BQ - MP - Mahon
BQ - MP - Mahon
BQ - MP - Mahon
6. A bacterium that grows only on plates incubated in the absence of oxygen would be
categorized as a(n):
a. Aerotolerant anaerobe.
b. Facultative anaerobe.
c. Obligate anaerobe.
d. Obligate aerobe.
CHAPTER 2
Of the following, which would most likely cause an opportunistic infection in the genitourinary
tract of a woman of childbearingage?
a. Chlamydia trachomatis
b. Neisseria gonorrhoeae
c. Candida albicans
d. Trichomonas vaginalis
CHAPTER 3
10. The microbiology laboratory interacts with the infection control program by providing:
a. Culture results
b. Antibiograms and pathogen prevalence reports
c. Environmental cultures when appropriate
d. All of the above
CHAPTER 4
9. Give the mechanism of action for each type of chemical agent commonly used in antiseptics
and disinfectants.
10. Explain the use of health care personnel handwash, surgical hand scrub, and patient
preoperative skin preparation.
11. OSHA requires employers to offer the hepatitis B virus vaccine free of charge to employees
who are at risk for exposure to hepatitis B virus. True of False?
12. SDSs are important to employees because they contain information relating to which of the
following?
a. Bloodborne pathogens
b. Fume hoods
c. Chemical safety
d. Fire extinguishers
13. Which of the following would be a correct definition of standard precautions?
a. Wearing only gloves to handle blood and body fluids
b. Viewing all specimens as potentially infectious and using the appropriate protective
equipment
c. Delaying testing of blood and body fluids pending results of HIV and hepatitis B antigen
testing
d. Flagging only specimens that come from patients who are known HIV carriers for “extra
precautions”
14. What type of filter does a class II BSC use to filter out infectious agents?
a. Millipore filters
b. HEPA filters
c. Dust filters
d. Charcoal filters
15. Infectious agents can enter the body through which of the following routes?
a. Inhalation
b. Ingestion
c. Inoculation
d. All of the above
16. Employees can remember the steps to take in case of a fire by remembering which of the
following acronyms?
a. RUSH
b. REST
c. RACE
d. RISK
17. How often must safety training for laboratory employees be conducted for compliance with
OSHA regulations?
a. Annually
b. Quarterly
c. At time of employment only
d. No set requirement
18. Briefly describe the NFPA hazard-rating diamond found on all chemical containers to warn
employees of potential hazards associated with that chemical.
19. Washing hands frequently, disinfecting work areas, using needle resheathing devices,
performing procedures in a manner to reduce splashes, and transporting specimens in well-
constructed leak-proof containers are examples of which of the following?
a. Standard precautions
b. Work practice controls
c. Responsible methods of fire safety
d. Chemical hygiene
20. The OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard outlines the safety requirements that an
employer must have in place to protect the employee from bloodborne pathogens. This is
called:
a. Laboratory Response Network
b. Work practice controls
c. Exposure control plan
d. Emergency action plan
21. A patient with active tuberculosis is admitted to the hospital. What type of precautions
above and beyond standard precautions will be followed for this patient?
a. Contact precautions
b. Droplet precautions
c. Airborne precautions
22. The following BSL practice is required for agents that may cause serious disease:
a. BSL-1
b. BSL-2
c. BSL-3
d. BSL-4
23. The risk group classification for infectious agents that can cause human disease but for
which effective treatments and preventive measures are available is:
a. Risk group 1
b. Risk group 2
c. Risk group 3
d. Risk group 4
CHAPTER 5
1. Which of the following terms refers to checking media and reagents with specific organisms
to determine whether expected results are obtained?
a. Preventive maintenance
b. Quality control (QC)
c. Performance improvement (PI)
d. Total quality management (TQM)
3. The laboratory must perform QC on all of the following media except which one?
a. Complex media
b. Media made by the laboratory
c. Media with a history of failure
d. All media obtained from a commercial source
4. Which of the following describes the correct way to select organisms for QC?
a. They should represent the most fastidious organisms for which the medium was designed.
b. They should be organisms that will grow most easily.
c. They should be immediately removed from the freezer.
d. Streaking should be done only once after their removal from the freezer.
5. Susceptibility tests must be quality controlled daily except when which of the following is the
case?
a. An automated system is in use.
b. Controls have been in an acceptable range for 6 months.
c. Precision is demonstrated for 20 or 30 consecutive days.
d. A new antimicrobial agent is added.
