Week 3: Staph Flashcards
1
Q
List pathophysiologies of S. aureus
A
- Folliculitis
- Boils (furuncles)
- Carbuncles (big boils)
- Bullous impetigo (giant ruptured crusty stuff)
- Scalded skin syndrome
- Toxic shock syndrome
- Food poisoning
- meningitis
- UTI
- osteomyelitis
- sepsis
- mastitis
1
Q
List some S. aureus virulence factors
A
- Protein A
- Hyaluronidase
- Coagulase
2
Q
List methods to detect MRSA
A
- Nucleic acids probes/ PCR to detect mecA gene (gold standard
- CHROMagar MRSA
- Latex agglutination or EIA
- Oxacillin screen agar
- Cefoxitin disk
3
Q
Describe D-test
A
Check for macrolide resistance of clindamycin by putting erythromycin disk next to clindamycin disk. Inducible clindamycin resistance results in D shape zone of inhibition
4
Q
Sources of S. aureus?
A
Any clinical specimen
5
Q
Sources of coag neg staph?
A
- Normal skin flora + mucous membranes
- Often hospital acquired
6
Q
S. epidermidis virulence factors
A
- Capsule can help adhere to surfaces (helps with biofilms)
- Extracellular slime substance for biofilms
7
Q
List pathophysiologies of S. epidermidis
A
- subacute endocarditis
- meningitis involving shunts
- Prosthetic device-associated infections
- Post-op surgical infections
8
Q
Pathophysiology of S. saprophyticus
A
UTIs
9
Q
List pathophysiologies of S. lugdunensis
A
- Endocarditis
- Skin + soft tissue infections