Deck 14: Infection, Infectious Diseases, and Epidemiology

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Question
Which of the following is considered part of the resident microbiota of the female reproductive system?

A) Bacteroides
B) Candida
C) Lactobacillus
D) E. coli
E) both Candida and Lactobacillus
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Question
During which stage of disease should an infected person be considered contagious?

A) the decline stage
B) the incubation period
C) the illness stage
D) all stages
E) the convalescence period
Question
Among the virulence factors produced by Staphylococcus aureus are hemolysin, coagulase, hyaluronidase, and enterotoxin. Which of these factors contribute(s) to the ability of S. aureus to invade the body?

A) hemolysin
B) coagulase
C) hyaluronidase
D) enterotoxin
E) coagulase and hemolysin
Question
A person licks a needle before injecting a drug into a vein. The person later develops a bacterial infection of the blood. This is an example of

A) a member of the microbiota gaining access to an unusual location in the body.
B) a disruption of the normal microbial population of the blood.
C) immune suppression leading to disease.
D) microbial synergism.
E) microbial antagonism.
Question
Diseases that are induced by modern medical procedures are referred to as infections.

A) subacute
B) opportunistic
C) endogenous
D) exogenous
E) iatrogenic
Question
Vomiting is a common sign of food poisoning. The corresponding symptom would be

A) pain.
B) cramps.
C) nausea.
D) diarrhea.
E) fever.
Question
Which of the following is considered a mechanical vector transmission?

A) mosquito transmission of Plasmodium
B) louse transmission of Rickettsia
C) tsetse fly transmission of Trypanosoma
D) cockroach transmission of Shigella
E) flea transmission of Yersinia
Question
A bacterium inhabits the human nasal cavity where it obtains nutrients from secretions. It neither harms nor benefits the host. The relationship is therefore a(n) one.

A) neutral
B) antagonistic
C) mutualisitic
D) commensal
E) parasitic
Question
Bacterial contaminants grow in food in a closed container. The food is heated after the container is opened, but a person develops food poisoning after eating it. The bacteria were producing

A) an exotoxin.
B) capsules.
C) endotoxin.
D) an exoenzyme.
E) antiphagocytic factors.
Question
Chagasʹ disease is transmitted by a bug with mouthparts that penetrate blood vessels. Which type of exposure does this represent?

A) contact
B) fomite
C) parenteral route
D) mucous membrane portal
E) skin portal
Question
The fungus Pneumocystis jiroveci is found in the lungs of most people in low numbers, but in immunocompromised people it overgrows, resulting in severe respiratory problems. The fungus is best described as

A) resident microbiota.
B) transient microbiota.
C) a parasite.
D) a mutualist symbiotic partner.
E) both resident microbiota and opportunistic pathogen.
Question
Symptoms are

A) subjective characteristics of a disease that only the patient can feel.
B) laboratory tests used to diagnose a disease.
C) characteristics of a disease, such as sweating.
D) objective manifestations of a disease that can be measured.
E) objective manifestations of a disease that can be observed by others.
Question
A protozoan and its resident bacteria invade the body of a worm. The bacteria release toxins and exoenzymes that immobilize and digest the worm, and the protozoan and bacteria absorb the nutrients produced. The relationship between the protozoan and the bacteria would best be described as

A) parasitism.
B) both commensalism and parasitism.
C) mutualism.
D) a nonsymbiotic relationship.
E) commensalism.
Question
Which of the following is NOT an example of symbiosis?

A) tuberculosis in the human lung
B) microbes passing across the placenta to the fetus
C) bacteria in the human colon
D) tapeworm in the human intestine
E) protozoa in termites
Question
Which of the following might result in a nosocomial infection (HAI)?

A) a hospital aide forgetting to wash his or her hands before tending a patient
B) using a contaminated needle
C) eating contaminated food
D) being bitten by an infected insect
E) having unprotected sexual intercourse
Question
Which of the following is transmitted by the parenteral route?

A) gonorrhea
B) warts
C) pertussis
D) yellow fever
E) ringworm
Question
The close contact between newborns and family members allows them to become with microbes that become established as their microbiota. (Choose the most accurate term.)

