This species is the most commonly reported laboratory-acquir…

This species is the most commonly reported laboratory-acquired bacterial infection and must be handled in class II or higher biological safety cabinet. They are small gram-negative coccobacilli that are strict aerobes and will grow on Sheep Blood Agar and Chocolate agar. They are nonmotile, catalase, urease, and nitrate positive and most strains are oxidase positive. From the choices below, please select the organism matching the microscopic and biochemical reactions listed:  

This species is the most commonly reported laboratory-acquir…

This species is the most commonly reported laboratory-acquired bacterial infection and must be handled in class II or higher biological safety cabinet. They are small gram-negative coccobacilli that are strict aerobes and will grow on Sheep Blood Agar and Chocolate agar. They are nonmotile, catalase, urease, and nitrate positive and most strains are oxidase positive. From the choices below, please select the organism matching the microscopic and biochemical reactions listed:  

The granular, wrinkled, yellow/white-pigmented colonies show…

The granular, wrinkled, yellow/white-pigmented colonies shown in the photograph were recovered on chocolate agar after 48 hours of incubation from a respiratory specimen collected from a patient with cystic fibrosis. Note in the lower composite photograph that colonies on the surface of blood agar are flat, granular, and only slightly wrinkled. On MacConkey agar the colonies lack lactose fermentation and lack pyocyanin production. The spot oxidase test is positive, and nitrates are reduced. With these observations, select the presumptive identification of this isolate. The answer is in the morphology.