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BIOD 171 Module 5 Exam Questions and Answers 2026 | 220+ Verified Infectious Disease & Pathogenicity Practice Questions | Streptococcus, Tuberculosis, Botulism, Plague, STIs & Legionnaires’ Disease Review | Portage Learning

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This BIOD 171 Module 5 Exam Questions and Answers 2026 study guide is a comprehensive infectious disease and medical microbiology review resource designed for students enrolled in Portage Learning BIOD 171 and related microbiology, nursing, biology, allied health, and healthcare science programs. The document contains more than 220 expertly verified microbiology practice questions with detailed answers covering pathogenicity, microbial identification, Streptococcus infections, Staphylococcus diseases, tuberculosis, botulism, tetanus, gas gangrene, plague, sexually transmitted infections, Legionnaires’ disease, and laboratory diagnostic techniques frequently tested in Module 5 examinations and cumulative microbiology finals. The study material provides extensive coverage of pathogen identification and microbiological analysis, including universal precautions, Gram status determination, microbial motility testing, catalase reactions, hemolysis patterns, antigenic classification, facultative anaerobes, and blood agar culturing techniques. Students will strengthen their understanding of microbial sample analysis through observations such as size, shape, motility, Gram-positive versus Gram-negative characteristics, color changes, and biochemical reactions essential for laboratory diagnostics and pathogen differentiation. The guide also explains why motility must be assessed prior to Gram staining and reinforces proper microbiological laboratory procedures frequently discussed in microbiology and nursing coursework. A major focus of the document is Streptococcus and Staphylococcus microbiology. Topics include beta hemolysis, Lancefield grouping systems, carbohydrate antigen classification, catalase-negative bacteria, rheumatic fever progression, commensal bacteria, immune evasion, infection pathways, and microbial transmission mechanisms. Students will review diseases such as strep throat, folliculitis, conjunctivitis, impetigo, scalded skin syndrome, ophthalmia neonatorum, and skin infections while learning the associated symptoms, laboratory findings, and disease progression commonly tested in undergraduate microbiology and healthcare programs. The guide additionally provides detailed coverage of tuberculosis, Hansen’s disease, and acid-fast bacteria. Students will review acid-fast staining procedures, Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission, latent infection progression, extrapulmonary tuberculosis spread, and the microbiological characteristics of Mycobacterium leprae. The document also explains respiratory transmission, asymptomatic disease progression, granulomatous infection concepts, and the importance of airborne pathogen control in public health microbiology and healthcare settings. Another major section of the study guide focuses on Clostridium species and toxin-mediated diseases. Students will review Clostridium botulinum, infant botulism, foodborne botulism, tetanus, Clostridium perfringens, alpha toxin (perfringolysin), anaerobic bacterial growth, membrane perforation, cell lysis, gas gangrene, endospore formation, and toxin-mediated tissue destruction. The guide also examines the relationship between improperly canned foods and foodborne illness, the role of honey in infant botulism, and vaccine-based prevention strategies for tetanus infections. The document further explores plague infections, Lyme disease, sexually transmitted infections, and environmental pathogens. Students will review bubonic plague, pneumonic plague, septicemic plague, Yersinia pestis virulence, Borrelia burgdorferi infections, Treponema pallidum, Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Legionella pneumophila, and anthrax-related infections. Topics include bullseye rash recognition, respiratory system targeting, lymphatic involvement, cardiac and neurological complications, obligate intracellular parasites, hot tub–associated Legionnaires’ disease, and sexually transmitted disease progression commonly tested in microbiology and infectious disease courses. This study resource is highly recommended for students enrolled in microbiology, nursing, pre-nursing, biomedical sciences, public health, pharmacy, allied health sciences, molecular biology, biotechnology, pre-medical studies, and healthcare degree programs. It is especially useful for preparing for BIOD 171 module exams, microbiology laboratory practicals, ATI microbiology review, NCLEX-related infectious disease content, cumulative finals, laboratory competency assessments, and standardized science examinations. The structured question-and-answer format also supports active recall learning, tutoring sessions, collaborative group study, and independent revision. The material aligns closely with major microbiology and infectious disease textbooks commonly used in university science and healthcare curricula, including: Microbiology: An Introduction by Tortora, Funke, and Case Prescott’s Microbiology by Willey, Sherwood, and Woolverton Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg’s Medical Microbiology Brock Biology of Microorganisms by Madigan et al. Medical Microbiology by Murray, Rosenthal, and Pfaller Molecular Biology of the Cell by Alberts et al. The scientific and clinical microbiology concepts discussed throughout this study guide are additionally supported by peer-reviewed academic literature from journals such as Nature Reviews Microbiology, Clinical Microbiology Reviews, Journal of Clinical Microbiology, The Lancet Infectious Diseases, and Annual Review of Microbiology, ensuring academically accurate and evidence-based educational content appropriate for university-level microbiology and healthcare education. Keywords BIOD 171 BIOD 171 Module 5 Portage Learning microbiology microbiology exam questions infectious disease review pathogenicity microbial identification universal precautions Gram stain blood agar facultative anaerobes catalase negative bacteria Lancefield grouping beta hemolysis commensal bacteria immune evasion Streptococcus Staphylococcus strep throat rheumatic fever folliculitis conjunctivitis impetigo ophthalmia neonatorum scalded skin syndrome Mycobacterium tuberculosis acid fast stain Hansen disease leprosy Clostridium botulinum infant botulism foodborne botulism tetanus Clostridium perfringens gas gangrene perfringolysin cell lysis Yersinia pestis bubonic plague pneumonic plague septicemic plague Lyme disease Borrelia burgdorferi Treponema pallidum syphilis Neisseria gonorrhoeae gonorrhea Chlamydia trachomatis Legionella pneumophila Legionnaires disease anthrax microbiology laboratory techniques medical microbiology nursing microbiology pre nursing microbiology ATI microbiology review NCLEX microbiology undergraduate microbiology biology exam answers microbiology revision notes infectious disease microbiology microbiology flashcards microbiology final exam health sciences revision

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Module 5 Exam - Bio171
Microbio 2026 Exam Questions
and Answers | Already Graded
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The concept of treating all samples, whether known or unknown, as

potentially hazardous (or pathogenic) materials is known as _____. -

ANSWER ✔✔universal precautions


List at least 3 observations a researchers would be sure to note while

assessing an unknown microbial sample. - ANSWER ✔✔size and

shape, motility, gram status, color change, chemical reactions

, While observing an unknown sample of limited amounts, a researcher

must determine motility and Gram status using the same sample. What

would you determine first and why? - ANSWER ✔✔Motility because

Gram staining requires the sample be fixed which would kill the

organism and then you can't observe motility


a Facultative anaerobe is a microorganism capable of growth under what

conditions? - ANSWER ✔✔A microorganism capable of growth under

aerobic and anaerobic conditions


as streptococcus is catalase negative would it thrive or die in the

presence of peroxides? Why? - ANSWER ✔✔strep would not survive

in the presence of peroxides b/c it is unable to breakdown peroxides


strep is most often streaked onto:




1.) chocolate agar


2.) EMB agar


3.) Blood agar


4.) Spirit blue agar - ANSWER ✔✔blood agar

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