## Correct Answer: D. Bacillus anthracis The clinical presentation of a painless ulcer with a central black eschar on the forearm in a veterinarian is pathognomonic for cutaneous anthrax caused by **Bacillus anthracis**. The black eschar (Greek: "scar") is the hallmark lesion—a necrotic, charred-appearing center surrounded by significant edema, developing over 2–6 days after inoculation through abraded skin or minor cuts. Veterinarians and livestock handlers are occupationally exposed to infected animals and hides. B. anthracis is a Gram-positive, spore-forming rod that produces anthrax toxin (lethal toxin and edema toxin) via plasmid-encoded virulence factors. Cutaneous anthrax is the most common form (95% of cases) and has excellent prognosis (~1% mortality) with appropriate antibiotics (penicillin G or doxycycline per Indian guidelines). The eschar is painless despite its alarming appearance—a key discriminator from other bacterial infections. In India, anthrax remains endemic in certain agricultural regions, and occupational exposure in veterinarians and farmers is well-documented. The spore-forming nature and zoonotic transmission from livestock make B. anthracis the only organism matching this clinical picture. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Yersinia pestis** — Y. pestis causes plague with bubonic (painful lymphadenopathy), pneumonic, or septicemic presentations—never a characteristic black eschar ulcer on the skin. Plague presents with fever, chills, and regional lymph node enlargement (bubo), not a localized necrotic ulcer. The organism is a Gram-negative coccobacillus transmitted by fleas, not through direct contact with infected animals. **B. Francisella tularensis** — F. tularensis causes tularemia with ulceroglandular disease (painless ulcer + regional lymphadenopathy), but the ulcer lacks the characteristic black eschar. Tularemia presents with fever and systemic symptoms; the skin lesion is typically a small papule progressing to ulcer without the distinctive black necrotic center. Transmission is via tick bites or infected rabbit handling, not occupational exposure in veterinarians. **C. Pseudomonas aeruginosa** — P. aeruginosa is an opportunistic Gram-negative rod causing wound infections, otitis externa, and respiratory infections in immunocompromised hosts—not a primary pathogen in immunocompetent individuals. It does not produce the characteristic black eschar and is not associated with occupational zoonotic exposure in veterinarians. Pseudomonas infections are nosocomial or healthcare-associated, not from animal contact. ## High-Yield Facts - **Black eschar** is the pathognomonic lesion of cutaneous anthrax—painless, necrotic center surrounded by edema, developing over 2–6 days. - **Bacillus anthracis** is a Gram-positive, spore-forming rod; cutaneous form has ~1% mortality with antibiotics (penicillin G or doxycycline). - **Occupational exposure** in veterinarians, farmers, and livestock handlers is the primary risk factor for anthrax in India. - **Anthrax toxin** (lethal toxin + edema toxin) is encoded on plasmids; spore germination in macrophages triggers systemic disease if untreated. - **Cutaneous anthrax** accounts for 95% of anthrax cases; inhalational and gastrointestinal forms are rare but have high mortality without treatment. ## Mnemonics **BLACK ESCHAR = ANTHRAX** **B**acillus anthracis → **L**ocal ulcer → **A**nimal contact → **C**utaneous form → **K** (necrotic) eschar. Remember: the black eschar is *painless* and *surrounded by edema*—this painless necrotic ulcer in a veterinarian is anthrax until proven otherwise. **ANTHRAX FORMS (by mortality without Rx)** **C**utaneous (1% mortality) → **I**nhalational (90% mortality) → **G**astrointestinal (25–60% mortality). Cutaneous is most common and most survivable; occupational exposure in veterinarians → cutaneous form. ## NBE Trap NBE may lure students who confuse tularemia's ulceroglandular presentation (painless ulcer + lymphadenopathy) with anthrax's eschar. The discriminator is the **black necrotic center**—unique to anthrax. Alternatively, students may overthink and select Pseudomonas if they associate "veterinarian" with "wound infection" rather than recognizing the zoonotic occupational exposure pattern. ## Clinical Pearl In India, anthrax remains a concern in agricultural and pastoral communities. A veterinarian or farmer presenting with a painless black eschar should raise immediate suspicion for anthrax—early penicillin G or doxycycline therapy is curative. The painless nature of the eschar often delays diagnosis because patients assume it is less serious than it appears; educating occupational groups about this presentation is key to preventing progression to systemic disease. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology (Ch. Gram-Positive Bacilli); Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease (Ch. Infectious Diseases)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.