## Correct Answer: D. Exhibits satellitism around Staphylococcus aureus colonies The clinical presentation—high fever, seizures, headache, neck rigidity with CSF showing low glucose, high protein, and polymorphs—is classic bacterial meningitis. The CSF culture showing pleomorphic gram-negative bacilli is pathognomonic for **Haemophilus influenzae**, the second most common cause of bacterial meningitis in India (after *Streptococcus pneumoniae*). The key discriminating feature is **satellitism**: H. influenzae requires exogenous growth factors—specifically NAD (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, also called factor V) and hemin (factor X)—for growth. When cultured on blood agar alone, it grows poorly or not at all. However, when *Staphylococcus aureus* colonies are present on the same plate, they lyse red blood cells and release these factors, allowing H. influenzae to grow as small colonies around the S. aureus colonies—a phenomenon called satellitism. This is a classic microbiological identification feature taught in Indian medical schools and is highly specific for H. influenzae. The pleomorphic morphology (coccobacilli appearing as short rods or cocci) further confirms the diagnosis. Satellitism is the gold standard biochemical/growth characteristic for presumptive identification of H. influenzae in resource-limited Indian laboratories where MALDI-TOF or 16S rRNA may not be available. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. It exhibits alpha hemolysis on sheep blood agar** — H. influenzae does NOT produce alpha hemolysis (greenish discoloration). It is a **non-hemolytic** organism on blood agar because it lacks the enzymes needed to lyse RBCs. Alpha hemolysis is characteristic of *Streptococcus pneumoniae* and *Streptococcus viridans*, which are also meningitis pathogens but would show different CSF culture morphology (gram-positive cocci, not gram-negative bacilli). This is an NBE trap pairing meningitis with alpha-hemolytic streptococci. **B. Produces non-lactose fermenting colonies on MacConkey agar** — H. influenzae is **lactose non-fermenting** on MacConkey agar, but this is NOT a distinguishing feature because many gram-negative bacilli (e.g., *Salmonella*, *Shigella*, *Pseudomonas*) are also non-lactose fermenters. Moreover, H. influenzae grows poorly or not at all on MacConkey agar because it lacks the growth factors (NAD and hemin) that are absent in this selective medium. This option confuses a general property with a specific identification criterion. **C. It is bacitracin sensitive.** — Bacitracin sensitivity is a classic test for **Streptococcus pyogenes** (group A Streptococcus), not H. influenzae. H. influenzae is **bacitracin resistant**. This is a common NBE trap: students may confuse bacitracin sensitivity (used to differentiate S. pyogenes from other beta-hemolytic streptococci) with H. influenzae identification. The pleomorphic gram-negative morphology should rule out any streptococcal organism. ## High-Yield Facts - **Satellitism** around S. aureus colonies is the hallmark identification feature of H. influenzae due to its requirement for NAD (factor V) and hemin (factor X). - H. influenzae is the **second most common cause of bacterial meningitis** in India (after S. pneumoniae) and the leading cause in unvaccinated children. - **Pleomorphic gram-negative bacilli** (coccobacilli) in CSF culture with low glucose and high protein strongly suggests H. influenzae meningitis. - H. influenzae is **non-hemolytic** on blood agar and grows poorly on MacConkey agar due to lack of growth factors. - The **Hib vaccine** (part of pentavalent vaccine in IAP schedule) has dramatically reduced H. influenzae meningitis incidence in vaccinated Indian children. ## Mnemonics **NAH for H. influenzae** **N**AD and **A**uxotrophic for **H**emin = H. influenzae needs both factors. Satellitism occurs because S. aureus provides these factors by lysing RBCs. **Meningitis CSF Triad for H. influenzae** **Low glucose** (CSF:blood ratio <0.4), **High protein** (>100 mg/dL), **Pleomorphic gram-negative bacilli** = Think H. influenzae first in unvaccinated children. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs meningitis with alpha-hemolytic streptococci (option A) to trap students who confuse S. pneumoniae meningitis with H. influenzae meningitis. The gram-negative pleomorphic morphology is the key discriminator that rules out all streptococci. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric practice, H. influenzae meningitis remains a clinical emergency in unvaccinated or partially vaccinated children. The CSF profile (low glucose, high protein, polymorphs) mimics pneumococcal meningitis, but the pleomorphic gram-negative morphology on Gram stain is the bedside clue. Satellitism on culture confirms the diagnosis and guides empiric therapy—ceftriaxone or cefotaxime are the DOCs, with fluoroquinolones as alternatives in penicillin-allergic patients. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology (Ch. Haemophilus); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Communicable Diseases)_
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