front 1 1. The emergence of new infectious diseases is probably due to all of
| back 1 the need of bacteria to cause disease. |
front 2 2. All members of a group of ornithologists studying barn owls in
| back 2 They are contaminating their hands while handling the
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front 3 3. Which of the following statements is false? | back 3 E. coli never causes disease. |
front 4 4. Which of the following is not one of Koch’s postulates? | back 4 The disease must be transmitted from a diseased animal to a
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front 5 5. Which one of the following diseases is not correctly matched to its
| back 5 influenza—human |
front 6 On September 6, a 6-year-old boy experienced fever, chills, and
| back 6 September 3–5. |
front 7 On September 6, a 6-year-old boy experienced fever, chills, and
| back 7 September 6–7. |
front 8 A Maryland woman was hospitalized with dehydration; Vibrio
| back 8 vehicle transmission. |
front 9 A Maryland woman was hospitalized with dehydration; Vibrio
| back 9 Vibrio cholerae. |
front 10 A Maryland woman was hospitalized with dehydration; Vibrio
| back 10 crabs. |
front 11 The removal of plasmids reduces virulence in which of the
| back 11 Streptococcus mutans |
front 12 What is the LD50 for the bacterial toxin tested in the example
| back 12 25 3 3 |
front 13 3. Which of the following is not a portal of entry for pathogens? | back 13 blood |
front 14 All of the following can occur during bacterial infection. Which
| back 14 vaccination against fimbriae |
front 15 The ID50 for Campylobacter sp. is 500 cells; the ID50 for
| back 15 Cryptosporidium is more virulent than Campylobacter. |
front 16 An encapsulated bacterium can be virulent because the capsule | back 16 resists phagocytosis. |
front 17 A drug that binds to mannose on human cells would prevent | back 17 the attachment of pathogenic E. coli. |
front 18 The earliest smallpox vaccines were infected tissue rubbed into the skin
| back 18 Skin is the wrong portal of entry for smallpox. |
front 19 Which of the following does not represent the same mechanism
| back 19 d. Surface protein genes in Neisseria gonorrhoeae mutate
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front 20 Which of the following statements is true?
| back 20 A successful pathogen doesn’t kill its host before it is transmitted. |
front 21 Legionella uses C3b receptors to enter monocytes. This | back 21 prevents phagocytosis. |
front 22 Chlamydia can prevent the formation of phagolysosomes and
| back 22 avoid being digested. |
front 23 If the following are placed in the order of occurrence, which
| back 23 Formation of a phagolysosome |
front 24 If the following are placed in the order of occurrence, which
| back 24 Activation of C3 |
front 25 A human host can prevent a pathogen from getting enough iron by | back 25 binding iron with transferrin. |
front 26 A decrease in the production of C3 would result in | back 26 increased susceptibility to infection. |
front 27 In 1884, Elie Metchnikoff observed blood cells collected around a
| back 27 phagocytosis. |
front 28 Helicobacter pylori uses the enzyme urease to counteract a
| back 28 hydrochloric acid. |
front 29 Which of the following statements about IFN-α (alpha interferon) is false | back 29 It is virus-specific. |
front 30 Which of the following does not stimulate phagocytes? | back 30 histamine |
front 31 The type of protection provided by the injection of diphtheria
| back 31 artificially acquired active immunity |
front 32 The type of protection provided by the injection of antirabies
| back 32 artificially acquired passive immunity |
front 33 The type of protection resulting from recovery from an infection. | back 33 naturally acquired active immunity |
front 34 A newborn’s immunity to yellow fever. | back 34 naturally acquired passive immunity |
front 35 Antibodies that protect the fetus and newborn. | back 35 IgA |
front 36 The first antibodies synthesized; especially effective against
| back 36 IgM |
front 37 Antibodies that are bound to mast cells and involved in
| back 37 IgE |
front 38 Put the following in the correct sequence to elicit an antibody
| back 38 2)APC contacts antigen,3)antigen fragment goes to surface of APC,4) TH recognizes antigen digest and MHC, 1)TH cell recognizes B cell, 5)B cell proliferates. |
front 39 A kidney-transplant patient experienced a cytotoxic rejection
| back 39 4) MHC class I activates CD8+ T cell, 2) CD8+ T cell becomes CTL, 5) perforinreleased, 3) granzymes released, 1)apoptosis occurs |
front 40 Patients with Chédiak-Higashi syndrome suffer from various
| back 40 NK cells |
front 41 Patient’s serum, influenza virus, sheep red blood cells, and
| back 41 is hemagglutination-inhibition |
front 42 Patient’s serum, Chlamydia, guinea pig complement, sheep red
| back 42 d. no hemolysis |
front 43 The examples in questions 1 and 2 are | back 43 indirect tests. |
front 44 Which is the third step in a direct ELISA test? | back 44 substrate for the enzyme |
front 45 Which item is from the patient in an indirect ELISA test? | back 45 anti-Brucella |
front 46 In an immunodiffusion test, a strip of filter paper containing
| back 46 a line of antigen–antibody precipitate will form. |
front 47 Treatment given to a person bitten by a rabid bat. | back 47 rabies immune globulin |
front 48 Test used to identify rabies virus in the brain of a dog. | back 48 direct fluorescent antibody |
front 49 Test used to detect the presence of antibodies in a patient’s serum. | back 49 indirect fluorescent antibody |
front 50 In an agglutination test, eight serial dilutions to determine
| back 50 32 |
front 51 Desensitization to prevent an allergic response can be accomplished
| back 51 the antigen (allergen). |
front 52 What does pluripotent mean? | back 52 Ability of a stem cell to develop into many different cell types. |
front 53 Cytotoxic autoimmunity differs from immune complex
| back 53 do not involve complement. |
front 54 Antibodies against HIV are ineffective for all of the following
| back 54 the fact that antibodies aren’t made against HIV. |
front 55 Which of the following is not the cause of a natural immunodeficiency? | back 55 immunosuppressant drugs |
front 56 Which antibodies will be found naturally in the serum of a
| back 56 anti B |
front 57 Localized anaphylaxis | back 57 type I hypersensitivity |
front 58 Allergic contact dermatitis. | back 58 type IV hypersensitivity |
front 59 Due to immune complexes. | back 59 type III hypersensitivity |
front 60 Reaction to an incompatible blood transfusion. | back 60 type II hypersensitivity |
front 61 Which of the following pairs is mismatched? | back 61 antihelminthic—inhibition of cell wall synthesis |
front 62 All of the following are modes of action of antiviral drugs except
| back 62 inhibition of protein synthesis at 70S ribosomes. |
front 63 Which of the following modes of action would not be fungicidal?
| back 63 inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis |
front 64 An antimicrobial agent should meet all of the following criteria
| back 64 the production of hypersensitivities. |
front 65 The most selective antimicrobial activity would be exhibited by a
| back 65 inhibits cell wall synthesis. |
front 66 Antibiotics that inhibit translation have side effects? | back 66 at the 70S ribosomes in eukaryotic cells. |
front 67 Which of the following will NOT affect eukaryotic cells? | back 67 inhibition of the mitotic spindle, binding with sterols, binding to 80S ribosomes, binding to DNA, All of the above will affect them. |
front 68 Cell membrane damage causes death because? | back 68 cell contents leak out. |
front 69 A drug that intercalates into DNA has the following effects. Which
| back 69 It interferes with DNA replication. |
front 70 Chloramphenicol binds to the 50S portion of a ribosome, which
| back 70 translation in prokaryotic cells. |