A) infiltrated
B) parasitized
C) infected
D) colonized
E) contaminated
Question
Which of the following statements regarding the demonstration of the etiology of disease is FALSE?

A) The suspect agent must be isolated and cultured in the laboratory.
B) It must be possible to reisolate the suspect agent from the infected experimental host.
C) The suspect agent must be present in all cases of disease.
D) The suspect agent must cause the disease under investigation when introduced into a susceptible host organism.
E) The suspect agent must be the only potential pathogen present in disease cases.
Question
Which of the following situations might cause normal microbiota to become opportunistic pathogens?

A) treatment of a cancer patient with radiation
B) presence of Entamoeba in the lumen of the colon
C) growth of microbes on the surface of intact skin
D) growth of microorganisms on the excreted cellular wastes and dead cells in the large intestine
E) growth of Lactobacillus on the surface of teeth
Question
Which of the following situations is NOT a way in which a baby acquires normal microbiota?

A) Microbes cross the placenta during pregnancy.
B) The baby acquires the residential microbiota in the colon after the first meal.
C) Microorganisms grow in the respiratory tract after the babyʹs first breath.
D) Staphylococcus epidermidis is transferred from the hospital staff to the newborn after delivery.
E) Microbes enter the nose and mouth when the baby is in the birth canal.
Question
Treatment with high doses of antibiotics may lead to which type of health care associated infection?

A) zoonosis
B) endogenous infection
C) latent infection
D) iatrogenic disease
E) exogenous infection
Question
A true pathogen may also be described as

A) highly virulent.
B) opportunistic.
C) a component of the microbiota.
D) very common.
E) easily transmitted.
Question
An example of direct contact transmission is

A) inhalation of respiratory aerosols.
B) saliva exchanged during a kiss.
C) a door knob contaminated with respiratory secretions.
D) fecal contaminates on the hands of a restaurant worker.
E) the bite of a kissing bug.
Question
<strong>  The pattern of new cases reported in North America represented in this graph is consistent with Transmission.</strong> A) airborne B) housefly C) fecal-oral D) direct contact E) mosquito vector <div style=padding-top: 35px> The pattern of new cases reported in North America represented in this graph is consistent with
Transmission.

A) airborne
B) housefly
C) fecal-oral
D) direct contact
E) mosquito vector
Question
A strain of Neisseria gonorrhea has a mutation which has caused it to lose the ability to produce fimbriae and become less virulent as a consequence. What function has this pathogen lost?

A) the ability to establish a latent infection
B) the ability to prevent phagocytes killing it
C) the ability to produce an endotoxin
D) the ability to adhere to cells of the body
E) the ability to move from one location in the body to another
Question
The incidence of tuberculosis in the year 2000 in the United States was 12.43/100,000 cases. This means

A) 12.43 in every 100,000 people in the United States had tuberculosis in the year 2000.
B) 12.43 of every 100,000 people died of tuberculosis in the U.S. in the year 2000.
C) 12.43 of every 100,000 cases of tuberculosis were treated in the United States in the year 2000.
D) there were 12.43 tubercle bacilli per 100,000 microbes in the United States in the year 2000.
E) there were 12.43 new cases of tuberculosis for every 100,000 people in the United States in the year 2000.
Question
The bacterium that causes tuberculosis can be expelled from the lungs by a cough and remain viable in the air for an hour or more. If a person inhales the bacteria from the air, what type of transmission has occurred?

A) airborne
B) foodborne
C) indirect contact
D) bodily fluid
E) waterborne
Question
What is the relationship between prevalence and incidence for an acute disease like influenza?

A) The prevalence is always greater than the incidence.
B) The incidence and prevalence are essentially equal.
C) The incidence is always greater than the prevalence.
D) The incidence rises while prevalence declines.
E) There is no predictable relationship.
Question
A person is exposed to desert air containing fungus spores and develops valley fever as a result. Valley fever is an example of a disease.

