Deck 13: Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing

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Question
What is the most widely used method of inoculum standardization?

A) McFarland turbidity standards
B) Remel inoculum standards
C) Becton-Dickson standards
D) Difco standards
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Question
When should antimicrobial susceptibility testing be performed on a bacterial isolate from a clinical specimen?

A) When the isolate is determined to be a probable cause of the patient's infection
B) When the susceptibility of the isolate to particular antimicrobial agents cannot be reliably predicted
C) a and b
D) None of the above
Question
Once the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)is determined,the organism is interpreted as:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) All of the above
Question
Two antibiotics are contraindicated in pediatric patients.They are:

A) Erythromycin and Augmentin
B) Cleocin and Zithromax
C) Tetracycline and Ceclor
D) Tetracycline and fluoroquinolones
Question
How are antibiotics chosen for inclusion into laboratory antimicrobial testing protocols?

A) There are no set standards, because physicians demand which drugs they want tested for particular bugs each time an antimicrobial susceptibility test is performed.
B) The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) sets the standard for drugs that must be tested for each type of specimen.
C) It is important that the drugs tested by the laboratory match as closely as possible the institutional formulary.
D) The patient population decides the drugs included in the laboratory's testing protocols.
Question
Guidance for the development of a selective-reporting or cascade-reporting protocol for antibiotics is available from the:

A) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
B) Clinical Laboratory and Standards Institute (CLSI)
C) United States Army Medical Research Institute (USAMRIID)
D) Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
Question
Why are aminoglycosides not an effective treatment for meningitis?

A) They do not cross the blood-brain barrier.
B) They are nephrotoxic and will harm the patient's kidneys.
C) They are ototoxic and will harm the patient's ears.
D) They are not effective against Neisseria, Streptococcus, or Haemophilus.
Question
What McFarland standard provides turbidity comparable to that of a bacterial suspension containing approximately 1.5 ´ 10⁸ CFU/mL?

A) 1.0
B) 1.5
C) 0.5
D) 2.0
Question
Other important factors must be considered when determining whether antimicrobial susceptibility testing is warranted,including:

A) The body site from which the organism was isolated
B) The presence of other bacteria and the quality of the specimen from which the organism was grown
C) The host's status
D) All the above
Question
Many times,antimicrobial susceptibility testing includes drugs that are inappropriate for reporting.What does the technician do?

A) A drug should not be indiscriminately reported because results may be misleading.
B) If the drug is tested, the results are reported because the technician does not know what antibiotic was prescribed to the patient.
C) The technician reports this immediately to the microbiology supervisor because this is a wasteful practice.
D) The technician only reports on the drugs to which the bacteria are sensitive.
Question
Why would normal flora isolates from immunosuppressed patients undergo antimicrobial susceptibility testing?

A) These are not normal florae; they are other potential pathogens that have the colonial morphology as normal florae.
B) Species usually viewed as normal florae may be responsible for an infection in an immunosuppressed patient.
C) All bacteria isolated from immunosuppressed patients must have antimicrobial susceptibility tests performed.
D) Cultures from immunosuppressed patients only grow pathogenic organisms that must undergo antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
Question
When would it be appropriate for an institution to routinely test group C agents?

A) For urinary tract infections
B) If a particular institution routinely encounters large numbers of isolates resistant to group A and group B agents
C) For blood cultures
D) If a particular institution routinely encounters large numbers of isolates susceptible to group A and group B agents
Question
A 12-year-old girl goes to the doctor complaining of a sore throat,fever,headache,and general malaise.The doctor does a quick strep test that is positive for group A b-hemolytic Streptococcus.No antibiotic testing is needed because Streptococcus is:

A) Universally susceptible to penicillin
B) Universally susceptible to erythromycin
C) Not treated in throat cultures
D) Not considered a pathogen in the throat
Question
Why should antimicrobial susceptibility testing of normal flora isolates or isolates likely to represent contamination or colonization not be performed?

A) This may encourage a physician to treat a normal condition.
B) This will expose normal florae to various antibiotics and cause resistance to develop.
C) The amount of antibiotic needed to kill all of the normal florae in a site can cause toxic effects to the patient.
D) Antimicrobial susceptibility testing should be performed on all bacteria isolated from the patient.
Question
What is the most critical step in any susceptibility test?

A) Plate streaking
B) Organism isolation
C) Gram stain identification
D) Inoculum preparation
Question
The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)is:

A) The lowest antibiotic concentration to slow the growth of an organism.
B) The highest antibiotic concentration to slow the growth of an organism.
C) The lowest antibiotic concentration to inhibit the growth of an organism.
D) The highest antibiotic concentration to inhibit the growth of an organism.
Question
A primary tenet of antimicrobial therapy is to use:

A) The least toxic agents
B) The most cost-effective agents
C) The most clinically effective agents
D) All of the above
Question
What antibiotics should be reported for urinary tract infections?

A) Group A antibiotics
B) Group B antibiotics
C) Urinary tract active agents
D) Group C antibiotics
Question
As a general guideline,it is suggested that within a particular antimicrobial class,primary (group A)agents be reported first and secondary (group B)agents be reported only if:

A) The physician insists that a secondary agent be reported.
B) The hospital pharmacy no longer stocks the group A agent.
C) The patient cannot tolerate the primary agents.
D) The FDA has recalled the primary agents.
Question
What concentrations of antibiotics are tested in minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs)?

