Evaluation of calibrated 1 and 10 microl loops and dipslide as compared to pipettes for detection of low count bacteriuria in vitro.

APMIS(2000)

引用 10|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Criteria for defining urinary tract infection have changed as the importance of low count bacteriuria in patients with symptoms of infection has been recognized. Little has been published, however, regarding the ability of routine laboratory methods to meet this new challenge. We compared 1 mul and 10 mul calibrated plastic loops (Nunc, Denmark), to a commonly used dipslide method (Uricult, Orion, Finland) using a 0.1 mi pipette as the gold standard. Four typical uropathogens, E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. saprophyticus and E. faecalis, were mixed in pooled human urine in numbers representing low counts, i.e. 10(2), 10(3), and 10(4), together with 10(5) colony-forming units (cfu)/ml, and sampling with the four methods was performed 20 times for each with each bacterium and each dilution. Colony counts showed that in many cases the 1 mul loop did not deposit any bacteria on the agar plate when colony counts were lower than 104 cfu/ml. The 10 mul loop constantly deposited 1.5 times higher numbers of bacteria than predicted, which correlated with the results of weighing the amount of water sampled, i.e. 15.24 (1.55) mug (mean (SD)). The dipslide counts correlated with the 10 mul loop although the agar mounts on the slides absorbed water equal to about 200 mul. There were no significant differences in the counts of the four different bacteria. Variation coefficients increased with decreasing volumes sampled, but the 10 mul loop was found sufficiently exact to detect counts from 10(3) to 10(4), since only 10-fold multiples are usually reported for urine cultures.
更多
查看译文
关键词
quantitative counts,urine,urinary tract infection,loops,dipslide,bacteriuria
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要