A) noncommunicable
B) chronic
C) contagious
D) subacute
E) latent
Question
Organisms that are resident microbiota are best described as

A) microorganisms that may cause a disease under certain circumstances.
B) organisms that remain in the body for a short time.
C) any microorganisms that cause disease.
D) microorganisms that remain with the person throughout life.
E) microorganisms that never cause disease.
Question
In early spring 2009, the CDC reported several dozen cases of novel H1N1 influenza (ʺswine fluʺ) in the United States. By the summer, the number of confirmed cases was reported as over 40,000. The pattern of novel H1N1 cases in the United States represents a(n) disease.

A) sporadic
B) opportunistic
C) pandemic
D) endemic
E) epidemic
Question
The taxonomic approach to classifying disease is based on the

A) means of transmission.
B) severity and duration of the disease.
C) type of microbe that causes the disease.
D) organs or organ systems affected by the disease.
E) type of host for the microbe.
Question
Ten months after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, there was a sharp increase in the number of cases of cholera. What was the most likely source of disease?

A) direct contact with infected individuals
B) waterborne
C) indirect contact with contaminated equipment
D) airborne
E) foodborne
Question
Which of the following types of epidemiology applies Kochʹs postulates to study a disease?

A) descriptive
B) experimental
C) retrospective
D) analytical
E) systemic
Question
Which of the following pairings of microbe and disease was disproven using Kochʹs postulates?

A) Mycobacterium leprae and leprosy
B) Haemophilus influenzae and the flu
C) varicella-zoster virus and chickenpox
D) HIV and AIDS
E) hepatitis B and D and liver cancer
Question
Microbes known as transient microbiota are

A) microorganisms that remain with the person throughout life.
B) sources of microbial contamination.
C) organisms that remain in the body for a short time.
D) microorganisms that may cause a disease under certain circumstances.
E) unsuccessful microbial invaders because of the presence of preexisting microbes.
Question
Which of the following combinations of pathogen and virulence factor is CORRECT?

A) Escherichia coli and cytotoxin
B) Neisseria gonorrhoeae and endotoxin
C) Staphylococcus aureus and neurotoxin
D) Gram-positive bacteria and lipid A
E) Streptococcus pyogenes and protein M
Question
A new influenza strain appears and is spreading rapidly. What measures might be taken by public health agencies to stop the spread?

A) Identify and treat people who are infected.
B) Shut down public transportation.
C) Educate members of the public about ways to protect themselves.
D) Educate the public, promote vaccination, and treat those who are infected.
E) Facilitate access to vaccines.
Question
Which of the following is the correct sequence of a disease process?

A) prodromal period, convalescence, incubation, illness, decline
B) illness, convalescence, incubation, prodromal period, decline
C) incubation, convalescence, prodromal period, illness, decline
D) convalescence, incubation, prodromal period, illness, decline
E) incubation, prodromal period, illness, decline, convalescence
Question
Two children attend the same daycare, but one child is at the facility in the morning and the other child attends the facility in the afternoon. Both children become ill with fifth disease within one day of each other. How might the pathogen have infected both children?

A) droplet transmission
B) direct contact transmission
C) vector transmission
D) vertical transmission
E) fomite transmission
Question
Bacterial cells with capsules are resistant to killing by phagocytes.
Question
Botulism is transmissible by direct contact.
Question
The (incubation/morbidity/prodromal) period is the time between infection and the occurrence of the first symptoms or signs of the disease.
Question
<strong>  The dots on the map represent reported cases of a disease. This distribution is a(n) Pattern.</strong> A) endemic B) pandemic C) sporadic D) epidemic E) emerging <div style=padding-top: 35px> The dots on the map represent reported cases of a disease. This distribution is a(n)
Pattern.

A) endemic
B) pandemic
C) sporadic
D) epidemic
E) emerging
Question
Nervous system function may be impaired by the action of (endotoxins/neurotoxins/cytotoxins).
Question
Normal microbiota may cause disease if they are introduced into an unusual site in the body.
Question
All infections go through the stages known as incubation period, prodromal period, and illness.
Question
Several days after a walk in the woods, Cheryl develops a localized rash. It is not painful and soon fades so she thinks nothing of it. Several months later she experiences increasing fatigue, low-grade fever, and pain in the joints. These symptoms persist for months before she seeks medical attention. This description is most consistent with a(n) infection.

