Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Nosocomial Infections. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 1: Which gram-negative organism is particularly notorious for causing late-onset VAP with multidrug resistance?
- A. Klebsiella
- B. Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- C. Acinetobacter (Correct Answer)
- D. Staphylococcus aureus
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***Acinetobacter***
- *Acinetobacter baumannii* is particularly notorious for causing **late-onset VAP** (>5 days) with extensive **multidrug resistance**, including pan-drug resistant strains (resistant to carbapenems, polymyxins, and tigecycline).
- Its ability to survive on surfaces for prolonged periods, form biofilms, and its intrinsic resistance mechanisms make it a significant challenge in ICU environments.
- Often exhibits resistance to nearly all available antibiotics, earning it a place in the **ESKAPE pathogens** group.
*Klebsiella*
- While *Klebsiella pneumoniae* can cause VAP and exhibits multidrug resistance through **extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)** and carbapenemase production, it is not as characteristically associated with late-onset VAP as *Acinetobacter* and *Pseudomonas*.
- More commonly causes **healthcare-associated infections** including urinary tract infections and bloodstream infections.
*Pseudomonas aeruginosa*
- *Pseudomonas aeruginosa* is also a major cause of **late-onset VAP** with significant **multidrug resistance** potential, particularly in patients with prolonged mechanical ventilation and underlying lung disease.
- Can exhibit carbapenem resistance and is part of the ESKAPE pathogens.
- However, *Acinetobacter baumannii* is considered particularly "notorious" due to its more extensive pan-drug resistance patterns and extremely limited treatment options.
*Staphylococcus aureus*
- *Staphylococcus aureus* is a **Gram-positive** organism, not Gram-negative, making it incorrect based on the question's specification.
- While **MRSA** is a common cause of both early and late-onset VAP, it does not meet the Gram-negative criterion.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 2: What is the therapy of choice for pseudomembranous enterocolitis?
- A. Penicillin
- B. Ampicillin
- C. Erythromycin
- D. Vancomycin (Correct Answer)
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***Vancomycin***
- **Oral vancomycin** is indicated for pseudomembranous enterocolitis, particularly for severe or recurrent cases, as it achieves high luminal concentrations in the colon to target *C. difficile* [1].
- Vancomycin works by inhibiting **bacterial cell wall synthesis**, effectively eradicating the toxigenic *C. difficile* strains responsible for the condition [1].
*Penicillin*
- **Penicillin** is ineffective against *C. difficile* because *C. difficile* is a Gram-positive anaerobic bacterium producing toxins, and penicillin does not have the appropriate spectrum of activity.
- In fact, many cases of pseudomembranous enterocolitis are triggered by prior **antibiotic use**, including penicillins, which disrupt the normal gut flora [2].
*Ampicillin*
- Similar to penicillin, **ampicillin** is a broad-spectrum penicillin derivative and is not considered a treatment for *C. difficile* infection [3].
- Ampicillin can commonly be one of the **antibiotics that precipitates** the development of pseudomembranous enterocolitis by altering the normal gut microbiota [2].
*Erythromycin*
- **Erythromycin**, a macrolide antibiotic, is not effective against *C. difficile* and is not used in the treatment of pseudomembranous enterocolitis.
- Like other broad-spectrum antibiotics, erythromycin can **disrupt the normal gut flora**, potentially contributing to the overgrowth of *C. difficile* [2].
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 3: Most common route of nosocomial infection [Hospital-acquired infection]?
- A. Droplet transmission
- B. Direct contact (Correct Answer)
- C. Indirect contact
- D. Vehicle transmission
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: **Direct contact**
- **Direct contact** with colonized or infected patients is the predominant mode of transmission for many common nosocomial pathogens like **MRSA** and **VRE**.
- This often involves healthcare workers' hands becoming contaminated and then touching other patients.
*Droplet transmission*
- Involves the transmission of infectious agents through **respiratory droplets** produced during coughing, sneezing, or talking.
- While significant for some infections (e.g., influenza, pertussis), it is not the most common route overall for nosocomial infections.
*Indirect contact*
- Occurs when an infectious agent is transferred via a **contaminated intermediate object** or person.
- Although important (e.g., contaminated medical devices), it is generally less frequent than direct patient-to-patient transmission.
*Vehicle transmission*
- Involves transmission through **contaminated inanimate vehicles** like food, water, medications, or surgical instruments.
- While outbreaks can occur via this route (e.g., contaminated endoscopes), it is not the most common day-to-day transmission mechanism in hospitals.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 4: A patient in the ICU with a central venous catheter (CVC) develops an infection. Microscopy reveals ovoid budding yeast cells. What is the most likely organism?
- A. Candida (Correct Answer)
- B. Staphylococcus epidermidis
- C. Escherichia coli
- D. Staphylococcus aureus
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***Candida***
- **Gram-positive ovoid budding organisms** are characteristic findings for yeast, with **Candida** species being the most common cause of CVC-related fungal infections in ICU patients.
