MT2 > Plague Paper Stuff Flashcards

1
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What molecular techniques did the researchers use to identify Y. pestis biovars?

A

Pulse Field Gel Electrophoresis, RFLP of 16S rRNA genes.

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2
Q

Is Y. pestis gram positive or gram negative?

A

Gram negative.

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3
Q

(Madagascar Plague) Which biovar of Y. pestis was found to have caused the 2017 plague?

A

Biovar orientalis.

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4
Q

(Madagascar Plague) Which ribotype(s) correspond(s) to biovar Orientalis?

A

Mainly ribotype B, but occasionally ribotype G or E and even once S.

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5
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What was the research objective?

A

To show that:

  • Before 1982 ribotype B
  • After 1982 ribotype R, Q, & T appeared
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6
Q

(Madagascar Plague) How many strains of Y. pestis were isolated between 1939 and 1996?

A

187 strains.

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7
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What enzymes were used to digest Y. pestis DNA prior to hybridization?

A

EcoR1 and EcoR5.

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8
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What is a ribotype?

A

A way to identify bacteria based on their ribosomal gene (16S rRNA).

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9
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What is a pulsotype?

A

A distinct strain of bacteria as separated by Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis. Genomic DNA.

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10
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What can we conclude from finding that ribotypes Q and R share a consistent pulsotype?

A

That this would have a clonal origin.

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11
Q

(Madagascar Plague) How was plague introduced to Madagascar? When?

A

From India by ship in 1898.

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12
Q

(Madagascar Plague) Where in Madagascar is plague endemic?

A

The high plateau regions of Ambositra and Ambohimasahoa.

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13
Q

(Madagascar Plague) Besides ribotyping and pulsotyping, how else can related strains be differentiated?

A

By analysis of plasmid profiles (plasmid DNA).

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14
Q

(Madagascar Plague) How did the three new ribotypes likely develop from the original ribotype B in Madagascar?

A

Probably subjected to long-term selective pressures in specific ecosystems which was eventually relieved and allowed modification without affecting survival.

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15
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What did the researchers conclude about bacterial evolution and strain modification?

A

Distinct ribotypes can evolve in a short time period even when isolated. Local modifications can explain variation in other parts of the world.

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16
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What is a “suspected” case?

A

Someone who was exposed to an infected individual and may have been infected.

17
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What is a “probable” case?

A

Someone who has had their symptoms tested by dipstick and found to be positive for the disease.

18
Q

(Madagascar Plague) What is a “confirmed” case?

A

Someone who has been tested using PCR and is confirmed to be infected with the disease.

19
Q

(Outbreak Investigation) Why might we want to investigate the outbreak of a disease? Just list a couple of reasons.

A
  • Prevent additional cases
  • Prevent future outbreaks
  • Evaluate prevention strategies
  • Address public concerns
  • Improve understanding of the disease
20
Q

(Outbreak Investigation) What are the 3 types of activities associated with outbreak investigation?

A
  1. Epidemiological investigation
  2. Environmental investigation
  3. Interaction with public, press, legal system
21
Q

(Outbreak Investigation) What are some things that might constrain an outbreak investigation? Just list a couple of examples.

A
  • Urgency to find and eliminate source
  • Pressure to conclude investigation quickly
  • Limited number of cases to study
  • Early media reports cause bias
  • Legal liability
  • Longevity of clinical and environmental samples
22
Q

(Outbreak Investigation) What 10 steps outline an investigation? (ok if you can’t get them all, there’s a fuckton).

A
  1. Establish case definition
  2. Confirm cases are real
  3. Establish background rate
  4. Define scope of outbreak
  5. Examine epidemiological features
  6. Generate hypotheses
  7. Test hypotheses
  8. Collect/test environmental samples
  9. Implement control measures
  10. Inform the public
23
Q

(Outbreak Investigation) What is a case definition? What are the 4 main components?

A

A way to standardize the classification of cases of interest based on:

  1. Person
  2. Place
  3. Time
  4. Clinical features
24
Q

(Outbreak Investigation) What test must a hypothesis pass during an investigation in order to be valid?

A

The Koch test.