A) asymptomatic
B) chronic
C) subclinical
D) latent
E) acute
Question
The condition known as microbial antagonism may be defined as

A) a relationship between two organisms where only one member benefits.
B) a relationship between two organisms where both members benefit.
C) microorganisms that remain with a person throughout life.
D) an unsuccessful microbial invasion due to the presence of preexisting microbes.
E) a relationship between two organisms where one member harms the other.
Question
A common cold is an example of a chronic disease.
Question
The condition called parasitism is characterized as a(n)

A) nonsymbiotic relationship.
B) unsuccessful microbial invasion due to the presence of preexisting microbes.
C) relationship between two organisms where both members benefit.
D) relationship between two organisms where only one member benefits and the other is unharmed.
E) relationship between two organisms where one member harms the other.
Question
An infection always leads to disease.
Question
A syndrome is a group of symptoms and signs that collectively characterize a particular disease.
Question
Biofilms provide an alternative means for bacteria to attach to surfaces within the body.
Question
Rubella, or three-day measles, passes through the (parenteral/placenta/mucous/skin) route to establish congenital infection of a fetus.
Question
An axenic environment is one

A) in which microorganisms remain present only for a short time.
B) that is free of microbes.
C) contaminated by microbial toxins.
D) that is a source of contamination.
E) in which microorganisms remain with the person throughout life.
Question
Toxins that affect the lining of the gastrointestinal tract are (endotoxins/enterotoxins/exotoxins).
Question
The degree to which a microbe is able to cause disease is known as its (morbidity/virulence/toxicity).
Question
Kochʹs postulates can be applied to every infectious disease to identify its causative pathogen.
Question
Both members of a symbiotic relationship benefit from each other.
Question
Biological (sources/vectors/carriers) not only transmit pathogens, but also serve as hosts for the manipulation of the pathogen during some phase of the pathogenʹs life cycle.
Question
In 2012 a new kind of fungal meningitis (infection of the nervous system) was discovered. Disease occurred among patients who had received steroid injections into spinal joints. Discuss whether these were HA (nosocomial) infections. Defend your answer. Discuss the route of transmission and what measures public health agencies could take to reduce disease.
Question
Lyme disease is (communicable/contagious/noncommunicable) among humans.
Question
Describe three types of reservoirs of infection in humans. Give an example disease for each type of reservoir.
Question
What are the different types of symbiosis? List and give a short definition and an example for each.
Question
Virions attach to target host cell by means of (capsules/receptors/ligands).
Question
Lipid A is a(n) (cytotoxin/endotoxin/exotoxin) that stimulates the body to release chemicals that cause fever, inflammation, diarrhea, hemorrhaging, shock, and blood coagulation.
Question
Some of the bacteria in the human gut do not survive well outside of that environment, and produce vitamin K among other nutrients. This situation is an example of (commensalism/mutualism/parasitism).
Question
Compare and contrast endotoxins and exotoxins.
Question
The bacterium that causes cholera is capable of living independently in freshwater. As a consequence, cholera epidemics primarily involve (nonliving/animal/zoonotic) reservoirs.
Question
The hepatitis C virus normally establishes a (latent/chronic/subclinical) infection and may be asymptomatic for a decade.
Question
Researchers have proposed that the herpesvirus responsible for the childhood illness roseola may cause a type of T cell leukemia. Ninety percent of the population has been infected by the virus by two years of age, but the T cell leukemia is relatively rare. The virus can be cultured in the laboratory in tissue culture, but not in mature organisms. Discuss the obstacles to applying Kochʹs postulates to the etiology of this disease.
Question
The study of the cause of disease is known as (epidemiology/etiology).
Question
Persons with asymptomatic infections may be (contaminants/reservoirs/zoonoses) of disease.
Question
Spread of pathogens from one host to another by fomites is an example of (vehicle/direct/indirect) contact transmission.
Question
The study of when and where diseases occur is known as (analytical/descriptive/experimental) epidemiology.
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Deck 14: Infection, Infectious Diseases, and Epidemiology
1
Which of the following is considered part of the resident microbiota of the female reproductive system?