A) Serial fivefold dilution concentrations are tested.
B) Serial tenfold dilution concentrations are tested.
C) Serial onefold dilution concentrations are tested.
D) Serial twofold dilution concentrations are tested.
Question
When reading broth microdilution minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)testing,the MIC for a particular drug is:

A) The lowest concentration showing no obvious growth
B) The highest concentration showing no obvious growth
C) The lowest concentration showing confluent growth
D) The highest concentration showing confluent growth
Question
On a breakpoint panel,when there is growth in the low concentration but no growth in the high concentration,the isolate is:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) None of the above
Question
What is the approximate final concentration of organisms in each well of a microdilution tray?

A) 3 ´ 105 colony-forming units (CFU)/mL
B) 1 ´ 105 CFU/mL
C) 4 ´ 105 CFU/mL
D) 5 ´ 105 CFU/mL
Question
On a breakpoint panel,when there is growth in both wells,the isolate is:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) None of the above
Question
A zone of inhibition is:

A) The area on the agar plate where the drug no longer diffuses into the agar
B) The area around the antibiotic disk where the bacteria cannot not grow
C) The zone around the edge of the plate where the streaking does not cover the agar and bacterial growth is inhibited
D) All of the above
Question
After the plate is incubated in the Kirby-Bauer test,what occurs?

A) The plate is tested to make sure an isolated organism grew on the plate.
B) The diameter of each inhibition zone for each antibiotic is measured using a ruler or caliper.
C) The amount of carbon dioxide in the plate is measured to ensure confluent organism growth.
D) None of the above.
Question
Once zone measurements have been made,the millimeter reading for each antimicrobial agent is:

A) Sent to the physician to determine the appropriateness of antibiotic therapy for his patient
B) Converted into minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) units
C) Interpreted as susceptible, intermediate, or resistant
D) None of the above
Question
In terms of MIC microdilution trays,a skipped well occurs when:

A) When a well on the tray is skipped with inoculum and it does not grow
B) When the inoculator is turned around and the sterility well is accidentally inoculated and the growth well is accidentally skipped
C) When there is growth at higher concentrations and no growth at one or more of the lower concentration wells
D) None of the above
Question
In this type of antimicrobial susceptibility test,a McFarland 0.5 standardized suspension of bacteria is swabbed over the surface of a Mueller-Hinton agar plate,and paper disks containing single concentrations of each antimicrobial agent are placed onto the inoculated surface.What is the name of this test?

A) Kirby-Bauer
B) MIC
C) Breakpoint
D) Agar dilution
Question
What agencies develop the zone interpretive criteria?

A) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Army Medical Research Institute (USAMRIID)
B) U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and CDC
C) FDA and Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)
D) CLSI and CDC
Question
On a breakpoint panel,when two concentrations are tested and no growth is present in either well,the isolate is:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) None of the above
Question
Agar dilution and disk diffusion tests for Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus spp.use:

A) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with X and V factors
B) Columbia base supplemented with 5% sheep blood
C) Trypticase soy agar base supplemented with 5% lysed horse blood
D) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with 5% sheep blood
Question
A patient is admitted to the hospital with a diagnosis of endocarditis.Two separate blood cultures grow out viridans streptococci.The penicillin minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)of the organism is 0.12 µg/mL.What antibiotic should the physician prescribe?

A) Penicillin
B) Erythromycin
C) Clindamycin
D) Gentamicin
Question
What is the storage temperature for frozen panels?

A) 0° C
B) -20° to -70° C
C) -75° to -100° C
D) 273 K
Question
What broth is recommended in the tube dilution minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)tests?

A) Trypticase soy
B) Mueller-Hinton
C) Columbia
D) Cooked meat
Question
The broth microdilution minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)test uses these for the testing.

A) Test tubes
B) Plastic strips
C) Multiwell microdilution trays
D) Multiwell macrodilution trays
Question
Note that for some antimicrobial agents,different minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)interpretive criteria exist for:

A) Organisms or organism groups
B) Anatomical sites
C) Age groups
D) Immune status
Question
In this method of antimicrobial susceptibility testing,specific volumes of various concentrations of antimicrobial solutions are dispensed into premeasured volumes of molten and cooled agar,which is subsequently poured into standard Petri dishes.Organisms are inoculated onto the plate.What type of antimicrobial susceptibility testing is this?

A) Macrodilution
B) Broth dilution
C) Disk diffusion
D) Agar dilution
Question
In the Kirby-Bauer test,what is used to grow streptococci that do not grow adequately on unsupplemented Mueller-Hinton agar?

A) Chocolate agar
B) PEA agar
C) Mueller-Hinton agar with 5% sheep blood
D) Mueller-Hinton agar with 5% rabbit blood
Question
What is a breakpoint panel?

A) A standard minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) panel that contains many more dilution wells for each drug tested
B) A MIC panel with only three or four drugs tested
C) A MIC panel with only one or a few concentrations of each drug
D) A MIC panel that contains nonroutine drugs
Question
How many hours of incubation are necessary for the antimicrobial susceptibility test run on the BD Phoenix?

A) 6 to 8 hours
B) 8 to 12 hours
C) 12 to 18 hours
D) 24 hours
Question
What antibiotics are active against extended-spectrum b lactamases (ESBL)-producing strains of bacteria?

A) Cephalosporins
B) Penicillins
C) Carbapenems
D) Aztreonam
Question
In vitro testing conditions that can be modified to enhance the expression of oxacillin resistance include all the following EXCEPT:

A) Use Mueller-Hinton media
B) Making final test readings after a full 24 hours of incubation
C) Incubation of tests at temperatures no greater than 35° C
D) Preparation of inocula using the direct inoculum suspension procedure
Question
When testing Escherichia coli,Klebsiella spp.,and Proteus mirabilis,which drug is mostly likely to indicate the presence of an extended-spectrum b-lactamases (ESBL)?

