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e. All
Enterobacteriaceae are all facultative anaerobes and oxidase negative. Majority of them are motile except:
a. Shigella
b. Klebsiella
c. Yersinia
d. a and b
e. All
e. None
H2S producing enterobacteriaceae include the following except:
a. Salmonella
b. Proteus
c. Citrobacter freundii
d. Edwardsiella
e. None
b. I, II, III
Klebsiella
Escherichia
Enterobacter
Rapid lactose fermenters:
I. Klebsiella
II. Escherichia
III. Enterobacter
IV. Citrobacter
V. Serratia
VI. Salmonella arizonae
VII. Shigella sonnei
VIII. Yersinia enterocolitica
a. I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
b. I, II, III
c. III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
d. I, II, III, IV
e. IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
e. IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
Citrobacter
Serratia
Salmonella arizonae
Shigella sonnei
Yersinia enterocolitica
Late lactose fermenters:
I. Klebsiella
II. Escherichia
III. Enterobacter
IV. Citrobacter
V. Serratia
VI. Salmonella arizonae
VII. Shigella sonnei
VIII. Yersinia enterocolitica
a. I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
b. I, II, III
c. III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
d. I, II, III, IV
e. IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
a. I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII
Non lactose fermenters:
I. Salmonella
II. Shigella
III. Yersinia
IV. Proteus
V. Providencia
VI. Morganella
VII. Edwardsiella
a. I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII
b. I, II, III, IV, V
c. I, II, III
d. IV, V, VI, VII
e. I, II, VI, VII
b. Salmonella arizonae
Only lactose fermenting salmonella.
a. Salmonella typhi
b. Salmonella arizonae
c. Salmonella enterica
d. Salmonella bongori
c. Shigella sonnei
Only lactose fermenting shigella.
a. Shigella dysenteriae
b. Shigella flexneri
c. Shigella sonnei
d. Shigella boydii
b. Yersinia enterolitica
Only lactose fermenting Yersinia.
a. Yersinia pestis
b. Yersinia enterolitica
c. Yersinia pseudotuberculosis
d. b and c
Bacteroides
Fusobacterium
Most abundant anaerobe of the colon:
a. Escherichia coli
b. Bacteroides
c. Fusobacterium
d. b and c
e. All
a. Escherichia coli
Most abundant aerobic flora of the colon which produce green metallic color on EMB.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
a. Escherichia coli
Most common cause of UTI which is also common indicator of fecal contamination of water.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
e. All
Treatment for E. coli infection
a. Nitrofurantoin
b. Fosfomycin
c. Fluoroquinolone
d. a and b
e. All
a. Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
Traveler's diarrhea.
a. Enterotoxigenic (ETEC)
b. Enteropathogenic (EPEC)
c. Enteroinvasive (EIEC)
d. Enteroaggregative (EAEC)
e. Enterohemorrhagic (EHEC)
b. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
Infantile diarrhea.
a. Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
b. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
c. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)
d. Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)
e. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
c. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)
Produces shigella-like dysentery
a. Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
b. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
c. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)
d. Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)
e. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
d. Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)
Causes persistent watery diarrhea specially in AIDS patients.
a. Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
b. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
c. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)
d. Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)
e. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
e. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
Produces shiga-like toxin (STEC) and verotoxin (VTEC).
a. Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
b. Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC)
c. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)
d. Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC)
e. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC)
f. None
Presentation of Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) except:
a. Dysentery
b. Hemolytic uremic syndrome
c. Renal failure
d. Anemia
e. Thrombocytopenia
f. None
b. Fluoroquinolones
Treatment for Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC).
a. Penicillin
b. Fluoroquinolones
c. Macrolide
d. Amoxicillin
e. Ceftriaxone
a. Acute cystitis
E. coli infecting urinary bladder manifested as dysuria, higher frequency of urinating and abdominal pain.
a. Acute cystitis
b. Acute pyelonephritis
c. Asymptomatic bacteruria
b. Acute pyelonephritis
E. coli infection up to the kidney which is manifested as dysuria, higher frequency of urinating, abdominal pain and fever.
a. Acute cystitis
b. Acute pyelonephritis
c. Asymptomatic bacteruria
c. Asymptomatic bacteruria
Infection with E. coli with positive urine analysis but has no signs and symptoms.
a. Acute cystitis
b. Acute pyelonephritis
c. Asymptomatic bacteruria
a. Fosfomycin, Nitrofurantoin
Treatment for acute cystitis.
a. Fosfomycin, Nitrofurantoin
b. Fluoroquinolones
c. Cefuroxime
d. Penicillin
b. Fluoroquinolones
Treatment for acute pyelonephritis.
a. Fosfomycin, Nitrofurantoin
b. Fluoroquinolones
c. Cefuroxime
d. Penicillin
c. Cefuroxime
Treatment for asymptomatic bacteuria.