A) Bacteroides
B) Candida
C) Lactobacillus
D) E. coli
E) both Candida and Lactobacillus
E
2
During which stage of disease should an infected person be considered contagious?

A) the decline stage
B) the incubation period
C) the illness stage
D) all stages
E) the convalescence period
D
3
Among the virulence factors produced by Staphylococcus aureus are hemolysin, coagulase, hyaluronidase, and enterotoxin. Which of these factors contribute(s) to the ability of S. aureus to invade the body?

A) hemolysin
B) coagulase
C) hyaluronidase
D) enterotoxin
E) coagulase and hemolysin
C
4
A person licks a needle before injecting a drug into a vein. The person later develops a bacterial infection of the blood. This is an example of

A) a member of the microbiota gaining access to an unusual location in the body.
B) a disruption of the normal microbial population of the blood.
C) immune suppression leading to disease.
D) microbial synergism.
E) microbial antagonism.
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k this deck
5
Diseases that are induced by modern medical procedures are referred to as infections.

A) subacute
B) opportunistic
C) endogenous
D) exogenous
E) iatrogenic
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6
Vomiting is a common sign of food poisoning. The corresponding symptom would be

A) pain.
B) cramps.
C) nausea.
D) diarrhea.
E) fever.
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
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7
Which of the following is considered a mechanical vector transmission?

A) mosquito transmission of Plasmodium
B) louse transmission of Rickettsia
C) tsetse fly transmission of Trypanosoma
D) cockroach transmission of Shigella
E) flea transmission of Yersinia
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8
A bacterium inhabits the human nasal cavity where it obtains nutrients from secretions. It neither harms nor benefits the host. The relationship is therefore a(n) one.

A) neutral
B) antagonistic
C) mutualisitic
D) commensal
E) parasitic
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9
Bacterial contaminants grow in food in a closed container. The food is heated after the container is opened, but a person develops food poisoning after eating it. The bacteria were producing

A) an exotoxin.
B) capsules.
C) endotoxin.
D) an exoenzyme.
E) antiphagocytic factors.
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k this deck
10
Chagasʹ disease is transmitted by a bug with mouthparts that penetrate blood vessels. Which type of exposure does this represent?

A) contact
B) fomite
C) parenteral route
D) mucous membrane portal
E) skin portal
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11
The fungus Pneumocystis jiroveci is found in the lungs of most people in low numbers, but in immunocompromised people it overgrows, resulting in severe respiratory problems. The fungus is best described as

A) resident microbiota.
B) transient microbiota.
C) a parasite.
D) a mutualist symbiotic partner.
E) both resident microbiota and opportunistic pathogen.
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12
Symptoms are

A) subjective characteristics of a disease that only the patient can feel.
B) laboratory tests used to diagnose a disease.
C) characteristics of a disease, such as sweating.
D) objective manifestations of a disease that can be measured.
E) objective manifestations of a disease that can be observed by others.
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13
A protozoan and its resident bacteria invade the body of a worm. The bacteria release toxins and exoenzymes that immobilize and digest the worm, and the protozoan and bacteria absorb the nutrients produced. The relationship between the protozoan and the bacteria would best be described as

A) parasitism.
B) both commensalism and parasitism.
C) mutualism.
D) a nonsymbiotic relationship.
E) commensalism.
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14
Which of the following is NOT an example of symbiosis?

A) tuberculosis in the human lung
B) microbes passing across the placenta to the fetus
C) bacteria in the human colon
D) tapeworm in the human intestine
E) protozoa in termites
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15
Which of the following might result in a nosocomial infection (HAI)?

A) a hospital aide forgetting to wash his or her hands before tending a patient
B) using a contaminated needle
C) eating contaminated food
D) being bitten by an infected insect
E) having unprotected sexual intercourse
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16
Which of the following is transmitted by the parenteral route?

A) gonorrhea
B) warts
C) pertussis
D) yellow fever
E) ringworm
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17
The close contact between newborns and family members allows them to become with microbes that become established as their microbiota. (Choose the most accurate term.)