A) Aztreonam
B) Cefpodoxime
C) Ceftriaxone
D) Ceftazidime
Question
What principle does the MicroScan Walkaway SI use to determine antimicrobial susceptibility?

A) Redox indicator system
B) Turbidimetry
C) Hydrolysis of a bioluminescent substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
Question
How long are minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)panels for anaerobes incubated?

A) 24 Hours
B) 36 Hours
C) 48 Hours
D) 72 Hours
Question
What type of antimicrobial susceptibility testing method does Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)recommend for anaerobes?

A) Microdilution
B) Agar dilution
C) Tube broth macrodilution
D) Disk diffusion
Question
Oxacillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus is called:

A) Methicillin-resistant S. aureus
B) Oxacillin-resistant S. aureus
C) Penicillin-resistant S. aureus
D) Penicillinase-resistant S. aureus
Question
Which enterococcus is/are the most common species demonstrating vancomycin resistance among clinical isolates?

A) Enterococcus faecium
B) E. faecalis
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
Question
To obtain a bactericidal effect in enterococci,ampicillin or penicillin must be given in combination with:

A) Macrolides
B) Peptidoglycans
C) Cephalosporins
D) Aminoglycosides
Question
When performing disk diffusion testing with Haemophilus influenzae and Haemophilus parainfluenzae,what type of medium used?

A) Mueller-Hinton with 5% sheep blood
B) Mueller-Hinton with hematin and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)
C) Mueller-Hinton with 5% lysed horse blood
D) Mueller-Hinton
Question
Oxacillin-resistant staphylococci can appear susceptible in vitro to other b-lactam agents such as:

A) Quinolones
B) Tetracyclines
C) Cephalosporins
D) Aminoglycosides
Question
The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)has published methods for susceptibility testing of several agents of potential bioterrorism,including Brucella anthracis,Yersinia pestis,Burkholderia mallei,B.pseudomallei,Francisella tularensis,and Brucella spp.How does CLSI suggest clinical laboratories perform antimicrobial susceptibility testing on these isolates?

A) Use the agar dilution technique.
B) Use the Kirby-Bauer method.
C) Use the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) plates.
D) Do not attempt to perform antimicrobial susceptibility on any of these isolates; refer them to a public health laboratory equipped to handle them.
Question
What principle does the TREK ARIS 2X System use to determine antimicrobial susceptibility?

A) Redox indicator system
B) Turbidimetry
C) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
Question
Spontaneous mutations occur in the b-lactamase genes that result in extended-spectrum b-lactamases (ESBL).These ESBL inactivate:

A) Cephalosporins
B) Penicillins
C) Aztreonam
D) All of the above
Question
Therapy of disseminated meningococcal infections and various types of gonococcal infections are:

A) Hard to treat and require special β-lactamase tests
B) An important public health concern, so a full spectrum of antimicrobial susceptibility testing is always performed
C) Generally empiric based on recommendations of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
D) None of the above
Question
A man goes to his doctor because he has a cloudy substance dripping from his penis.A Gram stain is performed and gram-negative intracellular diplococci are observed.What is the drug of choice to treat this infection?

A) Gentamicin
B) Erythromycin
C) Vancomycin
D) Ceftriaxone
Question
On what media is Kirby-Bauer testing for Neisseria gonorrhoeae performed?

A) GC agar base supplemented with various nutrients
B) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with vancomycin
C) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with X and V factors
D) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with biotin, X and V factors
Question
The BD Phoenix system uses this principle to measure bacterial growth in the susceptibility test wells.

A) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic growth substrate
B) Turbidimetric detection
C) Carbon dioxide concentration
D) Redox indicator system
Question
What principle do most current automated antimicrobial susceptibility instruments use to read growth?

A) Turbidimetric detection
B) Turbidity suppression
C) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic growth substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
Question
A microbiology technologist is performing a b-lactamase test on a staphylococci isolated from a hospitalized patient.The test was negative,so the technologist reported out in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility test results for b-lactam antibiotics.After 2 days,the patient was not improving and the physician changed the patient's antibiotic to an aminoglycoside.The patient showed improvement immediately.Why was the b-lactamase test on the staphylococci negative,when the organism produced b-lactamase?

A) The test was a false negative-the organism really did produce b-lactamase, but it did not react with the test.
B) Staphylococci must be exposed to the b-lactam agent before it will produce a positive test result.
C) The test was a false positive-the organism reacted with the test, but it did not produce a b-lactamase.
D) The staphylococci on the plate were more than 24 hours old and false-negative test results can occur when an "old" organism is used.
Question
What principle does the VITEK series use to determine antimicrobial susceptibility?

A) Turbidimetry
B) Redox indicator system
C) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
Question
If the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)or zone size is interpreted as intermediate using the latest Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)tables:

A) The clinical interpretation of the result is that the patient's infecting organism should respond to therapy with that antimicrobial agent using the dosage recommended normally for that type of infection and that species.
B) The patient's infecting organism is unlikely to be inhibited by the usually achievable concentrations of the antimicrobial agent based on the dosages normally used with that drug.
C) The patient's infecting organism is likely to require the maximum amount of antimicrobial or more than can be achieved and for which the clinical response is likely to be less than with a susceptible strain.
D) None of the above.
Question
A drug will generally inhibit multiplication of the bacteria so that the patient's immune defense mechanisms are no longer overwhelmed when:

A) All the debris and necrotic cells are removed.
B) The drug concentration exceeds the MIC for the microbe.
C) The patient is not infected with a gram-negative rod.
D) Two synergistic drugs are used to kill the bacteria.
Question
What is a mechanism for ensuring the testing personnel are proficient in their tasks?

