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Nursing 400 Exam 2 Practice Questions and Correct Answers

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  • Course
  • NUR 400
  • Institution
  • NUR 400

Infectious agent a pathogen, such as a bacterium or virus that can cause a disease Bacteria - Most significant and most commonly observe infection-causing agent in health care institutions - Categorized by shape Cocci (spherical) Bacilli (rod-shaped) Spirochetes (corkscrew) - Gram positive, have ...

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  • August 28, 2024
  • 31
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • NUR 400
  • NUR 400
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Nursing 400 Exam 2 Practice Questions
and Correct Answers
Infectious agent ✅a pathogen, such as a bacterium or virus that can cause a disease

Bacteria ✅- Most significant and most commonly observe infection-causing agent in
health care institutions

- Categorized by shape
Cocci (spherical)
Bacilli (rod-shaped)
Spirochetes (corkscrew)
- Gram positive, have thick walls that resist the loss of color. Will stain violet
- Gram negative, complex cell walls that can be decolorized by alcohol. Will not stain
- Antibiotics are classified as specifically effective against only gram-positive organisms
or as
broad spectrum and effective against several groups of microorganisms
- Require oxygen: aerobic

Bacteria shapes ✅Cocci (spherical)
Bacilli (rod-shaped)
Spirochetes (corkscrew)

Gram-positive bacteria ✅have thick walls that resist the loss of color.

Will stain violet

Gram-negative bacteria ✅complex cell walls that can be decolorized by alcohol.

Will not stain

Antibiotics ✅compounds that block the growth and reproduction of bacteria

are classified as specifically effective against only gram-positive organisms

broad spectrum antibiotics ✅effective against several groups of microorganisms

Aerobic bacteria ✅Bacteria that require oxygen for survival

Anaerobic bacteria ✅bacteria that do not require oxygen to survive

Viruses ✅- Smallest of all microorganisms, only visible with electron microscope

,- Causes infections like; common cold, hepatitis B and C, and AIDS

- Antibiotics have no effect

Antivirals ✅are effective and when given during the prodromal stage of certain viruses
they can shorten the full stage of illness (ex: Tamiflu)

Fungi ✅- Plant-like organisms (molds and yeast)

- Present in air, soil, and water

- Ex: Athlete's foot , ringworm, and yeast infections

- Treated with antifungal medications, however many are resistant to treatment

Parasites ✅- Can live on or in a host and rely on it for nourishment

- Ex: Malaria from a disease infecting a certain type of mosquito that then feeds on
humans

Organisms Potential to Produce Disease ✅Number of organisms (the more the better)

Virulence (ability to produce disease)

Competence of person's immune system

Length/intimacy of contact between person and organism (colonization=long contact)

Normal flora ✅is our body's natural defense system made up of microorganisms

Colonization ✅when an organism lives in the person's body with no clinical signs of an
infection

- Infection is present once the person exhibits specific manifestations of the disease

Person's defense mechanisms ✅are either effective or ineffective in responding to the
bacterial invasion. In ineffective, infection will result

Reservoir ✅used for growth and multiplication of microorganisms and is the natural
habitat of the organism

- People
- Animals
- Soil
- Food

,- Water
- Milk
- Inanimate objects

Carriers ✅individuals that are a reservoir and show no sign and symptoms. They are
asymptomatic and can transmit the disease.

Examples of Reservoirs ✅Rabies virus- in animals (dogs, squirrels, bats, and
raccoons)

West Nile- in animals (birds). Mosquitos feed on infected birds, become infected and
pass the infection on to people when feeding on their blood

Water- Giardia, E.coli, Shigella

Food- E.coli,

Milk- Listeria (unless it is pasteurized)

Portal of Exit ✅point of escape for the organism from the reservoir

ex. sneeze

Means of Transmission ✅direct contact
indirect contact
airborne route
Some organisms can be transported in more than one way.

Vehicles of transmission ✅blood, food, water, or inanimate objects

Vectors ✅mosquitos, ticks, lice transmit organisms from one host to another by
injecting salivary fluid when a human bite occurs

Airbonrne ✅germs float through the air after a person talks, coughs, or sneezes.
Germs can be inhaled even after the original person is no longer nearby. Direct contact
with the infectious person is NOT needed for someone else to get sick. Chicken pox
and TB are spread through the air.

smaller that 5mcm

Droplets ✅- fluids in large droplets from a sick person splash the eyes, nose, or mouth
of another person or through a cut in the skin. Droplets may cause short-term
environmental contamination, like a soiled bathroom surface or handrails, from which
another person can pick up the infectious material.

, MRSA sputum, Plague can be spread through large droplets. Ebola might be spread
through large droplets but only when a person is very sick

larger than 5 mcm

Portal of entry ✅point at which organisms enter a new host

Susceptible host ✅a person likely to get an infection or disease

must overcome resistance mounted by host's defenses

ex. elderly, malnourished

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) ✅Protective equipment that blocks exposure to
a pathogen or a hazardous material.

Gloves, gowns, masks (N95), and protective eye gear

Nosocomial infection ✅hospital acquired infection

Measures to reduce Nosocomial infections ✅- Constant surveillance by infection-
control committees and nurse epidemiologists

- Written infection-prevention practices for all agency personnel

- HAND HYGIENE

- Infection control precaution technique

- Keeping patient in best possible physical condition

Defense against infection. ✅- Integrity of skin and mucous membranes

- pH levels of GI and GU tracts, as well as skin which help to ward off microbial invasion

- Integrity and number of the body's white blood cells, which provide resistance to
certain pathogens

- Immunization, natural or acquired, which act to resist infection

-young

High risk for infection ✅elderly, race, genentics

malnourished

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