WBR0945

Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Author PageAuthor::William J Gibson
Exam Type ExamType::USMLE Step 1
Main Category MainCategory::Microbiology
Sub Category SubCategory::Genitourinary, SubCategory::Infectious Disease
Prompt [[Prompt::A sexually active 22-year old woman presents to her primary care physician with burning on urination. Urine culture reveals colonies of catalase positive, coagulase negative, gram-positive cocci with novobiocin resistance. Which of the following is the most likely causal organism?]]
Answer A AnswerA::Escheria coli
Answer A Explanation AnswerAExp::While E. Coli is the leading cause of urinary tract infections in sexually active women, E.Coli is a gram-negative rod.
Answer B AnswerB::Staphylococcus aureus
Answer B Explanation AnswerBExp::While S. aureus is a catalase positive, gram-positive cocci, it is coagulase negative. Furthermore, S. aureus is not a common cause of urinary tract infections.
Answer C AnswerC::Staphylococcus epidermidis
Answer C Explanation [[AnswerCExp::S. epidermidis is a catalase positive, coagulase negative, gram-positive cocci with novobiocin sensitivity. S. epidermidis is a component of the normal skin flora, but can become pathogenic by infecting prosthetic devices. It is a common cause of endocarditis in patients with artificial valves.]]
Answer D AnswerD::Staphylococcus saprophyticus
Answer D Explanation AnswerDExp::S. Saprophyticus is a catalase positive, coagulase negative, gram-positive cocci with novobiocin resistance. It is the second most common cause of urinary tract infections in sexually active women, behind E. coli.
Answer E AnswerE::Streptococcus agalactiae
Answer E Explanation AnswerEExp::S agalactiae is a catalase negative, beta-hemolytic, gram-positive cocci with bacitracin resistance. It is alternatively referred to as Group B streptococci and is a common cause of neonatal meningitis.
Right Answer RightAnswer::D
Explanation [[Explanation::The patient in this vignette has a urinary tract infection caused by Staphylococcus saprophyticus. S. Saprophyticus is a catalase positive, coagulase negative, gram-positive cocci with novobiocin resistance. It is the second most common cause of urinary tract infections in sexually active women (10-20%), behind E. coli.

A useful mnemonic to remember the drug resistance of staphylococci is: On the office's staph retreat, there was NO StRESs. NOvobiocin: Saprophyticus is Resistant, Epidemidis is Sensitive
Educational Objective: S. saprophyticus is novobiocin resistant and the second most common cause of urinary tract infections in sexually active young women.
References: Hovelius, Birgitta, and Per-Anders Mardh. "Staphylococcus saprophyticus as a common cause of urinary tract infections." Review of Infectious Diseases 6.3 (1984): 328-337.
First Aid 2015 page 127 (gram positive diagram)
First Aid 2015 page 174 (UTI summary)]]

Approved Approved::Yes
Keyword WBRKeyword::Bacteria, WBRKeyword::Gram positive, WBRKeyword::Gram positive bacteria, WBRKeyword::UTI, WBRKeyword::Urinary tract infection, WBRKeyword::Laboratory classification, WBRKeyword::Catalase
Linked Question Linked::
Order in Linked Questions LinkedOrder::