a. Fosfomycin, Nitrofurantoin
b. Fluoroquinolones
c. Cefuroxime
d. Penicillin
c. Both
Asymptomatic bacteuria usually doesn't require treatment except for:
a. Pregnant
b. Patient for urologic procedure
c. Both
d. None of these
a. True
O157:H7 is a Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) strain that produces sever disease.
a. True
b. False
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
Also known as the Friedlander's bacillus which is identified as mucoid colonies (candle like) with capsule.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
Can be associated with alcoholics, diabetes, abscesses, aspiration pneumonia.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
e. Carbapenems
Treatment for Klebsiella pneumoniae infection.
a. Fosfomycin
b. Fluoroquinolones
c. Cefuroxime
d. Penicillin
e. Carbapenems
c. Salmonella typhi
A motile H2S producing bacteria which is transmitted through fecal route common in poultry and dairy products.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
c. Salmonella typhi
Diagnosed through Widal test.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
c. Salmonella typhi
Can cause enterocolitis and enteric fever or typhoid fever.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
c. Salmonella typhi
Causes prolonged high grade fever characterized with rose spots or rash on the torso and chronic form may affect the gallbladder.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella typhi
d. Shigella dysenteriae
e. Yersinia pestis
d. a and b
Ceftriaxone
Ciprofloxacin
Treatment for S. typhi infection in the Philippines.
a. Ceftriaxone
b. Ciprofloxacin
c. Chloramphenicol
d. a and b
e. All
a. Reduced nitroreduction
Chlromaphenicol may cause aplastic amemia because of:
a. Reduced nitroreduction
b. Reduced glucoronidation
c. Increased nitroreduction
d. Increased glucoronidation
b. Reduced glucoronidation
Chlromaphenicol may cause Gray Baby Syndrome because of:
a. Reduced nitroreduction
b. Reduced glucoronidation
c. Increased nitroreduction
d. Increased glucoronidation
d. Shigella
A fecally transmitted non-motile and non H2S producing bacteria that can be neurotoxic, enterotoxic, and cytotoxic.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella
d. Shigella
e. Yersinia
a. Shigella dysenteriae
Group A Shigella which is the most common Shigella.
a. Shigella dysenteriae
b. Shigella flexneri
c. Shigella boydii
d. Shigella sonnei
b. Shigella flexneri
Group B Shigella which is also the specie endemic in the Philippines.
a. Shigella dysenteriae
b. Shigella flexneri
c. Shigella boydii
d. Shigella sonnei
c. Shigella boydii
Group C Shigella.
a. Shigella dysenteriae
b. Shigella flexneri
c. Shigella boydii
d. Shigella sonnei
d. Shigella sonnei
Group D Shigella which is a late lactose fermenter.
a. Shigella dysenteriae
b. Shigella flexneri
c. Shigella boydii
d. Shigella sonnei
e. All
Seizure: Neurotoxic
Dysentery: Enterotoxic
Tenesmus: (painful defecation) Cytotoxic
Shiga toxin may cause:
a. Seizure
b. Dysentery
c. Tenesmus
d. a and b
e. All
a. Ciprofloxacin - can affect tendons thus not appropriate for children.
Treat for shigella infection in adults.
a. Ciprofloxacin
b. Azithromycin
c. Penicillin
d. Ceftriaxone
b. Azithromycin
Treat for shigella infection in children.
a. Ciprofloxacin
b. Azithromycin
c. Penicillin
d. Ceftriaxone
d. Yersinia enterolitica
Bacteria causing self limiting enterocolitis which sometimes may be mistaken for appendicitis and can be treated with Doxycycline.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Yersinia pestis
d. Yersinia enterolitica
e. Proteus mirabilis
c. Yersinia pestis
A zoonotic infection transmitted from flea to rat to man causing plague.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Yersinia pestis
d. Yersinia enterolitica
e. Proteus mirabilis
a. Bubonic plague
Presence of enlarged suppurative lymph nodes in the groin and axilla.
a. Bubonic plague
b. Septicemic plague
c. Pneumonic plague
b. Septicemic plague
Hemorrhage which can cause black gangrene in the fingers, toes, nose and may lead to black death.
a. Bubonic plague
b. Septicemic plague
c. Pneumonic plague
c. Pneumonic plague
Either from septic emboli or airborne.
a. Bubonic plague
b. Septicemic plague
c. Pneumonic plague
d. a and b
Aminoglycoside
Tetracycline
Treatment for Yersinia pestis infection.
a. Aminoglycoside
b. Tetracycline
c. Macrolide
d. a and b
e. All
f. Proteus
Urease containing bacteria with swarming motility.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella
d. Shigella
e. Yersinia
f. Proteus
f. Proteus
Proteus mirabilis
Proteus vulgaris
Identified by Weil Felix test wherein urinalysis is positive in nitrites and usually cause UTI.
