Enterobacteriaceae Classification
- Lactose fermenter: E.coli, klebsiella, Enterobacter, Citrobacter
- enter club and call sita
- Late lactose fermenter: Shigella sonnei
- sonna late
- Non-lactose fermenter: Salmonella, Shigella, proteus, Yersinia
- your salu is pretty shy
- H2S
- Producing: Salmonella, proteus
- Not producing: Shigella, Yersinia
- (Your Shy - Not Producing anything)

• Club → Vikk
• M (Methyl red) → SHY
• She → oH
• Salu → oHoH
Member | Motility | LF/NLF | IMViC | Urease |
E.Coli | M | LF | + + - - | -ve |
Klebsiella | NM | LF | - - + + | +ve |
Enterobacter | M | LF | v | -ve |
Citrobacter | M | LF | v | -ve |
Shigella | NM | NLF | - + - - | -ve |
Salmonella | M/NM (gallinarum, pullorum) | NLF | - + - + | -ve |
Proteus | M | NLF | v | +ve |
Yersinia | M/NM | NLF | - + - - | -ve |
- M: Motile
- NM: Non motile
- LF: Lactose fermenter
- NLF: Non lactose fermenter
Urease Positive Organisms
- Features
- Pink Color = Urease +ve
- Club () il protein () kazhichondirunna aale idich → he cried () → said Noooo ()
- passed stools () & urine ()
- 2 staph ()() came behind us → we escaped in helicopter

- Proteus
- Ureaplasma
- Nocardia
- Cryptococcus
- Helicobacter
- Klebsiella
- CONS
- Staph saprophyticus
- Staph epidermidis
- Clinical Relevance
- Predisposes to struvite (magnesium ammonium phosphate) stones
- Particularly Proteus
IMViC Tests

- I - Indole
- M - Methyl Red
- V - VP
- C - Citrate
- IMV→ red.
- citrate→ blue.
- ++- - indicates E.coli
- - - ++ indicates klebsiella

Differential Media


- Pink () Monkey ()
- Cled () blue () blood
- Man (Mannitol) is red (when salty experience - angry red)
- Give TC (TCBS) to panchara (sucrose fermenter) & watch blue film (BTB)
MacConkey Agar

- Pink color - Lactose fermentation
- Only Gram-negative organisms grow
- Monkey () on a pretty pink () PLANT eating lactose
- P – Peptone
- L – Lactose - differential media
- A – Agar (Nutrient agar)
- N – Neutral red - indicator media
- T – Taurocholate - selective media
CLED
- Cysteine Lactose Electrolyte Deficient
- Gram-negative, Gram-positive, and Candida grow
- Indicator - Bromothymol Blue
- CLED is better as it allows gram positive and gram negative organisms to grow.
- cled blue blood

- Yellow colonies
- Lactose fermenters (LF)
- Blue colonies
- Non-lactose fermenters (NLF)
EMB
- Eosin Methylene Blue
- Blue or black with a characteristic green sheen around it.


E.coli Strains and Diseases

Strains | Disease | Extra |
EPEC (Entero Pathogenic EC) | Pediatric/Infantile Diarrhea | • Bundle forming pili that is plasmid coded • Shows attachment/ effacement lesion • pathogenic -pili formation-plasmid coded- peads- attachment to peads |
ETEC (Enterotoxigenic EC) | Traveller's diarrhea | • Toxigenicity due to Colonization factor Ag • Travellers → colonize → toxic |
EIEC (Entero Invasive EC) | Dysentery similar to shigella | • Virulence marker Ag • Sereny Test • invasion and virulance cause bleeding |
EHEC (Entero Hemorrhagic EC) | HUS | • O157:H7 • Shiga like toxin ⇒ ⛔60S • Sorbitol MacConkey Agar: Negative |
EAEC (Entero Aggregative EC) | Persistent diarrhea (> 14 days) | • Stacked brick appearance on HEP2 Cell line • persistantly () aggregating () stack bricks with help () |
DAEC (Diffuse Adherent EC) | ㅤ | ㅤ |
Sereny Test
- Inoculation of bacteria into guinea pig's eye → Severe mucopurulent conjunctivitis and severe keratitis indicate a positive
- Serenity test is done for
- EIEC (Eye)
- Shigella
- Listeria (Anton Test)
E.coli causing UTI
KASS Criteria
- > 10^5 CFU/ML is UTI.
- Exception to KASS Criteria:
- Mnemonic- SPA
- S: Suprapubic aspiration
- P: Gram-positive organisms/ Candida and Staphylococcus Aureus
- A: Consumption of Antibiotics/ Diuretics.
Types of Klebsiella
- Grand party by Ozzy and raina
Klebsiella sp. | Notes |
Klebsiella pneumoniae ↳ Friedlander's bacillus | • Causes pneumonia • Lactose fermenter - pretty pink colour • Klebsiella will be capsulated so it will show a mucoid colony • String test positive • party (pneumonia) - wear pretty pink (pretty pink colour) strings (String test positive), drink milk (Lactose fermenter), use condom (capsulated) |
Klebsiella ozaenae ↳ Perez bacillus | • Causes ozaenae/atrophic rhinitis • Foul-smelling discharge • Anosmia • ozzy- smell foul. |
Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis ↳ Frisch bacteria | • Show rhinoscleroma • Nose will look woody • Microscopically ↳ big cells which are foamy - mikulicz cells ↳ inside those are pink bodies - russell bodies • Rx: Rifampicin, Streptomycin, Tetracycline x 6 weeks • raina was with russel in front of mike • RhinoScleromaTis: RST = Rifampicin, Streptomycin, Tetracycline |
Klebsiella Granulomatis ↳ Calymmato bacterium granulomatis | • Donovanosis - painless ulcer genitals • Donovan bodies • The safety pin appearance - bipolar staining • This is Wright giemsa stain/wayson stain. • done here right don - kill painlessly with saftey pin |

Note:
- Wayson stain shows safety pin
- Klebsiella granulomatis
- Yersenia
- Safety pin seen in:
- vibrio parahaemolyticus
- Yersinia pestis
- Haemophilus ducreyi
- Burkholderia
- klebsiella granulomatis


- Donovanosis:
- Grand party in Club (Kleb Granulo) mnemonic - refer micro
- Right Don () → aka False Bob (Pseudobuoes)
- Rolls (Rolled edges) in Club (Klebsiella), eat beef (red beefy)
- Has no Pain (Painless), but bleeds (bleed on touch)
- Put bodies → Donovan bodies
- Takes a long day to come
- why right (Wright Giemsa)?
- He kills with safety pin (safety pin appearance) painlessly


- Syphillis
- It was dark (dark field),
- Button hole → Felt
- hard (hard chancre) and rubbery (rubbery LN) d*** → did it Bilaterally (B/L LN)
- But no pain (Ulcer and LN painless)
- LGV
- LGTV → Keep Neat (NAAT) → From Dogs (Doxy)
- Only Painless ulcer with Painful Buboes (U/L)
- Chance with his Wife (Chancroid and Herpes)
- Multiple people (Multiple lesions)
- Painful sex (Painful)
- Cried (H ducreyi) → Soft (Soft chancre)
- HSV → Vesicles
- Black → Bubo
- Ulcer → White/Blue
- Herpes → Red
- Partner Rx
- Urethral and scrotal swelling, ulcer → treat partners
- Cervical d/d → treat partners when symptomatic
- Vaginal d/d → only trichomonas only when symptomatic
- Non herpetic Ulcer → last 3 months partners
- Herpetic Ulcer → no partner Rx
- PID → Rx partner with kit 1 (Patient kit 6)
- Bubo → All partners for last 3 weeks → BAD (Bubo, azithro, Doxy)
Rhinoscleroma