10. What is a The Joint Commission (TJC) initiative to monitor performance measurement?
a. PI
b. TQM
c. ORYX
d. Continuous quality improvement (CQI)
11. Which of the following refers to the ability of a test to detect a particular analyte?
a. Analytic specificity
b. Analytic sensitivity
c. Efficiency of tests
d. Test validation
12. Using the formula provided in the chapter, determine the positive predictive value (PPV) for
the Chlamydia test in a population in which the prevalence of the disease is 15%. The sensitivity
and specificity of the test are 95% and 98%, respectively.
13. If 100 individuals without syphilis were tested for the disease and 95 tested negative, what
is the diagnostic specificity of the test?
14. What parameter would be used to determine the percentage of patients who are
appropriately classified as having a disease or not having a disease?
CHAPTER 6
1. Which one of the following involves specimen management in the preanalytic process?
a. Selecting the appropriate medium for culture
b. Performing a direct microscopic examination
c. Rejecting suboptimal specimens
d. Communicating the results of the specimen culture
2. A patient has a subcutaneous infection, and the specimen is submitted on a swab. Explain
why this is an unacceptable collection method. How should the sample be collected?
11. Which of the following specimens is cultured using a quantitative isolation technique?
a. Urine
b. Sputum
c. Blood
d. Stool
12. Cultures of Bordetella pertussis are incubated in ambient air at 35° C for 6 to 7 days. True or
false?
13. Compose a list of questions that the microbiology technologist uses when doing a workup of
a culture.
14. The microbiology laboratory receives a vascular catheter tip for culture. How should this
specimen be processed?
15. What is the role of the microbiology laboratory in the postanalytic process?
CHAPTER 7
1. Direct smear examination of clinical samples is a rapid means to identify presumptively the
etiologic agents of infectious disease. True or false?
3. Which of the following stains may be used for direct smear examination?
a. Gram stain
b. Acid-fast stain
c. Wright or Giemsa stain
d. Calcofluor white stain
e. All of the above
4. Which of the following stains is best used to detect mycobacterial organisms in clinical
samples?
a. Gram
b. Giemsa
c. Acid-fast
d. India ink
5. Calcofluor white is a colorless dye that binds with which of the following structures?
a. Cell wall containing mycolic acid
b. Chitin
c. Peptidoglycan layer
d. Metachromatic granules
CHAPTER 8
8. A moderate growth of a heaped, dry-appearing, white colony is isolated from a patient with
thrush. The colony has tiny projections extending out along the edge of its margin. A
presumptive identification of this organism would be:
a. Staphylococcus aureus
b. Staphylococcus epidermidis
c. Neisseria spp.
d. Candida albicans
9. A vaginal culture from a 25-year-old pregnant woman produced colonies on SBA and CHOC
agar, but there was no growth on MAC agar. The colonies are described as medium size with
small, diffuse zones of β-hemolysis. This type of hemolysis is noticed when a colony is removed
with a loop. A suspected identification of this organism would be:
a. Streptococcus pyogenes (group A)
b. Staphylococcus aureus
c. Streptococcus agalactiae (group B)
d. Streptococcus pneumoniae
10. Medium, raised, off-white colonies with filamentous projections are seen on SBA and CHOC
agar. The organism is likely:
a. Streptococcus pneumoniae
b. Staphylococcus aureus
c. Bacillus cereus
d. A yeast
CHAPTER 9
1. Which of the following tests detects the production of mixed acids as a result of subsequent
metabolism of pyruvate?
a. Methyl red test
b. Voges-Proskauer test
c. Citrate test
d. Indole test
3. An oxidase-negative, gram-negative bacillus that produces an acid slant and acid butt on
triple sugar iron agar is able to ferment which of the following carbohydrates?
a. Glucose only
b. Glucose and lactose or sucrose or both
c. Lactose only
d. Lactose and sucrose, but not glucose
5. Tryptophan broth is inoculated and incubated 24 hours. After incubation, Kovac’s reagent is
added. A red color develops at the surface of the broth. What product of metabolism was
formed?
a. Mixed acids
b. Malonate
c. Phenylpyruvate
d. Indole
7. Lysine deaminase:
a. Cleaves the carboxy group from lysine
b. Cleaves the amino group from lysine
c. Adds an amino group to lysine
d. Adds a carboxy group to lysine
8. A triple sugar iron agar slant is inoculated with an oxidase-negative, gram-negative bacillus.
After incubation, the slant is red, and the butt (deep) is black. Explain the biochemical reactions
that have occurred.