A) Supervisory review of reported results
B) Self-assessment checklists
C) Periodic competency testing through proficiency surveys
D) All of the above
Question
What is the principle of the Etest?

A) Turbidimetry
B) Establishing an antimicrobial density gradient in agar
C) Carbon dioxide concentration
D) Redox indicator system
Question
If the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)or zone size is interpreted as resistant using the latest Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)tables:

A) The clinical interpretation of the result is that the patient's infecting organism should respond to therapy with that antimicrobial agent using the dosage recommended normally for that type of infection and that species.
B) The patient's infecting organism is unlikely to be inhibited by the usually achievable concentrations of the antimicrobial agent based on the dosages normally used with that drug.
C) The patient's infecting organism is likely to require the maximum amount of antimicrobial or more than can be achieved and for which the clinical response is likely to be less than with a susceptible strain.
D) None of the above.
Question
Advantages of the commercial microdilution susceptibility test methods include all the following EXCEPT:

A) More accurate results than manual methods
B) Automated panel readers
C) The quantitative nature of a minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)
D) The computerized data management systems
Question
Quality control of antimicrobial susceptibility tests involves:

A) Performing antimicrobial susceptibility tests on organisms using the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) charts to interpret the results
B) Using organisms grown from patient cultures to test the reactivity of the antimicrobial drugs
C) Testing standard reference strains that have defined antimicrobial susceptibility (or resistance) to the drugs tested
D) None of the above
Question
The minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC)test differs from the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)test because the MIC test gives the concentration needed at the site of infection to inhibit bacterial multiplications,whereas the MBC gives:

A) The highest concentration of antimicrobial that will kill an organism
B) The amount of antimicrobial that must be achieved at the infection site to inhibit the organism
C) The amount of antimicrobial that must be achieved at the infection site to kill the organism
D) None of the above
Question
All the following organisms produce b-lactamase EXCEPT:

A) Haemophilus influenzae
B) Neisseria gonorrhoeae
C) Moraxella catarrhalis
D) Neisseria meningitidis
Question
Who sets the criteria in the table of values that relates the diameter of the zone to a category of susceptibility in disk diffusion testing?

A) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
B) College of American Pathologists (CAP)
C) Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)
D) Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO)
Question
If the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)or zone size is interpreted as susceptible using the latest CLSI tables:

A) The clinical interpretation of the result is that the patient's infecting organism should respond to therapy with that antimicrobial agent using the dosage recommended normally for that type of infection and that species.
B) The patient's infecting organism is unlikely to be inhibited by the usually achievable concentrations of the antimicrobial agent based on the dosages normally used with that drug.
C) The patient's infecting organism is likely to require the maximum amount of antimicrobial or more than can be achieved and for which the clinical response is likely to be less than with a susceptible strain.
D) None of the above.
Question
How should quality control testing occur?

A) One specified technician should use extreme care when doing quality control testing, using special pipettes, special agar plates, and special incubators.
B) The procedure should be followed to a T, and if any mistake is made, the test should be discarded and started again.
C) The microbiology supervisor should perform all quality control testing.
D) Quality control testing should be included in all the patients tested and treated like a patient specimen.
Question
The inhibition zone size and minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)interpretive criteria published by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)are established by careful analysis of all of the following EXCEPT:

A) Microbiologic data
B) Pharmacokinetic data
C) Results of clinical studies during the phase before Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval
D) Pharmacodynamic data
Question
What is the most widely used supplementary quality control measure for antimicrobial susceptibility testing?

A) b-Lactamase testing
B) Use of antibiograms to verify results generated on patient isolates
C) Correlation of clinical outcomes with laboratory findings
D) None of the above
Question
What is generated by analysis of individual susceptibility results on isolates from a particular institution in a defined period and represents the percentage of isolates of a given species that is susceptible to the antimicrobial agents commonly tested against the species?

A) Historical antibiogram
B) Laboratory workload report
C) Infection control committee report
D) Cumulative antibiogram
Question
What is the principle of the most commonly used test to detect b-lactamase production?

A) Chromogenic cephalosporin nitrocefin
B) Redox reaction
C) Hydrolysis of fluorogenic substrate
D) Reduction of acetoin
Question
What automated system was originally designed for use in space?

A) TREK ARIS
B) MicroScan Walkaway SI
C) BD Phoenix
D) VITEK
Question
All of the following steps are taken to verify the results from an atypical antibiogram EXCEPT:

A) Reexamining the disk diffusion plate, or minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) tray, to ensure that results were properly interpreted
B) Checking earlier reports to see whether the particular patient previously had an isolate with an atypical antibiogram
C) Calling around to other hospitals to see if they are encountering the same organism with that same antibiogram
D) Repeating the test, if necessary
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Deck 13: Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing
1
What is the most widely used method of inoculum standardization?

A) McFarland turbidity standards
B) Remel inoculum standards
C) Becton-Dickson standards
D) Difco standards
A
The most widely used method of inoculum standardization involves McFarland turbidity standards.
2
When should antimicrobial susceptibility testing be performed on a bacterial isolate from a clinical specimen?