• Hebra nose
• Klebsiella rhinoscleomatis
• Russel body & Mikulikz cell
• Frisch bacteria
• DOC: Streptomycin + tetracycline x 4- 6 weeks
• +/- Steriods (↓ fibrosis)






Atrophic Rhinitis


- F > M (Starts during puberty).
- Atrophy of all nose structures (nasal/sinus mucosa, olfactory fibers).
- Caused by: Klebsiella ozaenae (Perez bacillus)
- Other causes:
- Hereditary,
- endocrinal,
- nutritional deficiency (Vit D, B12, iron),
- racial, autoimmune.
- Signs:
- Wide roomy nasal cavity.
- Dry nose.
- Crusty nose (greenish, foul smelling).
- Merciful anosmia (patient cannot smell the odor).
Medical Treatment:
- Alkaline nasal douching.
- Parts
- Sodium chloride (2),
- sodium bicarbonate (1),
- sodium biborate (1)
- mixed in 280 ml of water,
- patient is asked to flush the nose with this solution
- Glycerol.
- Glucose in glycerin.
- Kemicetine antiozena solution
- Chloromycetin
- Estradiol
- Placental extracts
- Mnemonic: Kemidennu chloroform manapichitt, estrogen, placental extract edukkum
Surgery (if medical therapy fails):
- Young's operation
- Complete closure of nasal cavity
- Modified Young's surgery.
- Lautenslager surgery (medialization of lateral wall).
- Submucous teflon injection
- Also in VUR → Sting procedure
Serratia Marcescens

- Non diffusible red pigment at room temperature
- Patient have pseudohemoptysis (Prodogiosin)
- It can be used as control for filtration.
- serratia- se-red dog
- Red diaper syndrome seen in
- Serratia Marcescens
- Lesch Nyhan syndrome
- Blue diaper is seen in
- Hartnup’s disease
Proteus

- It is urease positive
- Swarming - concentric growth or motility
- Proteus,
- Vibrio Parahemolyticus and Alginolyticus
- C. tetani
- B.cereus
- serratia.
Type of Motility | Examples | ㅤ |
Tumbling | • Listeria | ㅤ |
Darting-like | • Vibrio, • Campylobacter | Vibe camp il dart throwing |
Corkscrew | • Treponema | Pallilu Screw |
Lashing | • Borrelia | Borring eye lashes |
Twitching | • Eikenella, • Trichomonas vaginalis | Vaginayil ikkilakkiyappo twitch cheyth |
Falling leaf | • Giardia lamblia ↳ (STRING TEST) | Girtha huva leaf |
Differential motility | • Motile at 22–25°C, • non-motile at 37°C ↳ (Yersinia, Listeria) | Yes different list |
Swarming | • Proteus. • Vibrio parahemolyticus • Bacillus Cereus. • Serratia. • Clostridium tetani | principal vibe sir sir clos teacher |
- PPA positive
- Fishy odour
- protein and fish for dinner
Diene's phenomenon.
- One organism growing from one side and another organism from other side
- This is done for the epidemiology of proteus.
- If the swarming will merge, they are the same strain.
- The line of demarcation shows it is a different strain.
Important Information
- Diene's stain
- Used for mycoplasma
Mnemonic:
- for Mycoplasma
- Atypical Walking (walking pneumonia) people (PPLO agar) with CAT (Cold agglutination test) → Eat (Eaton agent) fried egg (fried egg colonies) and Dine (Diens stain) → No walls (cell wall deficient) and take steroids (steroid in cell membrane)
- for Diens
- Diens phenomenon → Proteus
- Diens stain → Mycoplasma
Shigella
- Shonna () boy () got dysentry () when Flexing ()
- S.dynsentriae - only catalase negative and non-mannitol fermenter
- S.flexneri - Most common in India
- india flexible
- S.boydii
- S.sonnei - Most common in the world, Late lactose fermenter.
- world is sonnei and late
Shigellosis
- Transport - SBGS - Sach's Buffered glycerol Saline
- transported inside a sac with nacl
Media for both:
Enrichment Media | Selective Media |
• Selenite F Broth • Tetrathionate Broth | • XLS (xylose lysine deoxycholate) • DCA (deoxycholate agar) • SS (salmonella shigella agar) • HE (Hektoen enteric agar) |
- Treatment - Ciprofloxacin
Salmonella ⇒ Typhoid
- Etiology: Salmonella typhi (Gram -ve flagellate).
- Typhoid outbreak: Indicates poor sanitation.
- Reservoir: Humans.
- Age group: 5-19 y
- Sex:
- Cases: m > F
- Carriers: F > m.
- Mode of transmission: Feco oral > urine.
- Seasonal variation: Late summers & monsoon.
- Incubation period: 7-14 days (up to 4 weeks).
- Wilson/Salmonella → climbed with a Longitudinal (Longitudinal ulcers in GIT) Ladder (Step ladder pattern fever) → to drink pea soup (Pea soup diarrhea) → fell on a Spot with Rose flowers (Rose spots) with pressure (fade on pressure) → swelling in belly (Soft palpable spleen, liver) → he was then carried in a Sac (Sach's Buffered glycerol Saline)
- Clinical Features
- Enteric fever
- Step ladder pattern fever
- Longitudinal ulcers in GIT
- Pea soup diarrhea
- Fever with bradycardia - Faget's sign
- Soft palpable spleen, liver
- Rose spots
- 2nd /3rd week
- fade on pressure
- Transport – Sach's Buffered glycerol Saline
- Culture media
- Wilson blair media - jet black colonies
- (Only for salmonella, not shigella)

- Treatment - Ciprofloxacin
Diagnosis (mnemonic: BASU)
Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 |
Blood culture | Antibody (Widal test) | Stool culture | Urine culture |
- Typhoid BASU prob (Probenecid with cholecystectomy)
- If started on antibiotics - most sensitive
- Bone marrow culture
Widal test:
Antigen | Location | aka | Note |
O antigen | Cell wall | Somatic Ag | Same for all |
H antigen | Flagella | Flagella Ag | Different |
Widal Test Table

- O (1st appears) – H (2nd to appears) – O (disappears 1st) – H (disappears last)
- Most immunogenic and earliest and highest Antibody appears - H
Slide Widal test
- Non specific test so serial testing needed

