Infectious Diseases HARR Flashcards
Which serum antibody response usually
characterizes the primary (early) stage of syphilis?
A. Antibodies against syphilis are undetectable
B. Detected 1–3 weeks after appearance of the
primary chancre
C. Detected in 50% of cases before the primary
chancre disappears
D. Detected within 2 weeks after infection
Detected 1–3 weeks after appearance of the
primary chancre
During the primary stage of syphilis, about 90% of patients develop antibodies between 1 and 3 weeks after the appearance of the primary chancre.
What substance is detected by the rapid plasma reagin (RPR) and Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) tests for syphilis?
A. Cardiolipin
B. Anticardiolipin antibody
C. Anti-T. pallidum antibody
D. Treponema pallidum
Anticardiolipin antibody
Reagin is the name for a nontreponemal antibody that appears in the serum of syphilis-infected persons and is detected by the RPR and VDRL assays. Reagin reacts with cardiolipin, a lipid-rich extract of beef heart and other animal tissues
What type of antigen is used in the RPR card test?
A. Live treponemal organisms
B. Killed suspension of treponemal organisms
C. Cardiolipin
D. Tanned sheep cells
Cardiolipin
Cardiolipin is extracted from animal tissues, such as beef hearts, and attached to carbon particles. In the presence of reagin, the particles will agglutinate.
Which of the following is the most sensitive test to detect congenital syphilis?
A. VDRL
B. RPR
C. Microhemagglutinin test for T. pallidum
(MHA-TP)
D. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
The PCR will amplify a very small amount of DNA from T. pallidum and allow for detection of the organism in the infant. Antibody tests such as VDRL and RPR may detect maternal antibody only, not indicating if the infant has been infected.
A biological false-positive reaction is least likely
with which test for syphilis?
A. VDRL
B. Fluorescent T. pallidum antibody absorption test (FTA-ABS)
C. RPR
D. All are equally likely to detect a false-positive result
Fluorescent T. pallidum antibody absorption test (FTA-ABS)
The FTA-ABS test is more specific for T. pallidum than nontreponemal tests such as the VDRL and RPR and would be least likely to detect a biological false-positive result. The FTA-ABS test uses heat-inactivated serum that has been absorbed with the Reiter strain of T. pallidum to remove nonspecific antibodies. Nontreponemal tests have a biological false-positive rate of 1%–10%, depending upon the patient population tested. False-positive findings are caused commonly by infectious
mononucleosis (IM), SLE, viral hepatitis, and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection.
A 12-year old girl has symptoms of fatigue and a localized lymphadenopathy. Laboratory tests reveal a peripheral blood lymphocytosis, a positive RPR, and a positive spot test for IM. What test should be performed next?
A. HIV test by ELISA
B. VDRL
C. Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) specific antigen test
D. Treponema pallidum particle agglutination
(TP-PA) test
Treponema pallidum particle agglutination
(TP-PA) test
The patient’s symptoms are nonspecific and could be attributed to many potential causes. However, the patient’s age, lymphocytosis, and serological results point to infectious mononucleosis (IM). The rapid spot test for antibodies seen in IM is highly specific. The EBV-specific antigen test is more sensitive but is unnecessary when the spot test is positive. HIV infection is uncommon at this age and is
often associated with generalized lymphadenopathy and a normal or reduced total lymphocyte count. IM antibodies are commonly implicated as a cause of biological false-positive nontreponemal tests for syphilis. Therefore, a treponemal test for syphilis should be performed to document this phenomenon in this case
Which test is most likely to be positive in the
tertiary stage of syphilis?
A. FTA-ABS
B. RPR
C. VDRL
D. Reagin screen test (RST)
FTA-ABS
The FTA-ABS or one of the treponemal tests is more likely to be positive than a nontreponemal test in the tertiary stage of syphilis. In some cases, systemic lesions have subsided by the tertiary stage and the nontreponemal tests become seronegative. Although the FTA-ABS is the most sensitive test for tertiary syphilis, it will be positive in both treated and untreated cases.
What is the most likely interpretation of the
following syphilis serological results?
