WBR0314

Revision as of 13:40, 31 August 2014 by William J Gibson (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Author [[PageAuthor::Ogheneochuko Ajari, MB.BS, MS [1]]]
Exam Type ExamType::USMLE Step 1
Main Category MainCategory::Microbiology
Sub Category SubCategory::Pulmonology, SubCategory::Infectious Disease
Prompt [[Prompt::A 22-year old male military recruit presents to the emergency room with complaints of persistent cough of 2 months, chest pain, headache, low-grade fever and malaise. He reported that his symptoms are similar to what other recruits had in the military base. Chest X ray shows pulmonary infiltrates more severe in appearance than his clinical state. Sputum culture grew an organism in a complex acellular medium enriched with cholesterol. Which of the following organisms is the likely cause of the patient’s symptoms?]]
Answer A AnswerA::Klebsiella pneumonia
Answer A Explanation [[AnswerAExp::Klebsiella pneumonia is a common cause of lobar pneumonia in diabetics, hospitalized and alcoholic persons. Cough is productive of red currant jelly sputum. It is also a cause of nosocomial urinary tract infection]]
Answer B AnswerB::Mycoplasma pneumonia
Answer B Explanation AnswerBExp::See Explanation
Answer C AnswerC::Streptococcus pneumonia
Answer C Explanation [[AnswerCExp::Streptococcus pneumonia cause lobar consolidation on chest X ray and associated with a rusty sputum and sepsis in sickle cell anemia. It is the most common cause of Meningitis, Otitis media, Pneumonia and Sinusitis (MOPS). It is lancet-shaped, encapsulated and produces IgA protease. It grows on standard unenriched blood agar but cannot grow in the presence of optochin or bile]]
Answer D AnswerD::Haemophilus influenzae
Answer D Explanation [[AnswerDExp::Haemophilus influenzae causes epiglottitis (cherry red in children), Meningitis, Otitis media and Pneumonia. It is a small gram-negative rod, produces IgA protease and cultured on chocolate agar which requires factors V (NAD+) and X (hematin) for growth]]
Answer E AnswerE::Legionella pneumophilia
Answer E Explanation [[AnswerEExp::Legionella pneumophilia causes severe pneumonia and fever in a condition called Legionnaires disease. It is a gram-negative rod that stains poorly with gram stain. Silver stain is used in the culture media. It grows on charcoal yeast extract culture with iron and cysteine and detected clinically by the presence of antigen in urine]]
Right Answer RightAnswer::B
Explanation [[Explanation::The infection is caused by Mycoplasma pneumonia. This is a classic cause of atypical “walking” pneumonia. Patients experience a chronic nonproductive cough, headache, low-grade fever and malaise. A clinical clue is a chest X ray that looks worse than the patient’s clinical state. Mycoplasma pneumonia requires cholesterol to grow. It has no cell wall, no capsule and not seen on gram stain. It is the ONLY bacterial membrane containing cholesterol. It is seen in frequent outbreaks in military camps and prisons. It has a high titer of cold agglutinins (IgM), which can agglutinate or lyse Red Blood Cells and it is grown on Eaton’s agar.

Educational Objective: Mycoplasma pneumonia cause atypical pneumonia, seen in frequent outbreaks in military camps and prisons with the chest X Ray appearing worse than the patients clinical state.
References: First Aid 2014 page 145]]

Approved Approved::Yes
Keyword WBRKeyword::Persistent cough, WBRKeyword::Cough, WBRKeyword::Respiratory Infection outbreaks, WBRKeyword::Pulmonary infiltrates, WBRKeyword::Cholesterol rich culture medium
Linked Question Linked::
Order in Linked Questions LinkedOrder::