- Dot → Agglutination test occurred
New test
- Typhidot
- Dot blot
Yersinia
ㅤ | Y. Pestis | Y. Enterocolitica & Y. Pseudo TB |
ㅤ | • Plague (Misc bacteria) | • Yersiniosis • Enterobacteraciae family |
Motility | Negative | • 22° (motile) • 37° (nonmotile) • Also known as differential motility |
Urease | Negative | Positive |
ㅤ | plague wont pass urine or move :( | ㅤ |
- Both of these cause gastroenteritis
Laboratory diagnosis of Yersiniosis
- cold (Cold enrichment) il yeast (Yersiniosis) itt bulls eye (Bulls eye appearance) undakki
- it was a sin (CIN agar) so ghee ozhich (ghee broath)
- Cold enrichment
- Optimum temperature - 25° celsius
- Incubate for 4° celsius for 1 week
- Isolation easier
- Also seen with yersiniosis and listeriosis
- Bulls eye appearance on CIN agar

ㅤ | Cold | Egg |
Yersenia | Enrichment | Bulls eye |
Mycoplasma | Agglutination | Fried egg |

Diagnosis
- Sample: Stool / sputum / bubo
- M/E: Safety pin appearance
- Wayson stain (NMB stain)/ Wright stain / Giemsa stain
- On ghee broth, shows stalactite growth.
Note:
- Wayson stain shows safety pin
- Klebsiella granulomatis
- Yersenia
- Safety pin seen in:
- vibrio parahaemolyticus
- Yersinia pestis
- Haemophilus ducreyi
- Burkholderia
- klebsiella granulomatis



Vibrio Cholerae


- TAD GH
- CADherins (A → Adherans, D → Desmosomes)
- Cholera toxin (zonula occludens) receptor - GM1 Gangliosidosis
Vibrio Classification by Salt Requirement
Halophilic Family | Non-Halophilic Family |
Need salt 7 to 10% | Cannot grow at high salt |
• V.parahaemolyticus • V.alginolyticus • V.vulnificus | • V.cholerae • V.mimicus |
ㅤ | No salt → diarrhea mimicking () cholera () |
V. Cholera classification - Classical vs. EL TOR
ㅤ | Classical strain | EL TOR strain |
Polymyxin B sensitivity | Sensitive | Resistant |
Phage IV susceptibility | Susceptible | Resistant |
B-hemolysis on sheep blood agar | Negative | Positive |
Chick Erythrocyte agglutination | Negative | Positive |
VP test | Negative | Positive |
ㅤ | Poli () page () kanditt | vip (vp test) sheep (sheep blood agar - hemolyisis) um chiken (chick erythrocyte agglutination) um kazhichappo toori (el tor) |
- Vibrio cholerae (Gram -ve comma shaped, motile bacilli).
- m/c type: O1 (serogroup) → El tor (biotype) → Ogawa (serotype)
- O → OG → group
- Ogawa → OGT

C/f:
- Mostly asymptomatic.
- Fever → Uncommon
- Clinical history: Rice water stools (↑↑ cAMP)
Important Information
- Increased cAMP:
- Cholera
- Anthrax
- ETEC (liable)
- Pertussis
cAMP vs cGMP Mechanism
cAMP | cGMP |
ETEC - labile toxin | ETEC - Stable toxin |
B. cereus - Diarrheal type of food poisoning (so cAMP elevated) | B. cereus - Emetic type of food poisoning (so cGMP elevated) |
Important Information
- Vibrio cholera targets small intestine
- Cholera toxin increases cAMP
- Vibrio cholera disrupts zona occludens (Tight junction)
Epidemiology
- Cholera outbreak:
- Indicates lack of social development.
- Note: lack of sanitation - typhoid
- Force of infection:
- After controlling the source of outbreak
- the incidence of cholera cases still remains a plateu
- called force of infection / tail of outbreak
- D/t carrier stages.
- So no need for vaccination or any other interventions as half of people are carriers

- Reservoir of infection: Humans.
- Transmission: Water borne.
- Period of communicability:
Source | Period of communicability |
Cases | 7-10 days |
Convalescent carriers | 2-3 weeks |
Chronic carriers | Weeks-months |
Stool Collection & Transportation
- Container: McCartney bottle
- Transport media:
- Venkataraman Ramakrishna (VR) media
- Rectal swabs:
- Alkaline peptone water
- Cary Blair media
- Mnemonic: Venkata Raman Ramakrishnan () → Namamde Appi water (Alkaline peptone water) carry (Cary blair) cheyyum → Cartil (McCartney bottle)
- Culture media:
- TCBS (Thiosulphate citrate bile salt sucrose)
- Bromothymol blue (BTB) is the indicator.
- Culture Methods
- Hanging drop preparation:
- Shows scintillating (darting) motility
- Darkfield microscopy:
- "Darting/Shooting stars in dark sky" appearance
- Mnemonic: VR →
- appi thuukki idum (hanging drop) → apo aadum (dartling motility) OR
- Ratriyil starsine nokki eriyum ( Dark field → shooting star)
- Gelatin Stab:
- Turnip/Napiform Liquefaction
Note:
Organism | Gelatin stab appearance |
Anthrax | Inverted fir tree appearance. |
C. tetani | fir tree |
V. cholerae's | turnip/napiform |
Biochemical tests:
- CCOINSS
- Cholera red reaction (nitroso indole compound)
- Catalase +ve
- Oxidase +ve
- Indole test +ve
- Nitrate reduction +ve
- Sucrose lysis +ve
- String test
- String test positive:
- Vibrio cholera
- Klebsiella
- Giardia lamblia
- when kleb ile guard vibe anel
- Oxidase positive
- Features
- vighnesh pseudo nyc vibe on camp helicopter micropenis
- Pseudomonas
- Vibrio cholera
- Neisseria
- Campylobacter
- Helicobacter
A child is brought to the PHC with acute diarrhoea. The doctor, based on history, suspects that the child may be suffering from an infection due to Shigella over cholera and proceeds to give ciprofloxacin as the antibiotic. Which of the following points on history, apart from bloody stools, favour the doctor’s suspicion?
A. Absence of rectal pain
B. Presence of abdominal cramps
C. Presence of vomiting
D. Presence of fever
B. Presence of abdominal cramps
C. Presence of vomiting
D. Presence of fever
ANS
Presence of fever
Notification & isolation:
- Typhoid → Till 3 negative stool cultures.
- Diphtheria → 2 culture negative
- Cholera → Isolate patient until 2–3 negative stool cultures

Diagnosis
Treatment
- Isolation:
- Isolate patient until 2–3 negative stool cultures
- Rehydration:
- ORS + Zinc
- Antibiotics:
- Adults: Doxycycline
- Children: Erythromycin
- Pregnant women: Erythromycin or Azithromycin
Chemoprophylaxis
- Drug of choice: Tetracycline
- No use
Chemoprophylaxis cases isolation ??
- 3 days after starting Tetracycline till 48 hours of antibiotics
Disinfection
- Disinfectant: 5% cresol
Cholera Outbreak Management
- Notifiable
- Single case is not notifiable
- Outbreak → Within 24 hours
- To WHO and Government of India
- Most effective prophylactic measure:
- Health education
- No use of chemoprophylaxis, vaccination in cholera
- Except for healthcare workers → vaccines given
- Verification of diagnosis.
- Early case finding.
- Treatment
- Epidemiological investigation.
- Sanitation, health education.
Vaccines for healthcare workers :
ㅤ | Dukoral | Shanchol (Euvichol), MORCVAX |
ㅤ | Oral vaccine | Oral vaccine |
Contains | Cholera O1 (monovalent) | Cholera O1 & O139 recombinant (Bivalent) |
B subunit | (+) →Destroyed by gastric pH | No B subunit |
Gastric buffer | Requires buffer | Does not require buffer |
Age criteria | >2 years | >1 year |
Dose schedule | 2 doses, >7 days apart but within 6 weeks | 2 doses within 14 days gap |
ㅤ | • monovalent → 1 week apart • Duck → Oraal → Monovalent • Oraal ayond → need β (destroyed by gastric pH) and buffer • Since single → only go out when > 2 yrs | bivalent → 2 week apart double → go out when > 1 year |


