## Correct Answer: A. Nocardia asteroides Nocardia asteroides is a Gram-positive, partially acid-fast (ZN-positive), filamentous branching bacterium that causes chronic meningitis and other CNS infections, particularly in immunocompromised patients. The key discriminating features are: (1) **Gram-positive filamentous branching** morphology (unlike cocci or rods), (2) **positive ZN stain** (partially acid-fast, unlike most bacteria but weaker than Mycobacterium), and (3) **growth on paraffin bait culture** — a pathognomonic test where Nocardia preferentially grows on mineral oil/paraffin, using it as a carbon source. This combination is diagnostic for Nocardia. In India, Nocardia meningitis is seen in patients with hematologic malignancies, organ transplant recipients, and those on prolonged corticosteroids. The organism is aerobic, grows slowly on standard media (Sabouraud dextrose agar, blood agar), and requires 48–72 hours for visible growth. Chronic meningitis presentation with subacute course, CSF showing lymphocytic pleocytosis, and elevated protein are typical. Treatment in India follows sulfonamide regimens (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) as first-line, with alternatives including amikacin or imipenem for severe CNS disease. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Cryptococcus neoformans** — Cryptococcus is a **yeast (not filamentous bacteria)**, is **Gram-positive but round/oval**, and is **ZN-negative**. While it causes chronic meningitis (especially in HIV patients in India), it lacks the branching filamentous morphology and does not grow on paraffin bait culture. India has high prevalence of cryptococcal meningitis in advanced HIV, but the morphology and culture characteristics rule it out here. **C. Mycobacterium tuberculosis** — TB meningitis is common in India and presents as chronic meningitis, but M. tuberculosis is **acid-fast (strongly ZN-positive) and rod-shaped, not filamentous branching**. It does **not grow on paraffin bait culture**. While ZN-positive, the absence of branching morphology and negative paraffin bait test distinguish it from Nocardia. This is an NBE trap pairing two acid-fast organisms. **D. Actinomyces israelii** — Actinomyces is Gram-positive and filamentous branching but is **ZN-negative (not acid-fast)** and **does not grow on paraffin bait culture**. It is anaerobic/microaerophilic and causes cervicofacial infections ('lumpy jaw'), not typically meningitis. The negative ZN stain and absent paraffin growth rule it out despite morphologic similarity to Nocardia. ## High-Yield Facts - **Nocardia asteroides** is Gram-positive, partially acid-fast (ZN-positive), and filamentous branching — the only organism with all three features. - **Paraffin bait culture** (growth on mineral oil) is pathognomonic for Nocardia and distinguishes it from Actinomyces and Mycobacterium. - Nocardia meningitis in India occurs in immunocompromised hosts: hematologic malignancies, transplant recipients, prolonged corticosteroid use. - **First-line treatment** for Nocardia is trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX); alternatives include amikacin or imipenem for CNS disease. - CSF in Nocardia meningitis shows **lymphocytic pleocytosis, elevated protein, normal-to-low glucose** — similar to TB meningitis but organism morphology differs. ## Mnemonics **NOCA for Nocardia** **N**o anaerobes (aerobic) | **O**il-loving (paraffin bait) | **C**hronic infection | **A**cid-fast (partially ZN+). Use when you see filamentous + ZN+ + paraffin growth. **Branching Bacteria Trio** **Nocardia** = Gram+, ZN+, paraffin+ | **Actinomyces** = Gram+, ZN−, paraffin− | **Mycobacterium** = Gram−/weak, ZN++, paraffin−. Paraffin bait is the Nocardia giveaway. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs Nocardia with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (both cause chronic meningitis in India, both ZN-positive) to trap students who focus only on acid-fastness and meningitis, missing the filamentous branching and paraffin bait culture that are unique to Nocardia. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary centers, Nocardia meningitis is an emerging diagnosis in hematology-oncology and transplant units; delayed recognition (mistaken for TB meningitis) leads to prolonged anti-TB therapy without improvement. Paraffin bait culture on a simple bedside setup can differentiate it within 72 hours, allowing rapid switch to TMP-SMX and preventing unnecessary isoniazid exposure. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology (Nocardia section); Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease Ch. 8 (Bacterial infections)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.