- Patients with CVCs are at high risk for candidemia due to compromised skin barriers and often receiving broad-spectrum antibiotics, which can disrupt the normal flora.
*Staphylococcus epidermidis*
- This is a **Gram-positive coccus** that grows in clusters and is a common cause of CVC-related **bacterial infections**, developing **biofilms** on catheters.
- It does not present as an ovoid budding organism on microscopy.
*Escherichia coli*
- This is a **Gram-negative rod**, typically associated with **urinary tract infections** and sepsis from an abdominal source.
- It would not appear as a Gram-positive ovoid budding organism and is not a common cause of primary CVC-related bloodstream infections unless there's an associated abdominal source.
*Staphylococcus aureus*
- This is a **Gram-positive coccus** that grows in grape-like clusters and can cause severe CVC-related bloodstream infections, often leading to **endocarditis** or widespread dissemination.
- Like *S. epidermidis*, it is a bacterium and does not exhibit ovoid budding.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 5: Most common catheter related blood stream infection is
- A. Candida
- B. Coagulase negative staphylococci (Correct Answer)
- C. Coagulase positive staphylococci
- D. Gram negative organisms
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***Coagulase negative staphylococci***
- **Coagulase-negative staphylococci** (CoNS), such as *Staphylococcus epidermidis*, are the most common cause of catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSIs).
- These bacteria colonize the skin and can easily contaminate the insertion site, forming **biofilms** on the catheter surface.
*Candida*
- While *Candida* species can cause CRBSIs, especially in immunocompromised patients or those on broad-spectrum antibiotics, they are less common than coagulase-negative staphylococci.
- **Fungal infections** often require different antimicrobial treatments than bacterial infections.
*Coagulase positive staphylococci*
- **Coagulase-positive staphylococci**, primarily *Staphylococcus aureus*, are significant causes of CRBSIs, known for their virulence and ability to cause severe infections.
- However, they are still **less frequently isolated** in CRBSIs than coagulase-negative staphylococci.
*Gram negative organisms*
- **Gram-negative bacteria**, such as *Klebsiella*, *Pseudomonas*, and *Escherichia coli*, can cause CRBSIs, particularly in critically ill patients or those with urinary tract infections.
- While important, they are not the **most common** cause of CRBSIs compared to staphylococci.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 6: When do we have to start antibiotics to prevent post-operative infection?
- A. 1 week before surgery
- B. 2 days before surgery
- C. After surgery
- D. 30-60 minutes before incision (up to 24 hours post-op) (Correct Answer)
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***30-60 minutes before incision (up to 24 hours post-op)***
- Surgical antibiotic prophylaxis (SAP) should be administered **30-60 minutes before surgical incision** to ensure adequate tissue and serum concentrations at the time of incision.
- This timing allows optimal drug distribution to surgical tissues, which is crucial for preventing surgical site infections (SSIs).
- For most clean and clean-contaminated surgeries, prophylaxis should be limited to a **single dose** or continued for **maximum 24 hours post-operatively** as per WHO and CDC guidelines.
- Prolonged post-operative antibiotics beyond 24 hours do **not** reduce infection rates and increase the risk of **antibiotic resistance** and **adverse effects**.
*1 week before surgery*
- Administering antibiotics this far in advance is **unnecessary** and **ineffective** for surgical prophylaxis.
- It increases the risk of **antibiotic resistance** and does not guarantee adequate drug levels at the time of incision.
- Pre-operative antibiotic use should be avoided unless treating an active infection.
*2 days before surgery*
- This timeframe is too early to achieve prophylactic benefit during the surgical procedure.
- Prolonged pre-operative use promotes **bacterial resistance** without providing additional protection.
- Drug levels will not be optimal at the time of incision due to metabolism and excretion.
*After surgery*
- Starting antibiotics **after surgical incision** is **too late** for prophylaxis as contamination has already occurred.
- Post-operative initiation is considered **therapeutic treatment** for established infection, not prevention.
- The critical window for prophylaxis is the period from skin incision to wound closure.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 7: Nosocomial infections are defined as infections that develop after how many hours of hospital admission?
- A. A) 48 hours (Correct Answer)
- B. B) 72 hours
- C. C) 24 hours
- D. D) 50 hours
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***A) 48 hours***
- Nosocomial infections, also known as **hospital-acquired infections (HAI)**, are defined as infections that develop **48 hours or more** after hospital admission.
- This is the **standard definition** used by the **CDC, WHO**, and major medical textbooks including **Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine**.
- The 48-hour threshold helps differentiate infections acquired during hospitalization from those that were **incubating at the time of admission** (typical incubation periods for most common infections are less than 48 hours).
- Infections can also be classified as nosocomial if they occur **within 3 days after discharge** or **within 30 days after surgery**.
*B) 72 hours*
- While **72 hours** is occasionally mentioned in some contexts or specific institutional protocols, it is **not the standard definition** for nosocomial infections.