Category | Examples | ㅤ |
Water borne | Cholera, Typhoid, Dysentery | Feco Oral route |
Water washed | Scabies, Trachoma, Lice/Tick diseases | Hand hygiene, hand wash |
Water based | Dracunculiasis, Schistosomiasis | ㅤ |
Water related vector borne | Dengue, Filariasis, Malaria, Yellow fever | ㅤ |
Other Vibrio
Vibrio Parahaemolyticus | Vibrio Vulnificus | Vibrio Alginolyticus |
• Capsulated organism (selfish) • Gastroenteritis - Shell fish • Wound infection • Kanagawa phenomenon (wagatsuma agar - blood agar 2 to 4 % salt) • If hemolysis (+) ⇒ pathogenic [else not] | • Sepsis • Wound Infection | • Conjunctivitis • Wound Infection • Most tolerant to NaCl (>10%) |
vibe para kanakem kond wagamon poyi. blood vannu. dont like sucrose | ㅤ | aginomoto- salt-conjunctivitis |
Non Fermenters
- Does not ferment sugars
- Pseudomonas
- Burkholderia mallei
- Burkholderia pseudomallei
- Acinetobacter baumannii
Pseudomonas

- Pyocyanin
- generates ROS to kill competitors
- Blue green (diffusible)

- Pyoverdin - Green yellow
- Pyorubin – Red
- Pyomelanin - Black
Clinical Features
- pseudo king chilling in hot tub shangai swimming pool. loves sugar fruity. but lactose intolerent. was motile. got green nail, lens inf, uti, meningitis, burns, pneumonia. test- hemolysis. drink citrus juice for relief. wear a metallic armor with sheen
- Pneumonia
- Swimmer's ear (otitis externa)
- Hot tub folliculitis (jacuzzi fever)
- Shanghai fever
- Meningitis
- UTI
- Burn wound infections
- Green nail syndrome

- Ecthyma gangrenosum
- A/c osteomyelitis
- A/w nail or Drug abusers →Pseudomonas
- M/c/c → Staph Aureus
- Sickle cell → Salmonella
- Lens users in Ophthal
- Acanthameba
- Contact lens misuse
- Dirty contact lens
- Pseudomonas
- M/c/c of corneal ulcer in contact lens users
- Giant Papillary conjunctivitis
Pseudomonas
- Pigments - Enhanced on King's media
- Sweet fruity odor
- Iridescence (colonies with metallic shine)
- Use sugar
- Oxidation
- Motile
- NLF
- Agar - Beta hemolytic
- Selective Cetrimide agar
Pseudomonas Skin Infections
- Hot Tub Folliculitis:
- Cause: Pseudomonas
- History: Jacuzzi or public pool exposure
- Presentation: Monomorphic papules (especially trunk)

- Ecthyma Gangrenosum:
- Cause: Pseudomonas
- Ek (one) thyma - monas (mono)
- Erythema progressing to skin necrosis
- leading to necrotic crust/eschar
- Affected: Immunocompromised (e.g., HIV, hospitalized)
- Deep infection, leads to scar

General Treatment of Bacterial Infections
- Mild: Topical antibiotics
- Examples: Fusidic acid, Mupirocin, Bacitracin, Retapamulin
- Severe: Oral antibiotics
- Examples: Cloxacillin, Cephalosporins, Erythromycins, Amoxicillin
- (+ Clavulanic acid preferred)
Eschar seen in
- E: Ecthyma Gangrenosum
- S: Scrub typhus, Spider bite
- C: Cutaneous anthrax
NOTE: Ecthyma Types (Distinction):
- Ecthyma Contagiosum: Virus (Parapox → Orf virus)
- Ecthyma Infectiosum: Bacteria (Streptococcus)
- Ecthyma Gangrenosum: Bacteria (Pseudomonas)
Nosocomial Infections (MDR)
WHO priority organisms causing nosocomial infections having MDR
Mnemonic-ESKAPE
- Enterococcus faecium
- S. Aureus
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Acinetobacter baumanni
- Pseudomonas Aeruginosa
- Enterobacter species
Burkholderia cepacia
- Most common
- Most potent
- Antibiotic resistant to
- Aminoglycosides
- 1st-gen cephalosporins
- 2nd-gen cephalosporins (e.g. cefotetan)
- Carboxypenicillins
- Associated with chronic granulomatous disease and cystic fibrosis
Burkholderia mallei
- Seen in animals (glander's disease)
- Strauss reaction - inoculation guinea pig – causes testicular swelling
- Clinical features - skin ulcer, pneumonia, Scrotum swelled.
- mallei - full of animals and pig
Burkholderia Pseudomallei
- Meliodosis
- Also known as Vietnam time bomb/ Whitmore bacillus
- Culture = ASA → ashdown agar
- Microscopic appearance - safety pin appearance
- Treatment: carbapenem, imipenem
- Associated with bioterrorism
- pseudomallei ilu vietnam timebomb itt- only ashes-use safetypin for escape
HBB: hemophilus, bordetella, brucellosis
Haemophilus influenzae/ Pfeiffer Bacillus

Clinical Features
- Virulence factors - capsular polysaccharide
- 6 types: A-F
- Precaution: Hib PRP vaccine
- Meningitis
- Croup [laryngotracheobronchitis]
- Pneumonia
- Suppurative lesions
- Treatment: Cefotaxime or Ceftriaxone
Agar
- Does not grow in simple blood agar
- Need
- Chocolate agar
- Heating blood at 70 degree C → appear like chocolate → releases Factor V and X needed by H influenza for growth
- Blood agar + Staph Aureus
- Blood → Contains Factor X (Hematin)
- Staph aureus → Release Factor V (NAD) by hemolysis
- Satellitism Positive
- H. influenzae growth near the staph streak.

