Publication | Open Access
Blood culture technique based on centrifugation: clinical evaluation
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Citations
18
References
1976
Year
Pathogen DetectionBiomedical EngineeringBlood Culture TechniqueArtificial OrganIsolation RateHematologyClinical ChemistryInfection ControlLaboratory MedicineAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesMedicineTransfusion MedicineClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial SusceptibilityMicrobial ContaminationCo2 AtmosphereMicrobiologyPour Plate TechniquesBlood Transfusion
A total of 1,000 blood samples from patients suspected of having a bacteremia were analyzed concurrently, where possible, by three methods: (i) Trypticase soy broth with sodium polyanethol sulfonate and a CO2 atmosphere: (ii) pour plates with either brain heart infusion agar or Sabouraud dextrose agar; and (iii) centrifugation of the suspected organism in a hypertonic solution. There were 176 positive cultures. The centrifugation technique recovered 73% of the positive cultures. The broth and pour plate techniques recovered 38 and 49%, respectively. The centrifugation technique showed an increased isolation rate for Pseudomonas, fungi, and gram-positive cocci. In general, for each organism the time required for the detection of a positive culture was shortest for the centrifugation technique.
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