3. Bacteriology lab Flashcards

1
Q

what are common diagnostic techniques in a bacteriology lab?

A
  • culture of sterile sites (blood/CSF) and non-sterile sites (urinary tract/bowel/skin)
  • serology looking for an amounted immune response to infection
  • molecular techniques (PCR)
  • antimicrobial susceptibility testing
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2
Q

give examples of first-line defence against bacteria that the body has (innate immunity)

A
  • lysozyme in tears kill gram + bacteria
  • mucus and cilia capture organisms and remove them
  • stomach acid kills ingested pathogens
  • skin is a physical barrier
  • competition and toxic products from intestinal flora
  • urination flushes organisms
  • low vaginal pH prevents colonisation
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3
Q

how is a blood culture done?

A
  1. blood is taken from the patient in the most sterile way possible - skin is cleaned beforehand
  2. blood goes in 2 different bottles (aerobic and anaerobic)
  3. blood is incubated at body temperature and bacteria multiply
  4. when bacteria reproduce they produce CO2 which causes a pH and colour change on discs at the bottom of the bottles
  5. the change flags on the machine
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4
Q

what happens if a blood culture is positive?

A
  1. blood is removed and put onto different agar plates: blood agar, chocolate agar (haemolysed blood), MacConkey agar, neomycin agar
  2. growth of bacteria is observed - most bacteria grow on blood/chocolate agar, gram - bacteria grow well in MacConkey causing a colour change
  3. agar plates are incubated for 24hrs
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5
Q

what is the difference between gram + and gram - bacteria?

A

gram + = thick peptidoglycan wall (stains purple)

gram - = thin peptidoglycan wall sandwiched between 2 membranes (stains pink/red)

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6
Q

other than cell wall how can bacteria be classified?

A

shape - cocci, bacilli etc.

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7
Q

what type of staphylococcus is found on human skin?

A

coagulase negative

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8
Q

what is the coagulase test?

A

a test for the enzyme coagulase - if the test is positive the type is staphylococcus aureus

coagulase changes fibrinogen to fibrin in our blood

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9
Q

what can staphylococcus aureus result in?

A

severe infections - skin/soft tissue, endocarditis, osteomyelitis

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10
Q

what is the difference between group A streptococcus and streptococcal pneumonia?

A

group A are beta-haemolytic - they use up all the blood on blood agar

streptococcal pneumonia are a-haemolytic - they produce a green tinge to the blood agar

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11
Q

if there is a gram - rod in the blood culture why should we be worried?

A

gram - bacteria have an outer membrane that can produce toxins and may cause septic shock

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12
Q

what causes diarrhoea?

A
  • bacteria: salmonella, shigella, c difficile, cholera, e coli
  • parasites: amoeba
  • viruses
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13
Q

what is sensitivity testing?

A

looking for the point at which bacteria is resistant or sensitive to a specific concentration of drug

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14
Q

what is the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and how is it found?

A

MIC = the point at which bacteria start growing

there are multiple test tubes including: a control with no antibiotic, bacteria but no antibiotic, antibiotic but no bacteria. a doubling dilution is done, decreasing antibiotic at each stage

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15
Q

what are beta-lactamases?

A

enzymes that bacteria have which allows them to survive against their environmental competitors

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16
Q

what is important to consider when a patient arrives with likely bacterial infection?

A
  • travel history
  • contacting infectious disease or microbiology for advice
  • sending samples for culture prior to starting antibiotics