9. How do bacteria that are able to ferment lactose rapidly differ from bacteria that are delayed
lactose fermenters?
10. After 24-hour incubation of a nitrate broth with visible growth, N,N-dimethyl-α-
naphthylamine and sulfanilic acid are added. No color change is noted. What are two possible
explanations concerning the reduction of nitrate? What should you do next to determine which
explanation is correct?
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
2. Which of the following probe labels is most often used for nucleic acid hybridization
reactions in clinical microbiology laboratories?
a. Fluorescein
b. 32P
c. 35S
d. 3H
3. Which of the following is not a component of a standard polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
assay?
a. Deoxynucleotides
b. Primers
c. Restriction enzymes
d. Magnesium
7. Which of the following procedures does not use fluorescence resonance energy transfer
(FRET)?
a. 5′ nuclease assay
b. Scorpion primers
c. Molecular beacons
d. Transcription-mediated amplification
10. The strain typing procedure that probably has the greatest interlaboratory agreement is:
a. Multilocus enzyme electrophoresis.
b. Multilocus sequence typing.
c. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis.
d. Random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis.
11. Which of the following is not true about the 5′ nuclease assay?
a. It is also referred to as the TaqMan assay.
b. The method uses a probe with a 5′ fluorophore and a 3′ quencher that gets degraded by the
action of DNA polymerase.
c. The method uses FRET to keep background fluorescence low.
d. The method uses a hairpin-shaped probe with a fluorophore on the 5′ end and a quencher on
the 3′ end.
13. For most bacteria, which target is usually sequenced to confirm the identity of problematic
isolates?
a. External transcribed spacer region 1
b. rpoB
c. 16S ribosomal RNA
d. Internal transcribed spacer region 1
CHAPTER 12
4. The most commonly used inhibitors of cell wall biosynthesis act on:
a. Transportation of lipid-bound precursors across the cytoplasmic membranes.
b. Insertion of glycan units into the cell wall.
c. Transpeptidation linking and maturation.
d. Synthesis of precursors in the cytoplasm.
e. Both b and c
11. Which of the following does not apply to antimicrobial resistance caused by target site
modification?
a. Chromosomal mutation of target site
b. Quinolone resistance–determining region
c. SCCmec
d. Erythromycin-resistant methylase
14. Serine-based β-lactamases appear to have evolved from the penicillin-binding proteins of
bacteria. True or false?
15. Which one of the following antimicrobials acts predominantly on cell membrane integrity?
a. Aminoglycosides
b. Polymyxins
c. Tetracyclines
d. Penicillins
CHAPTER 13
3. The ___________ disk cannot be used to screen for penicillin susceptibility in Streptococcus
pneumoniae from sputum.
4. Which method does the CLSI suggest is most reliable for detecting oxacillin resistance in
staphylococci?
a. Oxacillin disk diffusion test
b. Cefoxitin disk diffusion test
c. Cefoxitin MIC test
d. Penicillin MIC test
e. Oxacillin agar screen
10. Which of the following is true about quality control (QC) testing?
a. A laboratory must perform QC every day that patient isolates are tested.
b. A laboratory can perform QC weekly if it performs fewer than 10 tests daily.
c. A laboratory can perform QC weekly once accurate performance of 20 to 30 days of daily
quality control has been documented.
d. A laboratory does not have to perform QC if an automated test antimicrobial susceptibility
test system is used.
e. Testing materials can be used beyond their expiration date if they look satisfactory.
13. Why is a bactericidal drug regimen necessary for treating patients with bacterial
endocarditis?
14. The MBC end point is the lowest concentration of antimicrobial agent that kills _99.9% of
the test bacteria.
15. It is important to test bacteria in the ______ phase of growth when performing tests to
assess bactericidal activity.