- Using 72 hours would be too restrictive and could miss true hospital-acquired infections that manifest between 48-72 hours.
- The universally accepted standard remains **48 hours**.
*C) 24 hours*
- An infection developing within **24 hours** is very likely to have been **present or incubating prior to admission**.
- This timeframe is too short to establish that the infection was acquired during hospitalization.
- Most common bacterial and viral infections have incubation periods longer than 24 hours.
*D) 50 hours*
- This is **not a standard threshold** for defining nosocomial infections.
- The conventional definitions use **48 hours** as the cutoff point, which is based on typical incubation periods and epidemiological evidence.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 8: A patient admitted to an ICU is on a central venous line for the last one week. He is on ceftazidime and amikacin. After 7 days of antibiotics, he develops a spike of fever, and his blood culture is positive for gram-positive cocci in chains, which are catalase negative. Following this, vancomycin was started, but the culture remained positive for the same organism even after 2 weeks of therapy. The most likely organism causing the infection is:
- A. Staphylococcus aureus
- B. Viridans streptococci
- C. Enterococcus faecalis (Correct Answer)
- D. Coagulase negative Staphylococcus
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***Enterococcus faecalis***
- The organism is a **gram-positive cocci in chains** and is **catalase negative**, which is consistent with *Enterococcus*.
- **Vancomycin resistance** in *Enterococcus* (VRE) is a significant clinical problem, explaining the persistent positive culture despite vancomycin therapy.
*Staphylococcus aureus*
- *Staphylococcus aureus* is a **catalase-positive** organism, which contradicts the patient's culture results.
- While it can be vancomycin-resistant (VRSA), the initial catalase test rules it out.
*Viridans streptococci*
- *Viridans streptococci* are typically **susceptible to vancomycin**, making a persistent positive culture after 2 weeks of therapy unlikely unless there's a serious underlying issue like endocarditis with large vegetations or an undrained abscess.
- They are also **catalase-negative**, but the vancomycin resistance points away from this option.
*Coagulase negative Staphylococcus*
- **Coagulase-negative Staphylococci** (e.g., *Staphylococcus epidermidis*) are **catalase-positive**, which is inconsistent with the patient's culture results.
- While they can cause central line infections and be vancomycin-resistant, the catalase test rules out this group.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 9: What is the most common cause of postoperative fever on the first postoperative day?
- A. Atelectasis (Correct Answer)
- B. Wound infection
- C. Pulmonary embolism
- D. UTI
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***Atelectasis***
- **Atelectasis** is the most common cause of fever on the **first postoperative day** due to the collapse of lung alveoli, leading to impaired gas exchange.
- It is frequently caused by **anesthesia, pain, and immobility** reducing deep breaths and coughing.
*Wound infection*
- **Wound infections** typically manifest later, generally around **3 to 7 days post-surgery**, as bacterial growth and inflammation require more time.
- While it can cause fever, it is unlikely to be the cause within the **first 24-48 hours**.
*Pulmonary embolism*
- A **pulmonary embolism** is a serious complication, but fever is not its primary or most common early symptom; instead, patients often present with **dyspnea, tachypnea, and chest pain.**
- Although it can occur, it's generally less frequent on the **first postoperative day** compared to atelectasis.
*UTI*
- **Urinary tract infections (UTIs)** usually develop a few days after surgery, often associated with **catheterization**, and present with dysuria, frequency, and suprapubic pain.
- While fever can occur with a UTI, it is rarely the cause of fever within the **first 24 hours** after surgery.
Nosocomial Infections Indian Medical PG Question 10: Which of the following causes the majority of UTIs in hospitalized patients?
- A. Inadequate perineal care
- B. Invasive procedures (Correct Answer)
- C. Lack of fluid intake
- D. Immunosuppression
Nosocomial Infections Explanation: ***Invasive procedures***
- The use of **urinary catheters** or other urological interventions significantly increases the risk of UTIs in hospitalized patients by providing a direct route for bacteria to enter the bladder [1].
- Catheter-associated UTIs (**CAUTIs**) are the most common type of healthcare-associated infection and are predominantly linked to invasive procedures [1].
*Inadequate perineal care*
- While poor perineal hygiene can contribute to UTIs, it is typically a less significant factor than invasive procedures in the hospitalized setting, where **catheterization** is a major risk.
- Good perineal care is important but cannot fully mitigate the risk introduced by **indwelling catheters**.
*Lack of fluid intake*
- Insufficient fluid intake can lead to concentrated urine, which may increase the risk of UTI in general, but it is not the primary cause of UTIs in **hospitalized patients**. [2]
- **Urine stasis** due to mechanical obstruction or poor bladder emptying (often associated with catheters) is a greater factor than simply reduced fluid intake.
*Immunosuppression*
- Immunosuppression can increase susceptibility to infections, including UTIs, but it is not the leading cause of UTIs in most hospitalized patients.
- The **direct introduction of bacteria** during invasive procedures more commonly bypasses the body's natural defenses, even in immunocompetent individuals.
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