a. Escherichia coli
b. Klebsiella pneumoniae
c. Salmonella
d. Shigella
e. Yersinia
f. Proteus
a. Vibrio
An oxidase positive, halophilic, comma or curved shaped bacteria with shooting star motility.
a. Vibrio
b. Helicobacter
c. Campylobacter
d. Pseudomonas
e. Calymmatobacterium
f. Gardnerella
a. Vibrio cholerae
The only non halophilic vibirio.
a. Vibrio cholerae
b. Vibrio parahaemolyticus
c. Vibrio vulnificus
a. Vibrio cholerae
Yellow colonies vibrio that causes cholera.
a. Vibrio cholerae
b. Vibrio parahaemolyticus
c. Vibrio vulnificus
b. Vibrio parahaemolyticus
Green colonies vibrio that causes shellfish poisoning.
a. Vibrio cholerae
b. Vibrio parahaemolyticus
c. Vibrio vulnificus
c. Vibrio vulnificus
Blue-green colonies vibrio that causes oyster poisoning.
a. Vibrio cholerae
b. Vibrio parahaemolyticus
c. Vibrio vulnificus
a. Vibrio cholera
Produces a toxin that increase cAMP which increase the movement of water and sodium in the intestinal lumen causing rice watery diarrhea that lead to dehydration.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
c. Tetracycline
Supportive treatment is the main management for rice water infection. To shorten the infection, DOC is
a. Ampicillin
b. Amoxicillin
c. Tetracycline
d. Streptomycin
b. Helicobacter pylori
An oxidase positive, motile, spiral shaped, microaerophilic and lophotrichous bacilli which is also urease positive thus diagnose through urea breath test.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
e. All
Presentation of Helicobacter pylori infection:
a. Halitosis
b. Peptic ulcer disease
c. Chronic gastritis
d. a and b
e. All
e. None
Triple therapy may be:
OCA: Omeprazole + Clarithromycin + Amoxicillin
OCM: Omeprazole + Clarithromycin + Metronidazole
Included in the triple therapy for Helicobacter pylori except:
a. Omeprazole or any PPI
b. Clarithromycin
c. Amoxicillin
d. Metronidazole
e. None
e. None
Quadruple Therapy: TOMB
Tetracycline or Amoxicillin
Omeprazole
Metronidazole
Bismuth salicylate
Included in quadruple therapy for Helicobacter pylori infection except:
a. Tetracycline
b. Omeprazole
c. Metronidazole
d. Bismuth salicylate
e. None
c. Campylobacter jejuni
Oxidase positive, comma, s, or gull wing shaped bacilli which is common in dogs and transmitted through direct contact with feces.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
c. Campylobacter jejuni
Cultured in Skirrow/Butzler medium.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
c. Campylobacter jejuni
Infection similar to shigellosis which include crampy abdominal pain or bloody diarrhea.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
c. Campylobacter jejuni
Complication may include Guillan-Barre syndrome which is an ascending paralysis.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
c. Both
Treatment for Campylobacter jejuni infection.
a. Fluoroquinolones
b. Tetracycline
c. Both
d. None of these
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Colonies emit a fruity smell and inhibits soil, water, and vegetation.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
a. Pyocyanin
Blue pigment of Pseudomonas aeruginosa which stimulates inflammatory response.
a. Pyocyanin
b. Pyoverdine
c. Pyorubrin
d. Pyomelanin
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Number 1 cause of nosocomial infection and number 2 cause of burn.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
May cause hot tub folliculitis
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
e. All
Can be used for treatment of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection.
a. Penicillin
b. Cephalosporins
c. Aminoglycoside
d. a and b
e. All
e. All
Cephalosporin that can be used for Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection.
a. Ceftazidime
b. Cefoperazone
c. Cefepime
d. a and b
e. All
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
Formerly known as Klebsiella granulomatis.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
Infection with this microorganism is manifested as donovanosis/ granuloma inguinale which include genital ulcer with beefy base and pseudonuboes.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
d. Azithromycin
Treatment for Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis.
a. Penicillin
b. Metronidazole
c. Cefepime
d. Azithromycin
e. Tetracycline
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
Normal flora of vagina wherein when there is change in normal pH, it causes non sexually transmitted bacterial vaginosis which is foul smelling whitish vaginal discharge (fishy odor).
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
Diagnosed as clue cells which is vaginal cells embedded with bacteria.
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Helicobacter pylori
c. Campylobacter jejuni
d. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
e. Calymmatobacterium granulomatosis
f. Gardnerella vaginalis
b. Metronidazole
Treatment for Gardnerella vaginalis.
a. Penicillin
b. Metronidazole
c. Cefepime
d. Azithromycin
e. Tetracycline