A) infiltrated
B) parasitized
C) infected
D) colonized
E) contaminated
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18
Which of the following statements regarding the demonstration of the etiology of disease is FALSE?

A) The suspect agent must be isolated and cultured in the laboratory.
B) It must be possible to reisolate the suspect agent from the infected experimental host.
C) The suspect agent must be present in all cases of disease.
D) The suspect agent must cause the disease under investigation when introduced into a susceptible host organism.
E) The suspect agent must be the only potential pathogen present in disease cases.
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19
Which of the following situations might cause normal microbiota to become opportunistic pathogens?

A) treatment of a cancer patient with radiation
B) presence of Entamoeba in the lumen of the colon
C) growth of microbes on the surface of intact skin
D) growth of microorganisms on the excreted cellular wastes and dead cells in the large intestine
E) growth of Lactobacillus on the surface of teeth
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k this deck
20
Which of the following situations is NOT a way in which a baby acquires normal microbiota?

A) Microbes cross the placenta during pregnancy.
B) The baby acquires the residential microbiota in the colon after the first meal.
C) Microorganisms grow in the respiratory tract after the babyʹs first breath.
D) Staphylococcus epidermidis is transferred from the hospital staff to the newborn after delivery.
E) Microbes enter the nose and mouth when the baby is in the birth canal.
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21
Treatment with high doses of antibiotics may lead to which type of health care associated infection?

A) zoonosis
B) endogenous infection
C) latent infection
D) iatrogenic disease
E) exogenous infection
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k this deck
22
A true pathogen may also be described as

A) highly virulent.
B) opportunistic.
C) a component of the microbiota.
D) very common.
E) easily transmitted.
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23
An example of direct contact transmission is

A) inhalation of respiratory aerosols.
B) saliva exchanged during a kiss.
C) a door knob contaminated with respiratory secretions.
D) fecal contaminates on the hands of a restaurant worker.
E) the bite of a kissing bug.
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24
<strong>  The pattern of new cases reported in North America represented in this graph is consistent with Transmission.</strong> A) airborne B) housefly C) fecal-oral D) direct contact E) mosquito vector The pattern of new cases reported in North America represented in this graph is consistent with
Transmission.

A) airborne
B) housefly
C) fecal-oral
D) direct contact
E) mosquito vector
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25
A strain of Neisseria gonorrhea has a mutation which has caused it to lose the ability to produce fimbriae and become less virulent as a consequence. What function has this pathogen lost?

A) the ability to establish a latent infection
B) the ability to prevent phagocytes killing it
C) the ability to produce an endotoxin
D) the ability to adhere to cells of the body
E) the ability to move from one location in the body to another
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26
The incidence of tuberculosis in the year 2000 in the United States was 12.43/100,000 cases. This means

A) 12.43 in every 100,000 people in the United States had tuberculosis in the year 2000.
B) 12.43 of every 100,000 people died of tuberculosis in the U.S. in the year 2000.
C) 12.43 of every 100,000 cases of tuberculosis were treated in the United States in the year 2000.
D) there were 12.43 tubercle bacilli per 100,000 microbes in the United States in the year 2000.
E) there were 12.43 new cases of tuberculosis for every 100,000 people in the United States in the year 2000.
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27
The bacterium that causes tuberculosis can be expelled from the lungs by a cough and remain viable in the air for an hour or more. If a person inhales the bacteria from the air, what type of transmission has occurred?

A) airborne
B) foodborne
C) indirect contact
D) bodily fluid
E) waterborne
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28
What is the relationship between prevalence and incidence for an acute disease like influenza?

A) The prevalence is always greater than the incidence.
B) The incidence and prevalence are essentially equal.
C) The incidence is always greater than the prevalence.
D) The incidence rises while prevalence declines.
E) There is no predictable relationship.
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
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29
A person is exposed to desert air containing fungus spores and develops valley fever as a result. Valley fever is an example of a disease.