18. Another name for the serum bactericidal test is the _SCHLICTER_ test.
19. Which of the following factors contribute to results in the serumbactericidal test?
a. Antibody, opsonins, complement
b. Opsonins
c. Antibody
d. Complement
e. None of the above
20. When are serum specimens obtained for serum bactericidal and antimicrobial assays?
a. Trough, 1 hour before dose; peak, 1 hour after intravenous (IV) dose
b. Trough, 1 hour after dose; peak, 3 hours before intramuscular (IM) dose
c. Trough, 30 minutes before dose; peak, 60 minutes after IM dose
d. Trough, 30 minutes before dose; peak, 12 hours after IV dose
e. Trough, 1 hour before dose; peak, 8 hours after oral dose
21. Use of molecular assays to detect antimicrobial resistance genes is limited because:
a. Genes are not responsible for most types of antimicrobial resistance.
b. Genes may be present but may not be expressed; therefore the presence of the gene does
not always correlate with resistance.
c. Researchers have been unable to identify genes for antimicrobial resistance.
d. Large numbers of genes are responsible for all clinically important resistance.
e. Testing is too expensive.
22. Which of the following classes of antimicrobial agents poses the greatest toxicity risks and
therefore is frequently monitored using antimicrobial assays?
a. Penicillins
b. Cephalosporins
c. Sulfonamides
d. Aminoglycosides
e. Tetracyclines
CHAPTER 14
8. Which coagulase-negative staphylococci are considered more significant and might need to
be identified to the species level?
9. What are the two types of coagulase produced by S. aureus, and which one can be used as a
confirmatory test for coagulase in a clinical laboratory?
13. Describe some risk factors associated with HA-MRSA and CA-MRSA.
14. What are the recommendations for detecting oxacillin, clindamycin, or vancomycin
resistance?
15. Describe methods for identification of staphylococci, and evaluate which rapid methods
would be appropriate and when they would be used.
CHAPTER 15
1. Name three tests that could be performed to aid in the identification of Streptococcus
pyogenes.
3. The Christie, Atkins, and Munch-Petersen (CAMP) test is based on enhanced hemolysis
between CAMP factor and β-lysin from:
a. Streptococcus agalactiae
b. Staphylococcus epidermidis
c. Staphylococcus aureus
d. Enterococcus
6. What antimicrobial agent or agents are most commonly used to treat infections caused by
pyogenic streptococci?
9. What is the clinical significance of group B streptococci isolated from a vaginal culture of a
pregnant woman?
10. How would you recover nutritionally variant streptococci from clinical samples such as
blood?
CHAPTER 16
1. An isolate with the appropriate colony and microscopic morphology may be suspected to be
Bacillus anthracis if it is:
a. β-Hemolytic on SBA
b. Nonmotile
c. Catalase negative
d. Gram negative, non–spore forming
2. An aerobic, gram-positive, spore-forming bacillus was isolated from raw vegetables that were
associated with an outbreak of gastroenteritis. The organism produced β-hemolysis, was
catalase positive, and was motile. The most likely organism is:
a. Bacillus anthracis
b. Nocardia nova
c. Bacillus cereus
d. Tsukamurella spp.
5. The functionality of lethal factor requires the presence of what other protein from Bacillus
anthracis to form an active toxin?
a. Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)
b. Edema factor
c. D-Glutamic acid
d. Protective antigen
10. True infections with nondiphtheria Corynebacterium spp., such as C. jeikeium or C. striatum,
are often in immunocompromised patients or patients who have had:
a. Insertion of hardware or prosthetic devices
b. Coronary artery bypass surgery
c. Vitamin B12 deficiency
d. A lengthy hospital stay
11. A(n) _________ test can help to differentiate which clinically significant Corynebacterium
spp. recovered from urine samples?
a. Gelatin hydrolysis; C. ulcerans
b. Reverse CAMP; C. pseudotuberculosis
c. Alkaline phosphatase; C. amycolatum
d. Urease; C. urealyticum
12. A newborn female becomes febrile and will not feed for about an hour after birth. A gram-
positive rod is recovered from blood cultures from the newborn. The isolate has the
characteristics listed below: What is the most likely identity of the isolate?
Weakly β-hemolytic on SBA
Gram-positive bacilli, no spores observed
Catalase positive
Hydrogen sulfide negative
Motile at room temperature
a. Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
b. Listeria monocytogenes
c. Corynebacterium ureilyticum
d. Gardnerella vaginalis
13. A commercial fisherman with red sores on his hands was seen by his physician. Biopsy and
culture of one of the lesions grew an organism with the characteristics listed below:
What is the most likely identification?
