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Bacillus Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.

These are the MediaLab courses that cover Bacillus and links to relevant pages within the course.

Learn more about laboratory continuing education for medical technologists to earn CE credit for AMT, ASCP, NCA, and state license renewal and recertification. Or get information about laboratory safety and compliance courses that deliver cost-effective OSHA safety training and continuing education to your laboratory's employees.

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CLIA Microbiology / Serology Review
Which of the following organisms are gram positive:View Page
Which of the following organisms is not an aerobic organism:View Page

Current Topics in Clinical Microbiology
The gram stain shown in the photograph was prepared from a positive anaerobic blood culture bottle after 36 hours incubation. Based on the morphology of the bacterial cells (some with spores--blue arrows), the most likely identification is:View Page
Listeria gram stain

Photomicrograph of a gram stain prepared from an 18 hour old broth culture.The organism is a small, non-spore-forming bacillus measuring between 0.4 to 0.5um by 1.0 to 3.5um.Coccobacillary forms, diplobacilli, and bacilli in short chains or in diphtheroidal clusters (upper right in photograph) may all be observed in gram stain preparations.When found in the CSF, the organism may be found both intracellularly and extracellulary.

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Introduction to Bioterrorism
Category A Agents

Category A agents include: Smallpox (variola major) Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis) Plague (Yersinia pestis) Botulism (Clostridium botulinum toxin) Tularaemia (Francisella tularensis) Ebola hemorrhagic fever Marburghemorrhagic fever Lassa fever Argentine hemorrhagic fever

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Packaging and Shipping Infectious Materials
Category A Definition and Examples

A category A infectious substance is in a form that is capable of causing permanent disability or life-threatening or fatal disease in otherwise healthy humans or animals when exposure to it occurs. Exposure would occur if the substance were released from its protective packaging and a human or animal came into contact with it. Some examples of category A infectious substances include: Bacillus anthracis (cultures only) Brucella abortus (cultures only) Brucella melitensis (cultures only) Burkholderia mallei (cultures only) Clostridium botulinum (cultures only) Dengue virus (cultures only) Escherichia coli, verotoxigenic (cultures only) Ebola virus Francisella tularensis (cultures only) Hantaviruses causing hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome Herpes B virus (cultures only) Human immunodeficiency virus (cultures only) Lassa virus Mycobacterium tuberculosis (cultures only) Poliovirus (cultures only) Rabies and other lyssaviruses (culture only) Shigella dysenteriae type I (cultures only) West Nile virus (cultures only) Yersinia pestis (cultures only)This is not an exhaustive list. Sometimes, deciding on the classification of an infectious substance requires professional judgement and involves knowing the medical history or symptoms of the source patient or animal and/or knowing the local epidemiological conditions at the time the patient specimen or culture was obtained. If there is doubt as to whether or not a substance meets the criteria of category A, it must be treated as a category A substance for shipping.

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