Blood Agar general note
Hemolysis | Seen in | Notes |
α - hemolysis (partial) | Pneumococcus | • Greenish-grey zone |
β - hemolysis (complete) | Staphylococcus | • Clear zone ↳ Narrow zone of hemolysis |
Both α and β hemolysis | Clostridium perfringens | • Double zone/Target hemolysis • Inner zone: α-toxin/ β hemolysis • Outer zone: θ-toxin/ α hemolysis • Complete inside, incomplete outside • α is incomplete, but our β is complete • write α and theta in that order from in to out |




H. Ducreyi

- Mnemonic: Ooi Oii → Cry → Baby
- Hint thannitt mullum (Muller hinton)
- Schoolil (school of fish) povum,
- railway trackil (rail road track) kuda nadakum,
- chocolate thinnond horse (chocolate horse blood) ride cheyyum
Ulcer Characteristics:
- Soft chancre
- painful soft genital ulcers.
- Non-indurated base.
- Floor with yellow necrotic tissue
- Undermined edges.
- Bleeds on touch.
Lymphadenopathy:
- Unilateral and tender
- Suppurative LN → Buboes
Gram Stain:

- Gram negative bacilli in chains
- "School of Fish"
- "Rail Road Track”

Investigation of Choice:
- Culture
- Mueller Hinton Agar + chocolate horse blood
- supplemented with isovitalex and fetal calf serum
Treatment:
- Single Dose T. Azithromycin 1 gram.
- If unavailable:
- Ceftriaxone 250 mg IM.
Important Information
- In syphilis - hard – painless chancre
Haemophilus Table

Bordetella Pertussis
For a 3-week-old baby suffering from a cough and sore throat, where the mother states that the baby experiences a sudden bout of coughing followed by temporary cessation of breathing, with a total leukocyte count exceeding 50,000 cells per microliter, which medication would you recommend for this patient?
A. Azithromycin
B. Amoxicillin
C. Cotrimoxazole
D. Clarithromycin
B. Amoxicillin
C. Cotrimoxazole
D. Clarithromycin
- Bordetella pertussis (also known as the 100-day cough)
- Toxin - PT (↑↑ CAMP)
- Disease: Whooping cough/pertussis
- Common in: Infants, especially unvaccinated
Phases of Whooping Cough
Catarrhal | Paroxysmal | Convalescent |
Dry cough, fever | Whoop cough | Recovery stage |
maximum infectivity | ㅤ | ㅤ |
Diagnostic Criteria
- Suspect if cough ≥14 days with no other cause + any of:
- Paroxysmal cough
- Worse at night, after feeding
- Inspiratory whoop
- Post-tussive vomiting
- Central cyanosis
- Undiagnosed apnoeic attacks (infants)
- May cause syncope/seizures from anoxia
- Marked lymphocytosis also seen
Investigations
- PCR (1st line):
- Best in first 3 weeks
- Fast and sensitive
- Swab type:
- Pernasal → infants/young children
- Nasopharyngeal → older children/adults
Characteristics
- Bordet - Gengou medium/ Regan Lowe
- Bisected pearls/mercury drops
- Aluminum paint appearance (confluent)
- M/E: thumb print appearance
- Boarderil gengiwar→ camp ketti→ 100 days war → they used mercury and aluminium paint for war
- Board il mercury drops- fuse to form aluminium paint- make thumb print out of it

- Drug of Choice:
- Macrolides (within 21 days of onset):
- Erythromycin > Azithromycin > Clarithromycin
- Admit infants <6 months
- Prevention: Acellular vaccine
- FHA, PT, AGG, PERT
- No complication
Complications
- Subconjunctival hemorrhage
- Pneumonia
- Bronchiectasis
- Seizures
Brucella

- Zoonotic disease
- TRIAD:
- Night sweat
- Arthritis
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Diagnosis
- Standard agglutination test → IgG, IgM Ab
- Treat with 2 mercaptoethanol → IgM destroyed
- IgM ko Marna
- Buzzwords
- Casteneda’s biphasic agar
- Rose Bengal test
- Milk ring test in animal ⇒ Purple ⇒ Positive
- Bengal nn vanna High caste standard cow

ㅤ | ㅤ |
Castanada stain | Scrub typhus |
Castanada medium | Brucella |
- Treatment
- Adults: Doxycycline × 45 days
- \+ Streptomycin I.M daily × 14 days
Agglutination Test | Organism | Notes |
Microscopic (MAT) | Leptospira | EMJH culture ↳ produce Dinger's ring Weil's disease • Ictero-Hemorrhagic fever/ • Hepatorenal syndrome |
Standard (SAT) | Brucella | • Casteneda’s biphasic agar • Rose Bengal test • Milk ring test in animal ⇒ Purple ⇒ Positive • COU positive ↳ Catalase, oxidase, urease positive |
Cold (CAT) | Mycoplasma | ㅤ |
Do not stain with Gram Stain
MRCS
- Mycoplasma
- Rickettsia
- Chlamydia
- Spirochetes
Mnemonic:
- for Mycoplasma
- Atypical Walking (walking pneumonia) people (PPLO agar) with CAT (Cold agglutination test) → Eat (Eaton agent) fried egg (fried egg colonies) and Dine (Diens stain) → No walls (cell wall deficient) and take steroids (steroid in cell membrane)
- for Diens
- Diens phenomenon → Proteus
- Diens stain → Mycoplasma
Spirochetes

Treponema | Borrelia | Leptospira |
Tight coils Corkscrew motility | Loose spirals Lashing motility | Hooked L Motility |
treponema- tight- pallilu screw cheyth | bore adikkumbo loose lashing | spiral hook |
Diseases
- T. Pallidium
- Venereal syphilis: STD
- Incubation period: 9 - 90 days
Syphilis Stages and Diagnosis


Stages | Notes |
Primary syphilis | • Hard Chancre," "Hunterian Chancre" • Single, painless, indurated ulcer • L.N → Painless, bilateral, rubbery • "Button Hole sign" (on touching ulcer). |
Secondary syphilis | Condylomata lata • Broad-based, flat, moist lesions on skin folds due to macerated papular syphilids → teeming with spirochetes → Very infective • Spread: Hematogenous. • "Great Imitator" Syphilids → Skin Lesions → Bilaterally symmetrical → Asymptomatic → Polymorphic (No vesicles or bullae) → Small hyperpigmented macules → Buschke Ollendorff sign Mucosal: Snail Track Ulcer Hair: Moth Eaten Alopecia Lymphadenopathy: Bilaterally symmetrical, epitrochlear lymph node common |
Tertiary syphilis | Cause: Hypersensitivity to persistent treponemes. Onset: 10-30 years after primary infection IOC: EIA Benign skin: ↳ Gumma (rubbery ulcer) → Granuloma with Histiocytes CVS ↳ Aortic aneurysm (most common). ↳ Tree bark aortitis [Cystic medial distortion] ↳ aortic regurgitation CNS ↳ General Paresis of Insane → Dementia + Palsy + Delusion/Hallucination ↳ ARP → Argyll Robertson Pupil ↳ Tabes dorsalis → DC/Lancinating pain |
Latent Syphilis | Serological evidence only (VDRL, TPHA, FTA-ABS positive); • No lesions. • Early Latent: <1 year. • Late Latent: >1 year (or 2 years). |
Relapsing Syphilis | Lesions similar to secondary syphilis ↳ "Chancre Redux" or "Monoresidive Chancre": Lesion at original chancre site. |
Congenital Syphilis | Early ↳ Snuffles (Persistent mucoid nasal discharge (infective)) ↳ Syphilitic Pemphigus (Vesicles and bullae) Late ↳ Hutchinson's Teeth (Peg-shaped central incisors) ↳ Mulberry Molars (Rounded molar cusps) ↳ Higoumenaki sign (rhagades or linear scars at the end of right clavicle) |
Guidelines for Follow-up
- Follow-up at 6, 12 and 24 months
Investigations:
Dark field microscope
- Cannot be stained with Geimsa
- Most sensitive and specific (for primary stage, chancre/lymph node).
- Spiral, slender, wavy organisms (spirochetes).
- Reflect the light transmitted by organism