A) When the isolate is determined to be a probable cause of the patient's infection
B) When the susceptibility of the isolate to particular antimicrobial agents cannot be reliably predicted
C) a and b
D) None of the above
C
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing should be performed on a bacterial isolate from a clinical specimen if the isolate is determined to be a probable cause of the patient's infection and the susceptibility of the isolate to particular antimicrobial agents cannot be reliably predicted.Susceptibility tests are not performed on bacteria that are predictably susceptible to the antimicrobial agents commonly used to treat infections caused by these bacteria.
3
Once the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)is determined,the organism is interpreted as:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) All of the above
D
Once the MIC is determined,the organism is interpreted as either susceptible,intermediate,or resistant to each agent with the use of a table provided in the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)dilution testing document.
4
Two antibiotics are contraindicated in pediatric patients.They are:

A) Erythromycin and Augmentin
B) Cleocin and Zithromax
C) Tetracycline and Ceclor
D) Tetracycline and fluoroquinolones
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5
How are antibiotics chosen for inclusion into laboratory antimicrobial testing protocols?

A) There are no set standards, because physicians demand which drugs they want tested for particular bugs each time an antimicrobial susceptibility test is performed.
B) The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) sets the standard for drugs that must be tested for each type of specimen.
C) It is important that the drugs tested by the laboratory match as closely as possible the institutional formulary.
D) The patient population decides the drugs included in the laboratory's testing protocols.
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6
Guidance for the development of a selective-reporting or cascade-reporting protocol for antibiotics is available from the:

A) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
B) Clinical Laboratory and Standards Institute (CLSI)
C) United States Army Medical Research Institute (USAMRIID)
D) Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
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7
Why are aminoglycosides not an effective treatment for meningitis?

A) They do not cross the blood-brain barrier.
B) They are nephrotoxic and will harm the patient's kidneys.
C) They are ototoxic and will harm the patient's ears.
D) They are not effective against Neisseria, Streptococcus, or Haemophilus.
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8
What McFarland standard provides turbidity comparable to that of a bacterial suspension containing approximately 1.5 ´ 10⁸ CFU/mL?

A) 1.0
B) 1.5
C) 0.5
D) 2.0
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9
Other important factors must be considered when determining whether antimicrobial susceptibility testing is warranted,including:

A) The body site from which the organism was isolated
B) The presence of other bacteria and the quality of the specimen from which the organism was grown
C) The host's status
D) All the above
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10
Many times,antimicrobial susceptibility testing includes drugs that are inappropriate for reporting.What does the technician do?

A) A drug should not be indiscriminately reported because results may be misleading.
B) If the drug is tested, the results are reported because the technician does not know what antibiotic was prescribed to the patient.
C) The technician reports this immediately to the microbiology supervisor because this is a wasteful practice.
D) The technician only reports on the drugs to which the bacteria are sensitive.
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11
Why would normal flora isolates from immunosuppressed patients undergo antimicrobial susceptibility testing?

A) These are not normal florae; they are other potential pathogens that have the colonial morphology as normal florae.
B) Species usually viewed as normal florae may be responsible for an infection in an immunosuppressed patient.
C) All bacteria isolated from immunosuppressed patients must have antimicrobial susceptibility tests performed.
D) Cultures from immunosuppressed patients only grow pathogenic organisms that must undergo antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
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12
When would it be appropriate for an institution to routinely test group C agents?

A) For urinary tract infections
B) If a particular institution routinely encounters large numbers of isolates resistant to group A and group B agents
C) For blood cultures
D) If a particular institution routinely encounters large numbers of isolates susceptible to group A and group B agents
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13
A 12-year-old girl goes to the doctor complaining of a sore throat,fever,headache,and general malaise.The doctor does a quick strep test that is positive for group A b-hemolytic Streptococcus.No antibiotic testing is needed because Streptococcus is:

A) Universally susceptible to penicillin
B) Universally susceptible to erythromycin
C) Not treated in throat cultures
D) Not considered a pathogen in the throat
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14
Why should antimicrobial susceptibility testing of normal flora isolates or isolates likely to represent contamination or colonization not be performed?

A) This may encourage a physician to treat a normal condition.
B) This will expose normal florae to various antibiotics and cause resistance to develop.
C) The amount of antibiotic needed to kill all of the normal florae in a site can cause toxic effects to the patient.
D) Antimicrobial susceptibility testing should be performed on all bacteria isolated from the patient.
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15
What is the most critical step in any susceptibility test?

A) Plate streaking
B) Organism isolation
C) Gram stain identification
D) Inoculum preparation
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16
The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)is:

A) The lowest antibiotic concentration to slow the growth of an organism.
B) The highest antibiotic concentration to slow the growth of an organism.
C) The lowest antibiotic concentration to inhibit the growth of an organism.
D) The highest antibiotic concentration to inhibit the growth of an organism.
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17
A primary tenet of antimicrobial therapy is to use:

A) The least toxic agents
B) The most cost-effective agents
C) The most clinically effective agents
D) All of the above
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18
What antibiotics should be reported for urinary tract infections?

A) Group A antibiotics
B) Group B antibiotics
C) Urinary tract active agents
D) Group C antibiotics
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19
As a general guideline,it is suggested that within a particular antimicrobial class,primary (group A)agents be reported first and secondary (group B)agents be reported only if:

A) The physician insists that a secondary agent be reported.
B) The hospital pharmacy no longer stocks the group A agent.
C) The patient cannot tolerate the primary agents.
D) The FDA has recalled the primary agents.
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20
What concentrations of antibiotics are tested in minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs)?