A) noncommunicable
B) chronic
C) contagious
D) subacute
E) latent
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Organisms that are resident microbiota are best described as

A) microorganisms that may cause a disease under certain circumstances.
B) organisms that remain in the body for a short time.
C) any microorganisms that cause disease.
D) microorganisms that remain with the person throughout life.
E) microorganisms that never cause disease.
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
In early spring 2009, the CDC reported several dozen cases of novel H1N1 influenza (ʺswine fluʺ) in the United States. By the summer, the number of confirmed cases was reported as over 40,000. The pattern of novel H1N1 cases in the United States represents a(n) disease.

A) sporadic
B) opportunistic
C) pandemic
D) endemic
E) epidemic
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32
The taxonomic approach to classifying disease is based on the

A) means of transmission.
B) severity and duration of the disease.
C) type of microbe that causes the disease.
D) organs or organ systems affected by the disease.
E) type of host for the microbe.
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33
Ten months after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, there was a sharp increase in the number of cases of cholera. What was the most likely source of disease?

A) direct contact with infected individuals
B) waterborne
C) indirect contact with contaminated equipment
D) airborne
E) foodborne
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34
Which of the following types of epidemiology applies Kochʹs postulates to study a disease?

A) descriptive
B) experimental
C) retrospective
D) analytical
E) systemic
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35
Which of the following pairings of microbe and disease was disproven using Kochʹs postulates?

A) Mycobacterium leprae and leprosy
B) Haemophilus influenzae and the flu
C) varicella-zoster virus and chickenpox
D) HIV and AIDS
E) hepatitis B and D and liver cancer
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36
Microbes known as transient microbiota are

A) microorganisms that remain with the person throughout life.
B) sources of microbial contamination.
C) organisms that remain in the body for a short time.
D) microorganisms that may cause a disease under certain circumstances.
E) unsuccessful microbial invaders because of the presence of preexisting microbes.
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37
Which of the following combinations of pathogen and virulence factor is CORRECT?

A) Escherichia coli and cytotoxin
B) Neisseria gonorrhoeae and endotoxin
C) Staphylococcus aureus and neurotoxin
D) Gram-positive bacteria and lipid A
E) Streptococcus pyogenes and protein M
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38
A new influenza strain appears and is spreading rapidly. What measures might be taken by public health agencies to stop the spread?

A) Identify and treat people who are infected.
B) Shut down public transportation.
C) Educate members of the public about ways to protect themselves.
D) Educate the public, promote vaccination, and treat those who are infected.
E) Facilitate access to vaccines.
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39
Which of the following is the correct sequence of a disease process?

A) prodromal period, convalescence, incubation, illness, decline
B) illness, convalescence, incubation, prodromal period, decline
C) incubation, convalescence, prodromal period, illness, decline
D) convalescence, incubation, prodromal period, illness, decline
E) incubation, prodromal period, illness, decline, convalescence
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40
Two children attend the same daycare, but one child is at the facility in the morning and the other child attends the facility in the afternoon. Both children become ill with fifth disease within one day of each other. How might the pathogen have infected both children?

A) droplet transmission
B) direct contact transmission
C) vector transmission
D) vertical transmission
E) fomite transmission
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41
Bacterial cells with capsules are resistant to killing by phagocytes.
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42
Botulism is transmissible by direct contact.
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43
The (incubation/morbidity/prodromal) period is the time between infection and the occurrence of the first symptoms or signs of the disease.
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44
<strong>  The dots on the map represent reported cases of a disease. This distribution is a(n) Pattern.</strong> A) endemic B) pandemic C) sporadic D) epidemic E) emerging The dots on the map represent reported cases of a disease. This distribution is a(n)
Pattern.

A) endemic
B) pandemic
C) sporadic
D) epidemic
E) emerging
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45
Nervous system function may be impaired by the action of (endotoxins/neurotoxins/cytotoxins).
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46
Normal microbiota may cause disease if they are introduced into an unusual site in the body.
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47
All infections go through the stages known as incubation period, prodromal period, and illness.
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48
Several days after a walk in the woods, Cheryl develops a localized rash. It is not painful and soon fades so she thinks nothing of it. Several months later she experiences increasing fatigue, low-grade fever, and pain in the joints. These symptoms persist for months before she seeks medical attention. This description is most consistent with a(n) infection.