RPR: reactive; VDRL: reactive; MHA-TP: nonreactive
A. Neurosyphilis
B. Secondary syphilis
C. Syphilis that has been successfully treated
D. Biological false positive
Biological false positive
A positive reaction with nontreponemal antigen and a negative reaction with a treponemal antigen is most likely caused by a biological false-positive nontreponemal test.
Which specimen is the sample of choice to
evaluate latent or tertiary syphilis?
A. Serum sample
B. Chancre fluid
C. CSF
D. Joint fluid
CSF
Latent syphilis usually begins after the second year of untreated infection. In some cases, the serological tests become negative. However, if neurosyphilis is present, cerebrospinal fluid serology will be positive and the CSF will display increased protein and pleocytosis characteristic of central nervous system infection.
Interpret the following quantitative RPR test
results.
RPR titer: weakly reactive 1:8; reactive 1:8–1:64
A. Excess antibody, prozone effect
B. Excess antigen, postzone effect
C. Equivalence of antigen and antibody
D. Impossible to interpret; testing error
Immunology/Correlate laboratory data with
Excess antibody, prozone effect
This patient may be in the secondary stage of syphilis and is producing large amounts of antibody to T. pallidum sufficient to cause antibody excess in the test. The test became strongly reactive only after the antibody was diluted.
Tests to identify infection with HIV fall into
which three general classification types of tests?
A. Tissue culture, antigen, and antibody tests
B. Tests for antigens, antibodies, and nucleic acid
C. DNA probe, DNA amplification, and Western
blot tests
D. ELISA, Western blot, and Southern blot tests
Tests for antigens, antibodies, and nucleic acid
Two common methods for detecting antibodies to HIV are the ELISA and Western blot tests. Two common methods for detecting HIV antigens are ELISA and immunofluorescence. Two common methods for detecting HIV genes are the Southern blot test and DNA amplification using the polymerase chain reaction to detect viral nucleic acid in infected lymphocytes.
Which tests are considered screening tests
for HIV?
A. ELISA, 4th generation, and rapid antibody tests
B. Immunofluorescence, Western blot,
radioimmuno-precipitation assay
C. Culture, antigen capture assay, DNA
amplification
D. Reverse transcriptase and messenger RNA
(mRNA) assay
ELISA, 4th generation, and rapid antibody tests
A ELISA, rapid antibody tests, as well as the 4th generation automated antigen/antibody combination assays are screening tests for HIV. The 4th generation assays detect both antigen and antibody.
Which tests are considered confirmatory tests
for HIV?
A. ELISA and rapid antibody tests
B. Western blot test, HIC-1,2 differentiation assays, and polymerase chain reaction
C. Culture, antigen capture assay, polymerase chain reaction
D. Reverse transcriptase and mRNA assay
Western blot test, HIC-1,2 differentiation assays, and polymerase chain reaction
Western blot, and PCR tests are generally used as confirmatory tests for HIV. An HIV-1,2 differentiation assay is recommended as the confirming procedure following a reactive 4th generation HIV assay. PCR, however, is more often used for early detection of HIV infection, for documenting infant HIV infection, and for following antiviral therapy.
Which is most likely a positive Western blot result for infection with HIV?
A. Band at p24
B. Band at gp60
C. Bands at p24 and p31
D. Bands at p24 and gp120
Bands at p24 and gp120
To be considered positive by Western blot testing, bands must be found for at least two of the following three HIV proteins: gp41, p24, and gp120 or 160. The p24 band denotes antibody to a gag protein. The gp160 is the precursor protein from which gp120 and gp41 are made; these are env proteins.
A woman who has had five pregnancies
subsequently tests positive for HIV by Western
blot. What is the most likely reason for this result?
A. Possible cross-reaction with herpes or EBV
antibodies
B. Interference from medication
C. Cross-reaction with HLA antigens in the antigen preparation
D. Possible technical error
Cross-reaction with HLA antigens in the antigen preparation
Multiparous women often have HLA antibodies. The Western blot antigens are derived from HIV grown in human cell lines having HLA antigens. A cross reaction with HLA antigen(s) in the Western blot could have occurred.
Interpret the following results for HIV infection.