A) Serial fivefold dilution concentrations are tested.
B) Serial tenfold dilution concentrations are tested.
C) Serial onefold dilution concentrations are tested.
D) Serial twofold dilution concentrations are tested.
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21
When reading broth microdilution minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)testing,the MIC for a particular drug is:

A) The lowest concentration showing no obvious growth
B) The highest concentration showing no obvious growth
C) The lowest concentration showing confluent growth
D) The highest concentration showing confluent growth
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22
On a breakpoint panel,when there is growth in the low concentration but no growth in the high concentration,the isolate is:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) None of the above
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23
What is the approximate final concentration of organisms in each well of a microdilution tray?

A) 3 ´ 105 colony-forming units (CFU)/mL
B) 1 ´ 105 CFU/mL
C) 4 ´ 105 CFU/mL
D) 5 ´ 105 CFU/mL
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24
On a breakpoint panel,when there is growth in both wells,the isolate is:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) None of the above
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25
A zone of inhibition is:

A) The area on the agar plate where the drug no longer diffuses into the agar
B) The area around the antibiotic disk where the bacteria cannot not grow
C) The zone around the edge of the plate where the streaking does not cover the agar and bacterial growth is inhibited
D) All of the above
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26
After the plate is incubated in the Kirby-Bauer test,what occurs?

A) The plate is tested to make sure an isolated organism grew on the plate.
B) The diameter of each inhibition zone for each antibiotic is measured using a ruler or caliper.
C) The amount of carbon dioxide in the plate is measured to ensure confluent organism growth.
D) None of the above.
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27
Once zone measurements have been made,the millimeter reading for each antimicrobial agent is:

A) Sent to the physician to determine the appropriateness of antibiotic therapy for his patient
B) Converted into minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) units
C) Interpreted as susceptible, intermediate, or resistant
D) None of the above
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28
In terms of MIC microdilution trays,a skipped well occurs when:

A) When a well on the tray is skipped with inoculum and it does not grow
B) When the inoculator is turned around and the sterility well is accidentally inoculated and the growth well is accidentally skipped
C) When there is growth at higher concentrations and no growth at one or more of the lower concentration wells
D) None of the above
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29
In this type of antimicrobial susceptibility test,a McFarland 0.5 standardized suspension of bacteria is swabbed over the surface of a Mueller-Hinton agar plate,and paper disks containing single concentrations of each antimicrobial agent are placed onto the inoculated surface.What is the name of this test?

A) Kirby-Bauer
B) MIC
C) Breakpoint
D) Agar dilution
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30
What agencies develop the zone interpretive criteria?

A) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Army Medical Research Institute (USAMRIID)
B) U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and CDC
C) FDA and Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)
D) CLSI and CDC
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31
On a breakpoint panel,when two concentrations are tested and no growth is present in either well,the isolate is:

A) Susceptible
B) Resistant
C) Intermediate
D) None of the above
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32
Agar dilution and disk diffusion tests for Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus spp.use:

A) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with X and V factors
B) Columbia base supplemented with 5% sheep blood
C) Trypticase soy agar base supplemented with 5% lysed horse blood
D) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with 5% sheep blood
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33
A patient is admitted to the hospital with a diagnosis of endocarditis.Two separate blood cultures grow out viridans streptococci.The penicillin minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)of the organism is 0.12 µg/mL.What antibiotic should the physician prescribe?

A) Penicillin
B) Erythromycin
C) Clindamycin
D) Gentamicin
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34
What is the storage temperature for frozen panels?

A) 0° C
B) -20° to -70° C
C) -75° to -100° C
D) 273 K
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35
What broth is recommended in the tube dilution minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)tests?

A) Trypticase soy
B) Mueller-Hinton
C) Columbia
D) Cooked meat
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36
The broth microdilution minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)test uses these for the testing.

A) Test tubes
B) Plastic strips
C) Multiwell microdilution trays
D) Multiwell macrodilution trays
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37
Note that for some antimicrobial agents,different minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)interpretive criteria exist for:

A) Organisms or organism groups
B) Anatomical sites
C) Age groups
D) Immune status
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38
In this method of antimicrobial susceptibility testing,specific volumes of various concentrations of antimicrobial solutions are dispensed into premeasured volumes of molten and cooled agar,which is subsequently poured into standard Petri dishes.Organisms are inoculated onto the plate.What type of antimicrobial susceptibility testing is this?

A) Macrodilution
B) Broth dilution
C) Disk diffusion
D) Agar dilution
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39
In the Kirby-Bauer test,what is used to grow streptococci that do not grow adequately on unsupplemented Mueller-Hinton agar?

A) Chocolate agar
B) PEA agar
C) Mueller-Hinton agar with 5% sheep blood
D) Mueller-Hinton agar with 5% rabbit blood
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40
What is a breakpoint panel?

A) A standard minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) panel that contains many more dilution wells for each drug tested
B) A MIC panel with only three or four drugs tested
C) A MIC panel with only one or a few concentrations of each drug
D) A MIC panel that contains nonroutine drugs
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41
How many hours of incubation are necessary for the antimicrobial susceptibility test run on the BD Phoenix?

A) 6 to 8 hours
B) 8 to 12 hours
C) 12 to 18 hours
D) 24 hours
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42
What antibiotics are active against extended-spectrum b lactamases (ESBL)-producing strains of bacteria?

