## Correct Answer: B. Bacillus anthracis The McFadyean reaction is the pathognomonic staining feature of *Bacillus anthracis*—a characteristic that immediately identifies this organism in clinical microbiology. When polychrome methylene blue stain is applied to *B. anthracis*, the bacterial capsule (composed of poly-D-glutamic acid) stains pink/magenta while the bacillus itself stains blue, creating a striking halo effect. This is the **McFadyean reaction**, named after the veterinary pathologist who first described it. The organism is a large, Gram-positive, aerobic bacillus with a prominent capsule visible in clinical specimens. The clinical presentation—a necrotic ulcerative skin lesion in a farmer (occupational exposure to infected animals or animal products)—is classic for cutaneous anthrax, the most common form in India. The capsule is an important virulence factor, and its demonstration via the McFadyean reaction is diagnostic. While *B. anthracis* can cause systemic disease (inhalational or gastrointestinal anthrax), cutaneous anthrax presents as a painless, black eschar surrounded by edema—the "malignant pustule." The organism is spore-forming, which is epidemiologically relevant in agricultural settings where contaminated soil or animal hides may harbor spores. This combination of clinical presentation, occupational history, and the specific McFadyean reaction makes *B. anthracis* the definitive answer. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Francisella tularensis** — While *F. tularensis* causes tularemia with skin ulcers (ulceroglandular form), it is a small, pleomorphic, Gram-negative coccobacillus that does NOT show a capsule or McFadyean reaction. It requires special stains (Gram or Giemsa) and is difficult to culture. The organism is associated with rabbit/hare contact in endemic areas, not typical farmer exposure. The absence of the McFadyean reaction rules this out immediately. **C. Clostridium perfringens** — This is an anaerobic, Gram-positive bacillus that causes gas gangrene and necrotizing fasciitis, not simple skin ulcers. *C. perfringens* does not form a capsule visible on methylene blue staining and does not exhibit the McFadyean reaction. It is spore-forming but lacks the characteristic pink halo effect. The clinical context (farmer with ulcerative lesion) and the specific staining finding point away from this organism. **D. Yersinia pestis** — Although *Y. pestis* causes plague with skin manifestations (bubonic plague with bubo formation), it is a small, Gram-negative coccobacillus that does NOT possess a prominent capsule or demonstrate the McFadyean reaction. It stains with Gram or Wayson stain (showing bipolar 'safety-pin' appearance), not polychrome methylene blue with a pink halo. Plague is rare in India and typically presents with lymphadenopathy, not isolated ulcerative lesions. ## High-Yield Facts - **McFadyean reaction** = pink/magenta capsule halo around blue bacillus on polychrome methylene blue stain; pathognomonic for *Bacillus anthracis*. - **Cutaneous anthrax** = painless black eschar with surrounding edema; most common form in India; occupational risk in farmers and veterinarians. - **Bacillus anthracis** capsule = poly-D-glutamic acid; antiphagocytic virulence factor; visible only in clinical specimens (not in culture media without specific conditions). - **Spore formation** = allows *B. anthracis* to survive in soil for decades; epidemiologically important in agricultural settings and animal product handling. - **Gram-positive, aerobic, large bacillus** with prominent capsule distinguishes *B. anthracis* from *F. tularensis* (Gram-negative, small) and *Y. pestis* (Gram-negative, small). ## Mnemonics **McFadyean = Magenta halo (Bacillus anthracis)** When you see **polychrome methylene blue** stain with a **pink/magenta halo** around a blue bacillus, think **McFadyean reaction = *Bacillus anthracis***. The capsule stains pink, the bacillus stains blue—instant diagnosis. **ANTHRAX = Aerobic, Non-motile, Toxin-producing, Huge bacillus, Resistant spores, Antiphagocytic capsule, eXotoxin (lethal & edema factors)** Memory hook for *B. anthracis* virulence: aerobic growth, large size, spore-forming, capsule (antiphagocytic), and two exotoxins (lethal toxin and edema toxin). Helps recall why it's so dangerous and why the capsule is diagnostically important. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the McFadyean reaction with *B. anthracis* to test whether students confuse it with other capsulated organisms (*Y. pestis*, *F. tularensis*) or other Gram-positive bacilli (*C. perfringens*). The trap is not knowing that the McFadyean reaction is **specific and pathognomonic** for *B. anthracis* alone. ## Clinical Pearl In India, cutaneous anthrax remains an occupational hazard in farmers, veterinarians, and workers handling animal hides or wool. Recognition of the black eschar with surrounding edema and confirmation via the McFadyean reaction allows rapid diagnosis and early antibiotic therapy (penicillin or doxycycline), preventing progression to systemic disease. The spore-forming nature makes environmental decontamination critical in affected farms. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, Ch. 12 (Bacillus); Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Ch. 8 (Infectious Diseases)_
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