Silver impregnation:
- Fontana Stain - fluid/films
- Levaditi stain: tissue
- silver pyrates live near fountain

Serological Diagnosis

Reagin Tests (Non-Treponemal Tests) (Non-specific)
- Become positive later
- Become negative → Helps in monitoring
- Includes
- Wasserman test (Complement Fixation Test)
- Kahn test
- VDRL
- RPR
- TRUST
- UST
- RST

VDRL | RPR (rapid plasma reagin) |
Serum (preheating needed) | No fluid prepared |
Cardiolipin Ag (use within 24 hours) | Not needed |
Agglutination (slide based test) | Not needed - card test |
VDRL
- Purified lipid extract of beef heart + lecithin + cholesterol
- Use all samples - blood as well as CSF
- IOC for Neurosyphilis → CSF sample


Treponemal Tests (Specific)
- Become positive first
- Do not help in monitoring
ㅤ | ㅤ |
FTA - ABS ↳ Fluorescent Treponemal Antibody Assay | Sensitive and specific |
TPI ↳ Treponema pallidum Immobilization Assay | Specific |
TPHA ↳ Treponema pallidum Hemagglutination Assay | ㅤ |
TPPA ↳ Treponema pallidum Particulate Agglutination Assay | (2nd specific) |
- Most Specific blood test:
- FTA-ABS > TPPA
- Earliest Positive:
- IgM Capita > FTA-ABS
- Most Sensitive:
- IgM Capita > FTA-ABS
- Screening:
- VDRL or RPR (RPR cards for field).
- IOC
- Primary Syphilis: DGM.
- Secondary Syphilis: FTA-ABS.
- Tertiary Syphilis: Enzyme Immunoassay.
- Neurosyphilis: CSF Examination.
- Monitoring Activity: VDRL
Treatment:
- Standard: Injection Benzathine Penicillin.
- Adult Dose:
- 2.4 million units IM single dose (1.2M each buttock).
- Duration:
- Single dose: Primary, Secondary, Early Latent.
- Three doses (weekly): Late Latent, CVS, Benign Tertiary.
- Child Dose:
- 50,000 units/kg IM
- up to adult dose
- Special Cases (Cannot cross barriers):
- Neurosyphilis, Congenital Syphilis:
- Drug of Choice: Aqueous Crystalline Penicillin IV.
- Alternative: Procaine Penicillin + Probenecid.
- Allergic to penicillin:
- Desensitize the patient
- because Penicillin is the most effective drug ????
- Doxycyline
- In pregnancy

Borrelia
vincet() dutta() recurrent ayitt hole burr cheyth bunglowil()

Borrelia Burgdorferi
- Most common in the USA.
- Causes Lyme disease.
- Transmitted by IXODID TICKS (Hard ticks) bite.
- Localised infection presents as:
- Annular/bull's eye/target rash.
- Also known as Erythema chronicum migrans.

- Treatment
- DOC - Doxycycline
- In complicated Lyme - Cephalosporins
- bunglow wasnt lyme. it was hard and migrant
B. recurrentis
- Relapsing Fever
- Epidemic → Louse Borne
- love spread like epidemic recur again
B. duttoni
- Causes Endemic Louse Borne Relapsing Fever.
- Treatment:
- Tetracyclines.
- Chloramphenicol.
- There is no vaccine.
- Diagnosis:
- Collect blood samples during a fever.
Borrelia Vincentii
- Causes Vincent's angina.
- Characterised by:
- Ulcerative gingivostomatitis.
- Oropharyngitis.
Leptospira


- Has hooked ends.
- Causes Weil's disease.
- Ictero-Hemorrhagic fever
- Hepatorenal syndrome.
- Jaundice is a key clinical feature.
- Spread via rat urine contaminating rainy water.
- Rice field workers are commonly affected.
- Laboratory diagnosis:
- EMJH culture media - produce Dinger's ring
- Serology is the best method.
- Microscopic Agglutination Test (MAT) is preferred.

Agglutination Test | Organism | Notes |
Microscopic (MAT) | Leptospira | EMJH culture ↳ produce Dinger's ring Weil's disease • Ictero-Hemorrhagic fever/ • Hepatorenal syndrome |
Standard (SAT) | Brucella | • Casteneda’s biphasic agar • Rose Bengal test • Milk ring test in animal ⇒ Purple ⇒ Positive • COU positive ↳ Catalase, oxidase, urease positive |
Cold (CAT) | Mycoplasma | ㅤ |
Do not stain with Gram Stain
MRCS
- Mycoplasma
- Rickettsia
- Chlamydia
- Spirochetes
Mnemonic:
- for Mycoplasma
- Atypical Walking (walking pneumonia) people (PPLO agar) with CAT (Cold agglutination test) → Eat (Eaton agent) fried egg (fried egg colonies) and Dine (Diens stain) → No walls (cell wall deficient) and take steroids (steroid in cell membrane)
- for Diens
- Diens phenomenon → Proteus
- Diens stain → Mycoplasma
Bacteriology - Chlamydia and Rickettsiae
Chlamydia
- Mnemonic: AABCC.
- Atypical bacteria
- Obtains ATP from its host - ATP parasites
- Forms Basophils bacterial inclusions
- Cannot be cultured
- it is obligate intracellular
- Rick (Ricketsia) has clamy (Chalmydia) cock (Coxiella)
- So he always Stay inside
- Lacks a Peptidoglycan cell wall.
- Cause Reiter’s syndrome
- Exists in two forms, ie Biphasic developmental cycle
- Elementary body (EB)
- Infectious form
- Mnemonic: EEEE.
- Extracellular, Enters and Exits.
- Has DNA=RNA.
- Reticulate body (RB)
- Mnemonic: RRR.
- Replicates.
- Has RNA>DNA.
Culture medium for Chlamydia
- Urethral discharge shows no organism on Gram staining
- McCoy cell culture
- Iodine stained inclusion bodies on microscopy
- “McCoy () Cat Chases (Chlamydia) Iodine () Fish.”Investigation:

Investigations
- NAAT
- CFT
Chlamydia trachomatis serotypes:
Serotypes | Causes |
A, B, Ba, C | • TraChoma |
D, E, F, G, H, I, K (no J) | • Non-Gonococcal Urethritis (NGU) • Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome • Inclusion conjunctivitis • Ophthalmia neonatorum |
L1, L2, L3 | • LGV |
Chlamydia pneumoniae | • TWAR strain • Pneumono |
Chlamydia psittaci | • Causes Psittacosis. • Has several serotypes |
Inclusion Bodies:
- Halberstadter-Prowazeki bodies (HP) are seen in trachoma.
- Levinthal cole lillie body is seen in C. Psittaci.

Trachoma/Egyptian Ophthalmia:
- Agent: Chlamydia Trachomatis (immune type A, B, C)
- IP (Incubation Period): 5-12 days
- Age: 0-10 years (average: 2-5 years)
- Most common cause of preventive blindness in adults.
- DOC (Drug of Choice): Azithromycin 20mg/kg oral single dose.
Stages of Trachoma
- Stage 1: Incipient
- Immature follicles, asymptomatic
- Stage 2: Established
- Typical lesions, no scarring
- Stage 3: Cicatrising
- Scarring + active infection
- Stage 4: Healed
- Only scarring, disease quiet

- Eliminated in 2024, Not eradicated
- Spread: Finger, fly, fomites.