Nonhemolytic on SBA
Gram-positive bacilli, no spores observed
Catalase negative
Hydrogen sulfide production positive
Growth in gelatin resembled a test-tube brush
a. Rhodococcus equi
b. Listeria monocytogenes
c. Lactobacillus acidophilus
d. Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
14. A 42-year-old man from Guatemala cuts his bare feet on thorns while walking. A
subcutaneous abscess develops, and when the patient is seen by a physician, his foot is swollen.
When the wound is pressed by the physician, purulence is expressed along with some soft,
white granules. A filamentous organism that is partially acid fast is recovered from the granules.
This is most likely an __________ mycetoma caused by ____________.
a. Actinomycotic; Pseudallescheria boydii
b. Actinomycotic; Nocardia brasiliensis
c. Eumycotic; Madurella mycetomatis
d. Eumycotic; Gordonia bronchialis
15. What other organisms can give similar clinical and laboratory findings as those for Listeria
monocytogenes? How are these organisms differentiated from L. monocytogenes?
17. A sample from a female patient suspected to have bacterial vaginosis is sent to the
laboratory. Which of the following would be an appropriate medium for this specimen?
a. Loeffler medium
b. HBT agar
c. CTBA
d. BCYE agar
18. A 57-year-old man from New York City presents to the emergency department with
diarrhea, arthralgia, abdominal pain, malabsorption, and weight loss of 10 lb (4.5 kg) over the
last month. A duodenal biopsy is performed, but no infectious agent is recovered on culture
media. However, on Gram staining, a gram-positive rod is observed in macrophages in the
biopsy tissue. The organism is identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. What is the most likely
identity of this organism?
a. Bacillus anthracis
b. Nocardia asteroides
c. Tropheryma whipplei
d. Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
CHAPTER 17
1. Most Neisseria species are:
a. Oxidase-positive, gram-positive diplococci
b. Oxidase-positive, gram-negative diplococci
c. Oxidase-negative, gram-negative diplococci
d. Oxidase-negative, gram-positive diplococci
2. Identify the virulence factor of the pathogenic Neisseria spp. That is responsible for the initial
attachment of the organism to host tissues.
a. Pili
b. Endotoxin
c. Cell membrane proteins
d. Peptidoglycan
4. What is the optimal specimen to collect for the diagnosis of gonorrhea by culture in male
patients?
a. Pharyngeal swab
b. Rectal swab
c. Urethral swab
d. Urine
6. Identify a selective medium that allows the isolation of N. gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis:
a. Sheep blood agar (SBA)
b. Chocolate (CHOC) agar
c. Columbia nalidixic acid
d. Modified Thayer-Martin (MTM)
7. Identify the test that can be used for definitive identification of both N. gonorrhoeae and N.
meningitidis.
a. Gram stain
b. Catalase
c. Oxidase
d. Carbohydrate utilization
8. The advantage of nucleic acid amplification tests for diagnosing gonorrhea is that the tests:
a. Are approved for use in testing in boys in cases of sexual abuse
b. Detect viable organisms in the specimen
c. Are sensitive and do not require invasive specimens
d. Require strict transport conditions
12. The test that can accurately differentiate N. lactamica from N. meningitidis is:
a. ONPG
b. Catalase
c. Acid from maltose
d. Acid from sucrose
13. Which organism is an opportunistic pathogen associated with otitis media and sinusitis in
children?
a. M. catarrhalis
b. N. lactamica
c. N. meningitidis
d. N. sicca
14. Describe the colony morphology of M. catarrhalis, and explain how it is identified in the
laboratory.
15. Erythromycin eye drops are placed into the eyes of newborns to prevent infections caused
by:
