirdiae?

Virions are composed of segmented, double-stranded RNA; a double-layered icosahedral nucleocapsid, and are nonenveloped.

The virions contain an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.

100

What part of the GI tract does Enteropathogenic E. Coli (EPEC) infect? What does it look like microscopically? (there's a buzz word) What does this do to the cell?

Small intestine 

Pedestals on the host cell surface

Destroys the microvilli

100

What is the most important virulence factor for C. perfringes? What foods can be contaminated with CP?

•Alpha toxin is the most important

–A lecithinase

–Lyses (RBCs, WBCs, platelets, endothelial cells)

–Massive hemolysis increased vascular permeability, tissue destruction (myonecrosis)


–Ingestion of meat products (stews, casseroles, and gravy) “food service germ.”

100

What treatment is Aeromonas resistant to?

Penicillins, most cephalosporins, and erythromycin.

200

What organism can cause protrusion of the eye?

Zygomycosis (Mucormycosis)

200

What is the viral protein associated with rotavirus? What type of toxin is it and what does it cause?

NSP4: virus protein which serves as an enterotoxin and it prevents absorption of water

200

What do the Heat-labile toxin (LT) and heat-stable toxin (ST) do inside the cell for ETEC? What is a common issue that is mainly caused by ETEC?

HT and ST both lead to Cl- export and hyper-secretion of H2O (watery diarrhea)

Traveler's diarrhea

200

What are the viral characteristics of C. diff? What are the virulence factors? (Sorry this question sucks)

•Gram-positive, spore-forming rod. Strict anaerobe (vegetative cells are extremely oxygen sensitive)


•Enterotoxin (toxin A)

–Promotes fluid secretions and intestinal hemorrhage, induces cytokine production

•Cytotoxin (toxin B)

–Damages mucosal membranes

•Adhesion factor

–Binds to human colon cells

•Spores highly resistant


200

What is the #1 cause of gastroenteritis? What are the characteristics of it? What do we catch it from?

Campylobacter

Gram-negative, Helical (spiral or curved) morphology, Microaerophilic atmospheric requirements

Poultry,  unpasteurized milk, or improperly treated water

300

What are the 3 necessary requirements for the formation of dental caries?

–Cariogenic bacteria

–Sugar

–Teeth

300

What family is Norovirus in and what are the viral characteristics? Where would one likely get this viral illness?

Caliciviridae

Nonsegmented, (+) ssRNA; an icosahedral nucleocapsid, and are nonenveloped.

Cruise ships (and schools, camps, hospitals, and nursing homes)

300

Which E. Coli strand is associated with diarrhea lasting >14 days? What part of the body does it infect?

Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)

Small intestine


300

What are the two types of illnesses that B. cereus produces and what enterotoxins are associated with them?

•Emetic form

–HEAT-STABLE ENTEROTOXIN

–Associated with FRIED RICE

–Abdominal cramps and vomiting

–Incubation period of 1 to 5 hours

–Resolves in 9 hours


•Diarrheal syndrome

–HEAT-LABILE ENTEROTOXIN

–Associated with MEAT, POULTRY, AND SOUPS, CREAM SAUCE

–Incubation period of 8 to 16 hours

–Fever uncommon

–Resolves within 24 hours

300

What is Reiter's syndrome caused by and what are the symptoms?

•Shigella, Salmonella, Yersinia, Campylobacter

•characterized by the triad of arthritis, conjunctivitis, and urethritis


400

What two subspecies of Strep Viridans is associated with dental caries?

Dental caries are associated with S. mutans and S. sobrinus

400

What are the 3 ways Norovirus' infection is enhanced?

•Low infectious dose (as few as 10 virions are needed to cause disease).

•Excretion of virus in the stool both before onset of symptoms and for several weeks after recovery.

•Resistance to inactivation by chlorination and to drying in the environment.

400

What are the virulence factors for Shigella? Does it ferment lactose? Does it produce H2S? Is it sensitive or resistant to bile salts? How does it move through the cytoplasm?

•Virulence: Ipa, Shiga toxin, VirA

•Non-lactose fermenting

•Do not produce H2S

•Resistant to bile salts

Shigella move through the cytoplasm by utilizing actin rocket.

400

What kinds of foods can you get Staph. food poisoning from and does it matter whether you cook them or not?

•Staphylococcus is salt tolerant and can grow in salty foods like ham

•Enterotoxin A-D (A and D most common)

–From enterotoxin producing strains contaminating rich foods (mayonnaise, custards, ice cream)

•Staphylococcal toxins are resistant to heat and cannot be destroyed by cooking

400

What's the drug of choice for C. perifringens?

Penicillin

500

What are the 3 main organisms that cause peridontal disease and what kind of viruses are they?

•Actinomyces viscosus

–Gram-positive, non-acid-fact, facultative, catalase-positive, filamentous, or diphtheroidal microorganism

•Actinobacillus

–Gram-negative, immotile and nonspore-forming, oval to rod-shaped bacteria

•Bacteroides spp.

–Gram-negative, obligately anaerobic, non-endospore-forming bacilli

500

What are the important serotypes to know with Adenoviridae?

•Serotypes 40 and 41 are usually associated with “infant diarrhea” (usually older children than those infected with rotaviruses)

•Serotype 42 - sometimes associated with gastroenteritis

500

What foods can you get Salmonella from? Does it ferment lactose? Does it produce H2S? Is it sensitive or resistant to bile salts? 

Meat, unpasteurized milk, raw poultry, fresh produce, and cantaloupe

•Lactose-negative

• H2S-producing

•Resistant to bile salts

500

Is Listeria catalase positive or negative? Explain its motility. What test can you do to identify it? What does listeriolysin do? Last but not least, does it grow at high or low temperatures?

Catalase positive

•"umbrella" type motility in hanging drop preparations AND actin rockets - protein that mediates actin-directed motility

CAMP test

It allows the organism to escape from the phagosome

Low!! In your fridge

500

What two illnesses does C. diff cause?

–Antibiotic-associated diarrhea

–Pseudomembranous colitis