- Signs:
- Sago grain follicles + papillae.
- Arlt’s line:
- Line of cicatrization from concurrent inflammation & healing.
- Herbert’s pits:
- At limbus
- Pannus:
- Vascularization of cornea.
- Mnemonic: Trachoma → Trackil odan Horse power venam (Halb Prow). Odikondirunnapo oru Panni (Pannus) Pit (Herberts Pits) undakki Grains (Sago grains) ittu vachu. But safe (SAFE) ayi line (Arlts) cross cheyth

- Diagnosis:
- Halberstaedter–Prowazek bodies (cytoplasmic inclusion bodies).
- Treatment (SAFE strategy):
- Surgery → for trichiasis → leading cause of blindness in trachoma
- Antibiotics: Azithromycin 1 gm single dose (Stat).
- Facial cleanliness.
- Environment changes.
- GET strategy

- Complication → Blindness:
- Infections → Inflammation → Scarring of eyelids → Trichiasis → Irritation of cornea by eyelashes → Corneal opacity.
Ophthalmia Neonatorum
- Onset & Cause:
Time of Onset | Cause | Notes |
Within first 6 hours | Chemical conjunctivitis | • Due to (silver nitrate) • Rx: Eye lubricant |
24–48 hours | Neisseria gonorrhoeae | • Most severe • DOC: Ceftriaxone or cefotaxime |
Around 1 week | Chlamydia trachomatis (D–K) | • Most common • DOC: Oral erythromycin |
- Prevention:
- Erythromycin eye ointment (first 2 hrs).
- Crede’s method (obsolete; used silver nitrate).
- Ophthalmia Neonatorum Child → (Neisseria Chalmydia)
Lymphogranuloma Venereum (LGV)


- Other Names:
- "Climatic Bubo," "Lymphogranuloma Inguinale."
- Causative Organism:
- Chlamydia trachomatis
- serovars L1, L2 (m/c), L3.
- Incubation: 3-30 days.
- Ulcer Stage: Very transient (hardly seen).
Stage | Ulcer |
Primary stage | • Transient ulcer |
Secondary stage | • Inguinal syndrome |
Tertiary stage | • Genito acro crural syndrome • Excessive Lymphatic involvement |
Features
- Mnemonic: ABCDEFG
- Asymptomatic
- Buboes (painful)
- C. trachomatis
- Conjunctivitis
- Urethritis
- Polyarthritis
- Doxycycline - treatment
- Esthiomene (rectal and vulvar strictures)
- Fries test - skin test for LGV
- Complication: Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome
- Groove sign
- curtain in groove
- esthiomene ne fry cheyth door nte adutgh

Presentation:
- Buboes/Enlarged Lymphadenopathy:
- Usually unilateral
- inflamed, painful, tender (can be bilateral).
- Patients often limp due to pain.
- Lymph nodes are fluctuant, matted, suppurate (leaving multiple sinuses).
Sign:
- "Groove Sign of Greenblatt"
- taut Poupart's ligament separating femoral and inguinal nodes

Complications:
- Males: "Sexophone Penis."

- Females: "Vulval Elephantiasis"
- Esthiomene - painless due to blocked lymph glands.

Investigation:
- NAAT
- CFT
Treatment:
- Doxycycline 100 mg twice daily for three weeks.
- Alternative: Erythromycin.
Rickettsia
- Arthroborne.
- Typically associated with rashes.
- R. prowazekii, R. typhi ⇒ not palms and soles
Disease | Causative agent | Reservoir | Incubation period | DOC | Mnemonic |
Endemic (murine) typhus | R. Typhi ↳ Flea | Rodents | 12 days | Tetracycline | Ende Typhi Flee ayi |
Epidemic typhus | R. Prowazekii ↳ Louse | Human, rodents | - | - | Epic Power Lies |
Trench fever | Bartonella quintana ↳ Louse | Human | - | - | Trench il quintel kanakkin louse |
Mediterranean spotted fever (Indian tick typhus) | R. Conorii ↳ Tick | Dogs | 3-7 days | Tetracycline | India yil Corona |
African Tick Typhus | R. africae ↳ Tick | ㅤ | ㅤ | ㅤ | ㅤ |
Rocky mountain spotted fever | R. Rickettsii ↳ Tick | Dogs, rodents | - | - | ㅤ |
Rickettsial pox | R. Akari ↳ Mite | Mice | - | Tetracycline | ㅤ |
Scrub typhus | R. Orientia tsutsugamushi ↳ Mite | Rodents | 10-12 days | Tetracycline | Orient express scrub cheyyan mightyavanam |
Q fever | Coxiella Burnetii ↳ Soft tick (inhalational) | Sheep, cattle, goat | 2-3 weeks | Doxycycline | ㅤ |
India, Africa, rocky mountain → Tick
Disease | Rash spread |
Epidemic Typhus | Trunk to extremities |
Endemic Typhus | Trunk to extremities |
RMSF | Palms and soles involved Exception: Extremities to trunk |
- Brill Zinsser disease/recrudescent typhus/reactivation typhus.
- Less severe.
- Has no vector.
- Associated with Epidemic typhus.
- Scrub Typhus:
- Chigger-borne disease.
- Zoonotic tetrad.
- Transmitted by trombiculid mites.
- Infection carried by rats/squirrels.
- Chiggers/larvae infect humans.
- Presents with an eschar in moist areas (axilla, groin).
Eschar seen in
- E: Ecthyma Gangrenosum
- S: Scrub typhus, Spider bite
- C: Cutaneous anthrax
NOTE: Ecthyma Types (Distinction):
- Ecthyma Contagiosum: Virus (Parapox → Orf virus)
- Ecthyma Infectiosum: Bacteria (Streptococcus)
- Ecthyma Gangrenosum: Bacteria (Pseudomonas)

(Neil mooser reaction positive)
- Neil Mooser Reaction/
Tunica Reaction (in guinea pigs): - R. Prowazekii:
- Negative reaction.
- R. Typhi: Positive reaction
- scrotal inflammation

Note

- He is Macho (Machiavello stain), Gym (Giemsa stain) and on Custody (Castanada stain) → Weli chaadi (Weil felix reaction) → using proteins (Weil felix → Use Proteus)
- Scrub cheyyunnavan says ok to everything (OXK positive on Weil felix)
- Eats egg (Yolk sac) → Yoyo CAR Mnemonic
ㅤ | ㅤ |
Castanada stain | Scrub typhus |
Castanada medium | Brucella |
Sandfly does not transmit:
A. Kala azar
B. Oriental sore
C. Oraya fever
D. Trench fever
B. Oriental sore
C. Oraya fever
D. Trench fever
Lab diagnosis of rickettsial infections:
- Do not stain well with Gram staining
- Special stains:
- Giemsa
- Castaneda
- Macchiavello
- Culture:
- Yolk sac of embryonated hen's egg
- Cell lines (vero, hela, hep2, detroit 6).
- Weil Felix Reaction:
- Heterophile agglutination test.
- Detects antibodies against rickettsia using Proteus antigens

