Pneumonia Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.
These are the MediaLab courses that cover Pneumonia and links to relevant pages within the course.
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| Which of the following antigen groups is closely related to the ABO system: | View Page |
| Which one of the following statements about Coxiella burnetii is not true: | View Page |
| The Quelling test is useful for which of the following : | View Page |
| Acute Onset Pneumonia A 70-year-old transient with productive cough, pleuritic chest pain radiating to the mid back, fever, and chills was seen in the emergency room. Expectorated sputum was sent to the laboratory for gram stain and culture. (Continue on next page) | View Page |
| Streptococcus pnemoniae is the most common cause of fatal community-acquired pneumonia. | View Page |
| Review 1 Podschun R. Ullmann U.:
Klebsiella spp. as nosocomial pathogens: epidemiology, taxonomy, typing methods, and pathogenicity factors
Clinical Microbiology Reviews. 11(4):589-603, 1998Bacteria belonging to the genus Klebsiella frequently cause human nosocomial infections. In particular, the medically most important Klebsiella species, Klebsiella pneumoniae, accounts for a significant proportion of hospital-acquired urinary tract infections, pneumonia, septicemias, and soft tissue infections.The principal pathogenic reservoirs for transmission of Klebsiella are the gastrointestinal tract and the hands of hospital personnel. Because of their ability to spread rapidly in the hospital environment, these bacteria tend to cause nosocomial outbreaks. Hospital
outbreaks of multidrug-resistant Klebsiella spp., especially those in neonatal wards, are often caused by new types of strains, the so-called extended-spectrum-beta-lactamase (ESBL) producersThe incidence of ESBL-producing strains among clinical Klebsiella isolates has been steadily increasing over the past years. The resulting limitations on the therapeutic options demand new measures for the management of Klebsiella hospital infections.While the different typing methods are useful epidemiological tools for infection control, recent findings about Klebsiella virulence factors have provided new insights into the pathogenic strategies of these bacteria. Klebsiella pathogenicity factors such as capsules or lipopolysaccharides are presently considered to be promising candidates for vaccination efforts that may serve as immunological infection control measures. | View Page |
| Agent: Tularemia (bacterium) Most likely means of dissemination: Solid or aerosolPrimary route of entry: Inhalation, absorption, or ingestionGeneral signs and symptoms: Sudden fever, chills, headaches, muscle aches, joint pain, dry cough, progressive weakness, and pneumonia.The disease is not transmissible through human contact. When used as a WMD, infection would be acquired by handling infected material, eating or drinking contaminated food or water or by breathing in the bacterium. | View Page |
| The fungus illustrated in this photomicrograph was recovered from an induced sputum specimen from a 74 year old man with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. This isolate is most likely: | View Page |
| An Aspergillus species was recovered from a sputum specimen of a patient with X-ray evidence of fungal pneumonia. Microscopic examination did not permit a species identification. A small amount of vegetative mycelium was removed and a direct mount prepared. The features indicated by the red arrows in this image are associated with which Aspergillus species? | View Page |
| The colonies illustrated in this photograph were recovered from a blood culture after 48 hour incubation at 30°C. The most likely source for the septicemia is: | View Page |
| This photomicrograph is an acid-fast stained smear prepared from a yeast colony growing on ascospore agar. A helmet-shaped, red-staining, acid fast yeast cell is seen in the center of view at the tip of the arrow, against the background, blue-staining blastoconidia. The presumptive identification of Hansenula anomala was made. Predisposing conditions that may indicate that this isolate is more than a contaminant include: | View Page |
| Warm antibody hemolytic disease A 49-year-old male with pneumonia was treated with penicillin. He became jaundiced with yellow sclera. Observe the photograph of his peripheral blood smear. Anisocytosis was observed with pale-centered microcytes and polychromatophilic macrocytes. Since penicillin is a classic offender for autoimmune hemolytic disease, the clinician asked for an antihuman globulin (AHG) test, also known as the Coombs test. A positive AHG reaction occurs when the antibody stimulated by penicillin becomes attached to red blood cells. Hemolysis follows, leaving the patient with jaundice and a peripheral blood smear, as demonstrated in the photograph. | View Page |
| The arrangement of the erythrocytes in this peripheral smear should be reported out as rouleaux formation. | View Page |
| Case History 2 An 80 year old man was seen in the emergency room with sudden onset of right sided chest pain accentuated on inspiration. His cough was productive of yellow sputum, and he was short of breath.His temperature was 101.2F. A chest X-ray revealed right middle lobe pneumonia. His hemoglobin was 15.2 gm/dl, HCT 44%, and RBC 4.5 m/ml. The white blood count was 35,000/cuml, with 45% neutrophils, 20% bands, 5% lymphocytes, 3% eosinophils, 2% basophils, and 25% atypical monocytes as noted in the photograph.The atypical monocytes had abundant blue-grey cytoplasm with a few scattered vacuoles, which, in company with toxic neutrophils appeared to be a response to infection.The patient had a past history of tuberculosis which may account for the monocytosis. | View Page |