a. N. meningitidis
b. N. gonorrhoeae
c. N. cinerea
d. M. catarrhalis
CHAPTER 18
2. The porphyrin test for H. influenzae would be __________ because the organism
__________ biosynthesize heme. The fluorescence result of the test would be __________.
a. Negative; cannot; negative
b. Positive; cannot; positive
c. Negative; can; positive
d. Positive; can; negative
6. A cervical culture for possible gonococcal infection is sent to the microbiology laboratory.
After 24 hours of incubation, the modified Thayer-Martin (MTM) plate has small opaque
colonies that adhere slightly to the medium. Microscopic examination reveals gram-negative
coccobacilli, many with square ends. The organism ferments glucose and is superoxol and
catalase negative. The most likely identification is:
a. N. gonorrhoeae
b. K. denitrificans
c. M. catarrhalis
d. H. ducreyi
7. A 52-year-old man who had recently received a kidney transplant was admitted to the
hospital with a low-grade fever, a heart murmur, and neutropenia. He had a history of
periodontal disease and recently had had two teeth extracted. Blood cultures were positive
after 48 hours. The isolate grew on chocolate (CHOC) agar and sheep blood agar (SBA) in 5%
CO2. The colonies were nonhemolytic, slightly adhered to the surface of the media, and had a
slight yellow appearance when removed. The isolate was catalase, indole, and oxidase negative.
Microscopic morphology indicated gram-negative fusiform bacilli. The most probable
identification is:
a. A. aphrophilus
b. K. kingae
c. C. hominis
d. Capnocytophaga spp.
8. An isolate from an infected cat bite is oxidase, catalase, ornithine decarboxylase, indole, and
urease positive. After 48 hours of incubation at 35° C, growth on SBA was described as mucoid
colonies exhibiting a greenish-brown halo. A MAC agar plate shows no growth. What organism
is the mostly likely cause of the infection?
9. Which microbiologic tests are most useful in differentiating B. melitensis from H. influenzae?
10. A patient is complaining of a painful cervical lymph node following a case of pharyngitis.
Further investigation reveals that the patient consumed a medium-cooked wild rabbit in a
restaurant in Germany 2 months earlier. What is the most likely cause of the infection?
CHAPTER 18 PART 2
7. Besides respiratory tract specimens, what clinical specimen is useful for the sensitive
detection of Legionella antigen?
a. Blood
b. Stool
c. Urine
d. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
14. The antimicrobial agent of choice for the treatment of pertussis is:
a. Ampicillin
b. Amoxicillin
c. Erythromycin
d. Penicillin
CHAPTER 19
1. What are the three general characteristics a gram-negative bacillus must possess to belong to
the family Enterobacteriaceae (with a few exceptions)?
5. A 47-year-old patient who had just returned from Mexico was admitted to the hospital with a
3-day history of vomiting and diarrhea, without fever, and no fecal leukocytes were found in
the stool. When he was admitted to the hospital, a stool culture grew an organism identified as
Escherichia coli. Which of the following strains is the most likely cause of the infection?
a. EPEC
b. ETEC
c. EHEC
d. EIEC
7. What organism is often associated with lobar pneumonia in elderly hospitalized patients?
a. Shigella spp.
b. Proteus vulgaris
c. Escherichia coli
d. Klebsiella pneumoniae
10. An enteric organism that is acquired by eating improperly prepared and cooked or
preserved food contaminated with human feces and produces dysentery is:
a. P. vulgaris
b. Y. enterocolitica
c. S. marcescens
d. Shigella spp.
CHAPTER 20
2. Which of the following Vibrio spp. would you expect to be most likely isolated from a blood
culture?
a. V. cholerae
b. V. parahaemolyticus
c. V. vulnificus
d. V. alginolyticus
8. Which of the following tests is most helpful in differentiating C. jejuni from the other
Campylobacter spp.?
a. Nitrate reduction
b. Urease activity
c. Hippurate hydrolysis
d. Susceptibility to nalidixic acid
9. When attempting to recover enteric Campylobacter spp., which specimen, media, and
incubation conditions should be used?
10. What nonculture methods are used to diagnose Helicobacter pylori infections?
CHAPTER 22
1. Match the following infectious diseases with their associated causative organism:
B – Myonecrosis
C – Tetanus
D – Botulism
A – Pseudomembranous colitis
E – Actinomycosis
a. Clostridioides difficile
b. Clostridium perfringens
c. Clostridium tetani
d. Clostridium botulinum
e. Actinomyces spp.