- Treatment:
- Doxycycline.
- Tetracycline.
NOTE
- Ehrilichia → Monocyte
- Anaplasma → Granulocyte
- GAME
Coxiella



Granuloma Type | Associated Conditions |
Donut Granuloma | • Q fever • Allopurinol drug reaction • Donut → Aalu Perotta (Allopurinol) vangan Q |
Durck Granuloma | • Cerebral malaria by Plasmodium falciparum • Special stain: Field stain • Attaches to ICAM • False (Falciparum) Truck (Duruk) in a Field () • got in camera (ICAM) |
- Coxiella burnetii causes Q fever
- Typically through inhalation.
- It is an intracellular parasite.
- Q fever is characterised by Doughnut granuloma.
- This is a fibrin ring granuloma.
- Coxiella has:
- No vector.
- No Weil Felix reaction.
- No rash.
- No Giemsa stain
- Not killed on pasturisation
- Only one culture positive for IE
- Drug of choice: Tetracycline.
- Burnetti - To buy doughnut()-4 cycle() in Que()
Arthropod Borne Infections

Bartonella bacilliformis | Bartonella quintana | Bartonella henselae |
• Oroya fever / Carrion disease | • 5-day / trench fever | • Cat scratch disease • B. angiomatosis (HIV) • Peliosis Hepatis |
Vector – sand fly | Vector – louse | ㅤ |
Sandil carry cheythapo oranju | ㅤ | 5 () hen (), cat (), Peeli () |

- Louse- epidemic- recurrent-last in trench
- CAT Scratch:
- Associated with LGV.
- Associated with Stellate necrotizing Granuloma
Mycoplasma/Eaton's Agent

- Joker/Mollicute → No Cell Wall
- ⇒ β lactam/Vancomycin not effective
- Most common cause of:
- Walking pneumonia.
- Atypical CAP.
- Known as a Pleuropneumonia Like Organism (PPLO).
- On PPLO agar, it forms fried egg colonies.
- It produces tiny colonies.
- Shows a cold agglutination test d/t
- cell wall deficiency
- cell membrane contains steroid.
- Is stained by Diene's stain.
- Diene's phenomenon is shown by proteus.
- Treatment:
- DOC is macrolide

ㅤ | Cold | Egg |
Yersenia | Enrichment | Bulls eye |
Mycoplasma | Agglutination | Fried egg |
Legionella
- Spread: Aerosol → causes epidemics
- Source:
- Air conditioners, cooling towers
- Water transmission
- Atypical Pneumonia
- Bibasal consolidation
- Features
- Bradycardia
- Hyponatremia
- Water transmission
- Requires L-cysteine & Yeast extract for growth
- BCYE (Buffered Charcoal yeast agar) culture medium
- Ground glass colonies
- Buy legion laptop
- Aerosolized bacteria: Survive long, travel long distances
- No Reservoir
- No human-to-human spread
- No carrier state
Agglutination Test | Organism | Notes |
Microscopic (MAT) | Leptospira | EMJH culture ↳ produce Dinger's ring Weil's disease • Ictero-Hemorrhagic fever/ • Hepatorenal syndrome |
Standard (SAT) | Brucella | • Casteneda’s biphasic agar • Rose Bengal test • Milk ring test in animal ⇒ Purple ⇒ Positive • COU positive ↳ Catalase, oxidase, urease positive |
Cold (CAT) | Mycoplasma | ㅤ |
Do not stain with Gram Stain
MRCS
- Mycoplasma
- Rickettsia
- Chlamydia
- Spirochetes
Mnemonic:
- for Mycoplasma
- Atypical Walking (walking pneumonia) people (PPLO agar) with CAT (Cold agglutination test) → Eat (Eaton agent) fried egg (fried egg colonies) and Dine (Diens stain) → No walls (cell wall deficient) and take steroids (steroid in cell membrane)
- for Diens
- Diens phenomenon → Proteus
- Diens stain → Mycoplasma
The bacters
- Catalase positive
- Oxidase positive
- Spiral organisms
Campylobacter jejuni

- Thermophilic
- Grows at 42°C
- Incubation period: 1 week
- Mode: Ingestion
- Camping- 1 week- hot - 42degree - poultry- watery diarrhea- shooting star and gulwing
Clinical Features
- Watery diarrhea
- GBS / Reiter syndrome
Laboratory
- Campy BAP / Skirrow medium / Butzler agar
- Droplet-like colonies
- Comma / S / gull-wing shaped
- Shooting star / darting motility
- Also in Vibrio cholerae
Helicobacter pylori

- Catalase, oxidase, urease positive.
- COU positive
- Diseases caused:
- Gastritis.
- Peptic Ulcer disease.
- Attributed to cag A and vac A.
- Maltoma of stomach
- Adenocarcinoma Stomach
- Stains used:
- Warthin-Starry Silver (black),
- Modified Giemsa (blue).
CLO Test

Revision: Toxins and Their Mechanisms
Toxins that decrease protein synthesis (Mnemonic: DPSS)
- Diphtheria toxin
- Pseudomonas Exotoxin A
- Shiga toxin (Shigella)
- Shiga-like toxin/Verocytotoxin (E. coli)
- Mechanisms of action:
- Diphtheria toxin and Exotoxin A of Pseudomonas:
- Cause ADP ribosylation of Elongation Factor-2 (Ef2).
- ⛔ protein synthesis.
- Shiga and Shiga-like toxins:
- Directly ⛔ 60S ribosomes.
Toxin Action
Toxin Action | Associated Toxins |
↑↑ cAMP | • Cholera • Anthrax • ETEC (labile toxin) • Pertussis |
↑↑ cGMP | • ETEC (stable toxin) • Bacillus cereus |
Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (AST)
Method | Medium | MIC Obtained | Detects Resistance | Basis |
Kirby Bauer Disk Diffusion | MHA | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | Zone of inhibition |
E-test (E-strip) | MHA | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | Zone & MIC on strip |
Broth Dilution | MHB | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | Turbidity |
PCR (Genotypic) | NA (molecular) | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | Resistance gene detection |
1. Phenotypic Methods (Culture-Based)
A. Kirby Bauer Disk Diffusion


- Most common
- Medium: Mueller Hinton Agar (MHA)
- Qualitative test
- MIC: ❌ Not obtained
- Drug sensitivity Obtained
- Principle: Antibiotic diffuses from disk → inhibits bacterial growth → Zone of inhibition
- Interpretation:
- Zone present → Antibiotic sensitive
- Zone absent → Antibiotic resistant
B. E-test
- Epsilon strip method
- Medium: Mueller Hinton Agar (MHA)
- MIC: ✅ Obtained
- Point where inhibition zone meets the strip


C. Broth Dilution Method (Gold Standard)
- Medium: Mueller Hinton Broth (MHB)
- MIC: ✅ Obtained
- Serial dilutions of antibiotic + bacteria → observe turbidity
- Clear = Sensitive
- Cloudy = Resistant

2. Genotypic Method (Molecular-Based)
PCR ⇒ CBNAAT
- Detect resistance genes
- EX: CBNAAT detects MTB
- If rpoB gene detected (➕) ⇒ Rifampicin resistance