MICRO

Microbiology

Fact 1 of 1

Gram Stain and Bacterial Classification

Gram positive = purple (thick peptidoglycan). Gram negative = pink (thin peptidoglycan, LPS outer membrane). Shapes: cocci vs rods.

Detailed Explanation

Gram Positive (Purple/Blue):

  • Thick peptidoglycan wall
  • No outer membrane
  • Teichoic acids present
  • Key organisms:

  • **Cocci in clusters:** Staphylococcus (aureus, epidermidis)
  • **Cocci in chains:** Streptococcus (pyogenes, pneumoniae)
  • **Rods:** Bacillus, Clostridium, Listeria, Corynebacterium
  • Gram Negative (Pink/Red):

  • Thin peptidoglycan
  • Outer membrane with LPS (endotoxin)
  • Periplasmic space
  • Key organisms:

  • **Cocci:** Neisseria (meningitidis, gonorrhoeae)
  • **Rods:** E. coli, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas, Salmonella, Shigella
  • Special Cases:

  • Mycobacteria: Acid-fast (waxy mycolic acid)
  • Mycoplasma: No cell wall (can't Gram stain)
  • Spirochetes: Too thin to see (use dark-field)
  • Clinical Pearl:

  • Gram negative → LPS → septic shock
  • Gram positive → exotoxins and peptidoglycan → inflammation
  • Clinical Correlation

    In suspected meningitis, Gram stain of CSF can rapidly distinguish between bacterial causes: Gram-positive diplococci (S. pneumoniae), Gram-negative diplococci (N. meningitidis), or Gram-positive rods (Listeria in immunocompromised/elderly).

    Memory Trick

    "Positive = Purple = Patricia keeps her POSITIVE attitude in PURPLE. Blue = Positive vibes."