A) asymptomatic
B) chronic
C) subclinical
D) latent
E) acute
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49
The condition known as microbial antagonism may be defined as

A) a relationship between two organisms where only one member benefits.
B) a relationship between two organisms where both members benefit.
C) microorganisms that remain with a person throughout life.
D) an unsuccessful microbial invasion due to the presence of preexisting microbes.
E) a relationship between two organisms where one member harms the other.
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50
A common cold is an example of a chronic disease.
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51
The condition called parasitism is characterized as a(n)

A) nonsymbiotic relationship.
B) unsuccessful microbial invasion due to the presence of preexisting microbes.
C) relationship between two organisms where both members benefit.
D) relationship between two organisms where only one member benefits and the other is unharmed.
E) relationship between two organisms where one member harms the other.
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52
An infection always leads to disease.
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53
A syndrome is a group of symptoms and signs that collectively characterize a particular disease.
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54
Biofilms provide an alternative means for bacteria to attach to surfaces within the body.
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55
Rubella, or three-day measles, passes through the (parenteral/placenta/mucous/skin) route to establish congenital infection of a fetus.
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56
An axenic environment is one

A) in which microorganisms remain present only for a short time.
B) that is free of microbes.
C) contaminated by microbial toxins.
D) that is a source of contamination.
E) in which microorganisms remain with the person throughout life.
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57
Toxins that affect the lining of the gastrointestinal tract are (endotoxins/enterotoxins/exotoxins).
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58
The degree to which a microbe is able to cause disease is known as its (morbidity/virulence/toxicity).
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59
Kochʹs postulates can be applied to every infectious disease to identify its causative pathogen.
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60
Both members of a symbiotic relationship benefit from each other.
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61
Biological (sources/vectors/carriers) not only transmit pathogens, but also serve as hosts for the manipulation of the pathogen during some phase of the pathogenʹs life cycle.
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62
In 2012 a new kind of fungal meningitis (infection of the nervous system) was discovered. Disease occurred among patients who had received steroid injections into spinal joints. Discuss whether these were HA (nosocomial) infections. Defend your answer. Discuss the route of transmission and what measures public health agencies could take to reduce disease.
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63
Lyme disease is (communicable/contagious/noncommunicable) among humans.
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64
Describe three types of reservoirs of infection in humans. Give an example disease for each type of reservoir.
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65
What are the different types of symbiosis? List and give a short definition and an example for each.
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66
Virions attach to target host cell by means of (capsules/receptors/ligands).
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67
Lipid A is a(n) (cytotoxin/endotoxin/exotoxin) that stimulates the body to release chemicals that cause fever, inflammation, diarrhea, hemorrhaging, shock, and blood coagulation.
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68
Some of the bacteria in the human gut do not survive well outside of that environment, and produce vitamin K among other nutrients. This situation is an example of (commensalism/mutualism/parasitism).
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69
Compare and contrast endotoxins and exotoxins.
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70
The bacterium that causes cholera is capable of living independently in freshwater. As a consequence, cholera epidemics primarily involve (nonliving/animal/zoonotic) reservoirs.
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71
The hepatitis C virus normally establishes a (latent/chronic/subclinical) infection and may be asymptomatic for a decade.
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72
Researchers have proposed that the herpesvirus responsible for the childhood illness roseola may cause a type of T cell leukemia. Ninety percent of the population has been infected by the virus by two years of age, but the T cell leukemia is relatively rare. The virus can be cultured in the laboratory in tissue culture, but not in mature organisms. Discuss the obstacles to applying Kochʹs postulates to the etiology of this disease.
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73
The study of the cause of disease is known as (epidemiology/etiology).
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74
Persons with asymptomatic infections may be (contaminants/reservoirs/zoonoses) of disease.
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75
Spread of pathogens from one host to another by fomites is an example of (vehicle/direct/indirect) contact transmission.
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76
The study of when and where diseases occur is known as (analytical/descriptive/experimental) epidemiology.
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