2. An organism that can live in reduced concentrations of oxygen but prefers an anaerobic
environment is known as a(n):
a. Capnophile
b. Obligate anaerobe
c. Facultative anaerobe
d. Aerotolerant anaerobe
3. Some anaerobes are particularly susceptible to oxygen because they lack the enzyme:
a. Amylase
b. β-Lactamase
c. Superoxide dismutase
d. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
6. A gram-positive bacillus was isolated from a wound specimen and had the following
characteristics: double zone of β-hemolysis, lecithinase positive, lipase negative, spot indole
negative. What is the most likely identification of this organism?
a. Clostridium perfringens
b. Clostridium ramosum
c. Clostridium septicum
d. Clostridium tetani
7. An anaerobic, pleomorphic, gram-negative bacillus was recovered from a liver abscess. The
special potency antimicrobial disks demonstrated that the organism was vancomycin resistant
and colistin and kanamycin sensitive. Other results were as follows: chartreuse fluorescence,
spot indole positive, and lipase positive. What is the most likely identification of the organism?
a. Fusobacterium mortiferum
b. Fusobacterium necrophorum
c. Fusobacterium nucleatum
d. Fusobacterium varium
False 9. Clostridium spp. are especially easy to identify in Gram-stained smears of clinical
specimens because they always appear as gram-positive rods with terminal or subterminal
spores.
True 10. Failure to isolate fusiform gram-negative organisms that were observed on a Gram-
stained smear of a clinical specimen could be an indication that a problem exists with the
primary medium used for the isolation of anaerobes or the system being used for anaerobic
incubation of primary plates.
True 11. Large, dark colonies (>1 mm) growing on a BBE agar plate at 24 hours can
presumptively be called a member of the Bacteroides fragilis group.
True 12. A pleomorphic gram-positive bacillus that is spot indole and catalase positive can be
presumptively identified as Cutibacterium acnes.
CHAPTER 26
7. Which of the following is (are) fluorescent stain(s) used in the detection of the mycobacteria?
a. Auramine-rhodamine
b. Kinyoun
c. Ziehl-Neelsen
d. Both b and c
1. For each of the following dimorphic fungi, describe the characteristic microscopic
appearance when grown at 22 or 35° C:
a. Blastomyces dermatitidis
b. Coccidioides immitis and C. posadasii
c. Histoplasma capsulatum
d. Sporothrix schenckii species complex
CHAPTER 29
8. Following the administration of the vaccine for HBV, which of the following serologic markers
should be positive?
a. HBeAg
b. HBcAg
c. Anti-HBs
d. Anti-HBc
CHAPTER 30
9. What specific growth patterns, Gram stain morphology, and biochemical test results must be
met for the following organisms before a sentinel laboratory needs to contact an LRN reference
laboratory to submit a sample?
10. What identifying clinical manifestations of infection with a specific organism will aid the
health care provider to determine a useful differential diagnosis so as to order the proper
laboratory tests?
11. What are the recommended clinical specimens to submit for patients potentially exposed to
the following?
a. Ebola virus or Marburg virus
b. Clostridium botulinum toxin
c. Inhalational anthrax
d. Variola virus
CHAPTER 39
8. Infections caused by Pneumocystis jirovecii most often affect the:
a. Upper respiratory tract
b. Lower respiratory tract
c. GI tract
d. Urinary tract
10. The increased risk of herpes zoster in patients with tumors is generally caused by:
a. Systemic chemotherapy
b. Immune suppression caused by the tumor
c. Neutropenia caused by the tumor
d. All of the above
CHAPTER 41
1. _______________is the most common gram-positive ocular pathogen.
a. Cutibacterium (Propionibacterium) acnes
b. Staphylococcus aureus
c. Corynebacterium spp.
d. Coagulase-negative staphylococcus
2. Media for the isolation of fungal pathogens from ocular specimens should not contain:
a. Gentamicin
b. Penicillin
c. Cyclohexamide
d. Streptomycin
4. The _______________are the group of viruses most frequently involved in ocular disease.
a. Herpesviruses
b. Adenoviruses
c. Enteroviruses
d. Poxviruses
5. Nonnutrient agar inoculated with Escherichia coli is used in recovering ___________ from
ocular specimens.
a. Microsporidia
b. Chlamydia
c. Fusarium spp.
d. Acanthamoeba
6. Requests for culture from which ocular site are received most often? Which organisms are
most likely to be recovered?
8. What is the most common route of administration for the antimicrobial treatment of
uncomplicated conjunctivitis?
9. Name three infectious agents that cause sexually transmitted diseases that can also affect
the eye.
10. Describe the best procedure when performing bacterial cultures to diagnose conjunctivitis.