A) Cephalosporins
B) Penicillins
C) Carbapenems
D) Aztreonam
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43
In vitro testing conditions that can be modified to enhance the expression of oxacillin resistance include all the following EXCEPT:

A) Use Mueller-Hinton media
B) Making final test readings after a full 24 hours of incubation
C) Incubation of tests at temperatures no greater than 35° C
D) Preparation of inocula using the direct inoculum suspension procedure
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44
When testing Escherichia coli,Klebsiella spp.,and Proteus mirabilis,which drug is mostly likely to indicate the presence of an extended-spectrum b-lactamases (ESBL)?

A) Aztreonam
B) Cefpodoxime
C) Ceftriaxone
D) Ceftazidime
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45
What principle does the MicroScan Walkaway SI use to determine antimicrobial susceptibility?

A) Redox indicator system
B) Turbidimetry
C) Hydrolysis of a bioluminescent substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
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46
How long are minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)panels for anaerobes incubated?

A) 24 Hours
B) 36 Hours
C) 48 Hours
D) 72 Hours
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47
What type of antimicrobial susceptibility testing method does Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)recommend for anaerobes?

A) Microdilution
B) Agar dilution
C) Tube broth macrodilution
D) Disk diffusion
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48
Oxacillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus is called:

A) Methicillin-resistant S. aureus
B) Oxacillin-resistant S. aureus
C) Penicillin-resistant S. aureus
D) Penicillinase-resistant S. aureus
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49
Which enterococcus is/are the most common species demonstrating vancomycin resistance among clinical isolates?

A) Enterococcus faecium
B) E. faecalis
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
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50
To obtain a bactericidal effect in enterococci,ampicillin or penicillin must be given in combination with:

A) Macrolides
B) Peptidoglycans
C) Cephalosporins
D) Aminoglycosides
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51
When performing disk diffusion testing with Haemophilus influenzae and Haemophilus parainfluenzae,what type of medium used?

A) Mueller-Hinton with 5% sheep blood
B) Mueller-Hinton with hematin and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)
C) Mueller-Hinton with 5% lysed horse blood
D) Mueller-Hinton
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52
Oxacillin-resistant staphylococci can appear susceptible in vitro to other b-lactam agents such as:

A) Quinolones
B) Tetracyclines
C) Cephalosporins
D) Aminoglycosides
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53
The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)has published methods for susceptibility testing of several agents of potential bioterrorism,including Brucella anthracis,Yersinia pestis,Burkholderia mallei,B.pseudomallei,Francisella tularensis,and Brucella spp.How does CLSI suggest clinical laboratories perform antimicrobial susceptibility testing on these isolates?

A) Use the agar dilution technique.
B) Use the Kirby-Bauer method.
C) Use the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) plates.
D) Do not attempt to perform antimicrobial susceptibility on any of these isolates; refer them to a public health laboratory equipped to handle them.
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54
What principle does the TREK ARIS 2X System use to determine antimicrobial susceptibility?

A) Redox indicator system
B) Turbidimetry
C) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
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55
Spontaneous mutations occur in the b-lactamase genes that result in extended-spectrum b-lactamases (ESBL).These ESBL inactivate:

A) Cephalosporins
B) Penicillins
C) Aztreonam
D) All of the above
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56
Therapy of disseminated meningococcal infections and various types of gonococcal infections are:

A) Hard to treat and require special β-lactamase tests
B) An important public health concern, so a full spectrum of antimicrobial susceptibility testing is always performed
C) Generally empiric based on recommendations of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
D) None of the above
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57
A man goes to his doctor because he has a cloudy substance dripping from his penis.A Gram stain is performed and gram-negative intracellular diplococci are observed.What is the drug of choice to treat this infection?

A) Gentamicin
B) Erythromycin
C) Vancomycin
D) Ceftriaxone
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58
On what media is Kirby-Bauer testing for Neisseria gonorrhoeae performed?

A) GC agar base supplemented with various nutrients
B) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with vancomycin
C) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with X and V factors
D) Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with biotin, X and V factors
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59
The BD Phoenix system uses this principle to measure bacterial growth in the susceptibility test wells.

A) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic growth substrate
B) Turbidimetric detection
C) Carbon dioxide concentration
D) Redox indicator system
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60
What principle do most current automated antimicrobial susceptibility instruments use to read growth?

A) Turbidimetric detection
B) Turbidity suppression
C) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic growth substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
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61
A microbiology technologist is performing a b-lactamase test on a staphylococci isolated from a hospitalized patient.The test was negative,so the technologist reported out in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility test results for b-lactam antibiotics.After 2 days,the patient was not improving and the physician changed the patient's antibiotic to an aminoglycoside.The patient showed improvement immediately.Why was the b-lactamase test on the staphylococci negative,when the organism produced b-lactamase?

A) The test was a false negative-the organism really did produce b-lactamase, but it did not react with the test.
B) Staphylococci must be exposed to the b-lactam agent before it will produce a positive test result.
C) The test was a false positive-the organism reacted with the test, but it did not produce a b-lactamase.
D) The staphylococci on the plate were more than 24 hours old and false-negative test results can occur when an "old" organism is used.
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62
What principle does the VITEK series use to determine antimicrobial susceptibility?

