front 1 What is the significance of normal flora and their role in diseases of their host? Discuss. | back 1 They provide a surface that is incompatible for attachment of an invader, they establish competition for nutrients and vitamins, they produce antimicrobial substances, and they stimulate the immune system. |
front 2 How could the use of a medium that is both selective and differential be justified? | back 2 Provides nutrients and environmental conditions that favor certain microbes and not others. |
front 3 Define | back 3 -Designed to stop the growth of certain bacteria and encourage the
growth of other desired microbes. |
front 4 State the usefulness of MSA medium and EMB agar. | back 4 − MSA: if the bacteria ferments mannitol the phenol red indicator
turns yellow |
front 5 E.coli and Enterobacter are both gram-negative rods that look similar under the microscope. What tests would you perform to differentiate them? | back 5 Indol Methyl Red, Voges-Proskauer Citrate |
front 6 Staphylococcus epidermis and Staphylococcus aureus are both Gram-positive cocci in clusters that look similar under the microscope. What test would you perform to differentiate them? | back 6 Coagulase test |
front 7 Indicate the specific selective and/or differential purpose of MacConkey agar. | back 7 Used to isolate and differentiate members of the Enterobacteriacae based on the ability to ferment lactose |
front 8 Explain the purpose of crystal violet in MacConkey agar medium. | back 8 Inhibits the growth of gram-positive bacteria |
front 9 What is the substrate in the catalase reaction? Is it positive or negative when bubbles are formed? Why are bubbles produced? | back 9 − Hydrogen peroxide catalase |
front 10 Write four sentences on plasmids | back 10 composed of DNA or RNA double-stranded or single-stranded linear or circular they may produce antibiotics (toxins) that help the host to compete for food or space |
front 11 How is mutation different from horizontal gene transfer? | back 11 Mutation is a change in nucleotide sequence in a single gene whereas horizontal gene transfer involves the transfer of many genes to a cell. |
front 12 Why is it necessary to constantly research and produce new antibiotics? Antimicrobial | back 12 Because organisms may become resistant to antibiotics if used often. |
front 13 Why is the disk-diffusion method not a perfect measure of how an antibiotic agent performs in vivo (in a living patient)? Antimicrobial | back 13 Because in the disk method it is placed directly on the tested substance which is not the case in the living patient |
front 14 Why is determining the sensitivity of a microorganism to antimicrobial substances important? Antimicrobial | back 14 So that we can see how effective it is and also to see if a new antibiotic is needed or perhaps that they need to change something about the existing antibiotic. |
front 15 Why should antibiotics not be given for viral infections? Antimicrobial | back 15 Antibiotics kill bacteria but they cannot kill viral infections so it would just be aiding the body in becoming resistant to that antibiotic. |
front 16 How would you have to modify this procedure to test antibiotic sensitivity of an obligate anaerobe? Antimicrobial | back 16 You would have to alter the procedure in order to have a successful experiment when involving an obligate anaerobe. Alteration would have to be made to accompany the different type of organism and you would have to be careful and pay close attention. |
front 17 Indicate the specific selective and/or differential purpose of MacConkey agar. | back 17 − Used to isolate and differentiate members of the Enterobacteriacae based on the ability to ferment lactose. |
front 18 What is the significance of normal flora and their role in diseases of their host? Discuss. | back 18 -May keep pathogen numbers under control by competiting with them for nutrients, producing harmful substances, altering environmental conditions so they cant live |
front 19 Why is it important to distinguish streptococcus pneumoniae from other streptococci? | back 19 So you know what to treat |
front 20 What is the procedure to identify bacteria cultured from a boil on the patient's neck? | back 20 A boil is usually the result of a staphylococcal or a streptoccal infection. First cultured in a broth medium, followed by streak plate inoculations on blood and mannitol agar. If S.aureus a yellow halo will be present surrounding colonies in Mannitol and Beta hemolysis evident in blood agar. If pathogenic streptococcus, beta hemolysis on blood agar and no growth on mannitol plate. |
front 21 How could the use of a medium which is both selective and differential be justified | back 21 used for isolation and differentiation between the Enterobacteriaciae |
front 22 How could a test that should be done to diagnose rheumatic fever be explained? | back 22 Rapid antigen for strep |
front 23 How would you explain the purpose of blood in blood agar medium | back 23 Will change color if the bacterium is able to produce protens that lyse the RBC. |
front 24 Would a person living in the tropics or in the desert have larger numbers of bacteria living on the surface of their skin? | back 24 The very low humidity of the desert would lead to rapid evaporation of sweat and sebum from an individual's skin. Bacteria need these secretions for a nutrient source. Without them, bacteria would be found in much lower numbers on the skin of a person in the desert than the skin of the person in the tropics. |
front 25 Why is it not surprising that staphylococci are the leading cause of wound infections? | back 25 Easily transmitted because its common on skin and nostrils |