ELISA: positive; repeat ELISA: negative; Western blot: no bands
A. Positive for HIV
B. Negative for HIV
C. Indeterminate
D. Further testing needed
Negative for HIV
These results are not indicative of an HIV infection and may be due to a testing error in the first ELISA assay. Known false-positive ELISA reactions occur in autoimmune diseases, syphilis, alcoholism, and lymphoproliferative diseases. A sample is considered positive for HIV if it is repeatedly positive by ELISA or other screening method and positive by a confirmatory method
Interpret the following results for HIV infection.
HIV 1,2 ELISA: positive; HIV-1 Western blot:
indeterminate; HIV-1 p24 antigen: negative
A. Positive for antibodies to human
immunodeficiency virus, HIV-1
B. Positive for antibodies to human
immunodeficiency virus, HIV-2
C. Cross reaction; biological false-positive result
D. Additional testing required
Additional testing required
The indeterminate Western blot and negative
p24 antigen assay indicate that HIV-1 infection is unlikely, However, additional testing is required to determine if the patient has antibodies to HIV-2 or if this could be a false-positive ELISA assay.
What is the most likely explanation when antibody tests for HIV are negative but a polymerase chain reaction test performed 1 week later is positive?
A. Probably not HIV infection
B. Patient is in the “window phase” before antibody production
C. Tests were performed incorrectly
D. Clinical signs may be misinterpreted
Patient is in the “window phase” before antibody production
In early seroconversion, patients may not be
making enough antibodies to be detected by
antibody tests. The period between infection with HIV and the appearance of detectable antibodies is called the window phase. Although this period has been reduced to a few weeks by sensitive enzyme immunoassays, patients at high risk or displaying clinical conditions associated with HIV disease should be tested again after waiting several more
weeks.
What criteria constitute the classification system for HIV infection?
A. CD4-positive T-cell count and clinical
symptoms
B. Clinical symptoms, condition, duration, and
number of positive bands on Western blot
C. Presence or absence of lymphadenopathy
D. Positive bands on Western blot and CD8-positive T-cell count
CD4-positive T-cell count and clinical
symptoms
The classification system for HIV infection is based upon a combination of CD4-positive T-cell count (helper T cells) and various categories of clinical symptoms. Classification is important in determining treatment options and the progression of the disease
What is the main difficulty associated with the
development of an HIV vaccine?
A. The virus has been difficult to culture; antigen extraction and concentration are extremely laborious
B. Human trials cannot be performed
C. Different strains of the virus are genetically
diverse
D. Anti-idiotype antibodies cannot be developed
Different strains of the virus are genetically
diverse
Vaccine development has been difficult primarily because of the genetic diversity among different strains of the virus, and new strains are constantly emerging. HIV-1 can be divided into two main subtypes designated M (for main) and O (for outlier). The M group is further divided into 9 subgroups, designated A–J (there is no E subgroup), based upon differences in the nucleotide sequence of the gag gene. Two remaining subtypes are designed N (non M and non O) and P (a subtype related to SIVgor). A vaccine has yet to be developed that is effective for all of the subgroups of HIV-1.
Which CD4:CD8 ratio is most likely in a patient
with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)?
A. 2:1
B. 3:1
C. 2:3
D. 1:2
1:2
An inverted CD4:CD8 ratio (less than 1.0) is a common finding in an AIDS patient. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention requires a CD4-positive (helper T) cell count of less than 200/μL or 14% in the absence of an AIDS-defining illness (e.g., Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia) in the case surveillance definition of AIDS.
What is the advantage of 4th-generation rapid
HIV tests over earlier rapid HIV tests?
A. They use recombinant antigens
B. They detect multiple strains of HIV
C. They detect p24 antigen
D. They are quantitative
They detect p24 antigen
Both 3rd-generation and 4th-generation rapid tests for HIV use recombinant and synthetic HIV antigens conjugated to a solid phase. The multivalent nature of these tests allows for detection of less common subgroups of HIV-1 and simultaneous detection of both HIV-1 and HIV-2. However, the 4th-generation assays also use solid-phase antibodies to p24 antigen to detect its presence. Because p24 antigen appears before antibodies to HIV, 4th-generation tests can detect infection 4–7 days earlier than tests based on antibody detection alone.