A) Turbidimetry
B) Redox indicator system
C) Hydrolysis of a fluorogenic substrate
D) Carbon dioxide concentration
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63
If the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)or zone size is interpreted as intermediate using the latest Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)tables:

A) The clinical interpretation of the result is that the patient's infecting organism should respond to therapy with that antimicrobial agent using the dosage recommended normally for that type of infection and that species.
B) The patient's infecting organism is unlikely to be inhibited by the usually achievable concentrations of the antimicrobial agent based on the dosages normally used with that drug.
C) The patient's infecting organism is likely to require the maximum amount of antimicrobial or more than can be achieved and for which the clinical response is likely to be less than with a susceptible strain.
D) None of the above.
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64
A drug will generally inhibit multiplication of the bacteria so that the patient's immune defense mechanisms are no longer overwhelmed when:

A) All the debris and necrotic cells are removed.
B) The drug concentration exceeds the MIC for the microbe.
C) The patient is not infected with a gram-negative rod.
D) Two synergistic drugs are used to kill the bacteria.
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65
What is a mechanism for ensuring the testing personnel are proficient in their tasks?

A) Supervisory review of reported results
B) Self-assessment checklists
C) Periodic competency testing through proficiency surveys
D) All of the above
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66
What is the principle of the Etest?

A) Turbidimetry
B) Establishing an antimicrobial density gradient in agar
C) Carbon dioxide concentration
D) Redox indicator system
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67
If the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)or zone size is interpreted as resistant using the latest Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)tables:

A) The clinical interpretation of the result is that the patient's infecting organism should respond to therapy with that antimicrobial agent using the dosage recommended normally for that type of infection and that species.
B) The patient's infecting organism is unlikely to be inhibited by the usually achievable concentrations of the antimicrobial agent based on the dosages normally used with that drug.
C) The patient's infecting organism is likely to require the maximum amount of antimicrobial or more than can be achieved and for which the clinical response is likely to be less than with a susceptible strain.
D) None of the above.
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68
Advantages of the commercial microdilution susceptibility test methods include all the following EXCEPT:

A) More accurate results than manual methods
B) Automated panel readers
C) The quantitative nature of a minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)
D) The computerized data management systems
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69
Quality control of antimicrobial susceptibility tests involves:

A) Performing antimicrobial susceptibility tests on organisms using the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) charts to interpret the results
B) Using organisms grown from patient cultures to test the reactivity of the antimicrobial drugs
C) Testing standard reference strains that have defined antimicrobial susceptibility (or resistance) to the drugs tested
D) None of the above
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70
The minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC)test differs from the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)test because the MIC test gives the concentration needed at the site of infection to inhibit bacterial multiplications,whereas the MBC gives:

A) The highest concentration of antimicrobial that will kill an organism
B) The amount of antimicrobial that must be achieved at the infection site to inhibit the organism
C) The amount of antimicrobial that must be achieved at the infection site to kill the organism
D) None of the above
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71
All the following organisms produce b-lactamase EXCEPT:

A) Haemophilus influenzae
B) Neisseria gonorrhoeae
C) Moraxella catarrhalis
D) Neisseria meningitidis
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72
Who sets the criteria in the table of values that relates the diameter of the zone to a category of susceptibility in disk diffusion testing?

A) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
B) College of American Pathologists (CAP)
C) Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)
D) Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO)
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73
If the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)or zone size is interpreted as susceptible using the latest CLSI tables:

A) The clinical interpretation of the result is that the patient's infecting organism should respond to therapy with that antimicrobial agent using the dosage recommended normally for that type of infection and that species.
B) The patient's infecting organism is unlikely to be inhibited by the usually achievable concentrations of the antimicrobial agent based on the dosages normally used with that drug.
C) The patient's infecting organism is likely to require the maximum amount of antimicrobial or more than can be achieved and for which the clinical response is likely to be less than with a susceptible strain.
D) None of the above.
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74
How should quality control testing occur?

A) One specified technician should use extreme care when doing quality control testing, using special pipettes, special agar plates, and special incubators.
B) The procedure should be followed to a T, and if any mistake is made, the test should be discarded and started again.
C) The microbiology supervisor should perform all quality control testing.
D) Quality control testing should be included in all the patients tested and treated like a patient specimen.
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75
The inhibition zone size and minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)interpretive criteria published by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)are established by careful analysis of all of the following EXCEPT:

A) Microbiologic data
B) Pharmacokinetic data
C) Results of clinical studies during the phase before Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval
D) Pharmacodynamic data
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76
What is the most widely used supplementary quality control measure for antimicrobial susceptibility testing?

A) b-Lactamase testing
B) Use of antibiograms to verify results generated on patient isolates
C) Correlation of clinical outcomes with laboratory findings
D) None of the above
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77
What is generated by analysis of individual susceptibility results on isolates from a particular institution in a defined period and represents the percentage of isolates of a given species that is susceptible to the antimicrobial agents commonly tested against the species?

A) Historical antibiogram
B) Laboratory workload report
C) Infection control committee report
D) Cumulative antibiogram
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78
What is the principle of the most commonly used test to detect b-lactamase production?

A) Chromogenic cephalosporin nitrocefin
B) Redox reaction
C) Hydrolysis of fluorogenic substrate
D) Reduction of acetoin
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79
What automated system was originally designed for use in space?

A) TREK ARIS
B) MicroScan Walkaway SI
C) BD Phoenix
D) VITEK
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80
All of the following steps are taken to verify the results from an atypical antibiogram EXCEPT:

A) Reexamining the disk diffusion plate, or minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) tray, to ensure that results were properly interpreted
B) Checking earlier reports to see whether the particular patient previously had an isolate with an atypical antibiogram
C) Calling around to other hospitals to see if they are encountering the same organism with that same antibiogram
D) Repeating the test, if necessary
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