front 26 Why do many tetanus victims fail to respond to tetanus antitoxin? | back 26 It only neutralizes the unbound toxin |
front 27 Give the virulence factors for the following diseases: scarlet fever and diphtheria. | back 27 Scarlet- Mprotein, hemolysin, streptolysin,
hyaluronidase |
front 28 Name the plasmodium species that causes anemia. | back 28 Merozoites |
front 29 How does the immune system protect us from disease? | back 29 The immune system includes physical barriers, such as the skin that prevent pathogens from entering the body, and cellular responses, that respond to foreign invaders. |
front 30 Why is rapid detection of disease exposure important? | back 30 For many diseases, detecting the infection and beginning treatment early may reduce the severity of the symptoms or even prevent the disease completely. Rapid detection of disease exposure is also important to prevent further spread of the disease |
front 31 Why are enzymes used in ELISA assay? | back 31 Enzymes provide a way to see whether or not the primary antibody has attached to its antigen. |
front 32 Why do you need to assay positive and negative control samples as well as your experimental samples? | back 32 Controls are needed to make sure the experiment worked so we don't get any false positives or negatives. |
front 33 Why did you need to wash the wells after each step? | back 33 Washing removes any proteins that have not bound to the plastic wells and any antibodies that have not bound to their targets, thus preventing unbound proteins (either antigen or antibodies) from giving false positive results. |
front 34 When you added primary antibody to the wells, what happened if your sample contained the antigen? What if it did not contain the antigen? | back 34 If the sample contained the antigen, the primary antibody bound the
antigen |
front 35 When you added secondary antibody to the wells, what happened if your sample contained the antigen? What if it did not contain the antigen? | back 35 If the sample contained the antigen, the secondary antibody bound to the primary antibodies already bound to the antigen in the wells. |
front 36 If the sample gave a negative result for the disease-causing agent, does this mean that you do not have the disease? What reasons could there be for a negative result when you actually do have the disease? | back 36 A negative result does not mean that you do not have the disease. It could be a false negative. The ELISA may not be sensitive enough to detect very low levels of the disease agent, as might occur if one is tested soon after infection before a proper immune response occurs. Another cause of false negatives is experimental error, such as putting a negative control in a well where you thought you were putting an experimental sample |
front 37 If you tested positive for disease exposure, did you have direct contact with one of the original infected students? If not, what conclusions can you reach about transmissibility of disease in a population? | back 37 Having intimate contact with another person means that you are exposed to any germs that a person may have contracted from any previous intimate contact |
front 38 Sporangium: | back 38 sac like structures that hold the immature sporangiospores |
front 39 Sporangiophore | back 39 arm like structure that holds sporangium and can help produce sporangiospores |
front 40 Sporangiospore | back 40 asexual spores that will form new sporangiophores |
front 41 What is meant by dimorphism? | back 41 Fungi can change from a unicellular yeast form to a multicellular mold form |
front 42 Why are yeast classified as fungi and how are they different from fungi? | back 42 They are classified as fungi because are unicellular like many other kinds of fungi, they are different in how they have sporangium and sporangiophores. |
front 43 Name two diseases caused by mold in humans. Include the causative organism, symptoms, and treatments. | back 43 Valley Fever: caused by C. immitis, causing flu like symptoms like
fever, cough, and chest pain. Treatment include medications like
amphotericin |
front 44 What other techniques might you use to identify organisms once you determine the morphological, cultural, and physiological characteristics? | back 44 Genetic, antimicrobial resistance and immunological tests |
front 45 How are molds both beneficial and harmful? Explain. | back 45 Beneficial-pest control, hep b vaccine |
front 46 Why is it important to pasteurize fruit juice? | back 46 Kills pathogenic microbes |
front 47 Are protozoa an important part of the food chain? Explain why. | back 47 Ingesting large numbers of bacteria and algae |
front 48 How would increased travel lead to increased spread of multicellular parasites? | back 48 Many eukaryotic parasites depend on vectors for transmission so moving an infected individual into an area with new vectors and new susceptible humans would increase the spread of the illness |
front 49 Nematoda- Ascaris lumbricoides | back 49 |
front 50 Protozoa- Entoemba histolytica | back 50 |
front 51 Protozoa-plasmodium | back 51 |
front 52 Platyhelthminthes taenia proglottid | back 52 |
front 53 Platyhelthminthes taenia ova | back 53 |
front 54 What conditions cause bacteria to grow | back 54 Warm temperatures Moisture Oxygen Ph |
front 55 Salmonella typi | back 55 typhoid fever |
front 56 Myobacterium tuberculosis | back 56 Tuberculosis |
front 57 Hemophilus Influenza | back 57 Bacterial meningitis |
front 58 What causes tetanus | back 58 clostrydium tetani |
front 59 Plasmodium falciparium | back 59 Vector is anopheles mosquito (female mosquito) causes more virulant malaria |