Title: MLAB 2434
1MLAB 2434 CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGYSUMMER,
2005CECILE SANDERS KERI BROPHY
- Chapter 7 General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling
2Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Basic Principles of Specimen Collection
- Specimen should be taken in acute phase of
infection AND before antibiotics are administered - Written order must specify site of culture
(example wound on left arm)
3Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Avoid normal flora and colonizing organisms
- Compare test results with suspected diagnosis
4Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Appropriate Collection Techniques
- Aspirates and tissues
- Aspirates and tissues present few problems, if
collected using sterile technique - Lesions, wounds and abscesses cultures should be
from as deep in the wound as possible
5Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Swabs
- Used only as a last resort
- Steps
- Clean wound
- Explore wound
- Obtain fresh and quality culture material
- Should be placed in a holding medium to protect
pathogens without permitting multiplication
during transport
6Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Patient Education and Preparation
- If patient is responsible for collecting
specimen, good instructions are critical - Urine midstream clean catch first morning
specimen - Sputum collect sputum NOT spit
- Stools usually 3 vials and at least 4 days
after barium Xrays
7Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Preservation, Storage, and Transport of Specimens
- Concerns
- Overgrowth
- Death of microorganisms
- Inaccurate quantitation
- Loss of organisms from drying
- Protection from oxygen
- Protection from clotting
- Safety of transporter
8Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Preservatives
- Urine boric acid
- Stool phosphate-buffered saline (PBS)
- Anticoagulants
- Needed in any specimen that might clot (blood,
serum, joint fluids) - Sodium polyanethol sulfonate (SPS)
9Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Use of Holding and Transport Media
- Swabs placed in Modified Stuart transport medium
or Cary-Blair transport medium - Blood placed in broth culture medium
- Unprotected specimens
- Sputums, body fluids, tissues, catheters, medical
devices, and specimens for sterility culture - Should be processed ASAP
10Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Storage of Specimens
- Urine, viral blood specimens, catheters and swabs
should be refrigerated - Blood and CSF should be processed ASAP
- Specimens for fungus cultures can be kept at room
temperature - Respiratory and stool cultures should be
processed ASAP if at all possible, but
refrigerated if immediate processing is not
possible
11Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Mailing Specimens
- Regulated by U.S. Dept. of Health and Human
Services - Primary container must be securely closed,
watertight - Secondary container has sufficient absorbent
material to absorb contents in case of breakage - Final container is an approved mailing container
with biohazard symbol and contact phone number
for CDC - Page 244 in textbook
12Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Safety
- Universal Precautions
- Specimen processing should be conducted in a
Class II safety cabinet (hood) - Labeling and Rejection of Specimens
- Requisitions must include source, diagnosis or
history, and test(s) requested
13Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Unacceptable Specimens
- Labels on requisition and on specimen must match
- Noninvasive vs. invasive specimens
- Rejected specimens
- Leaking
- Syringes with needles attached
- Stools contaminated with urine or barium
- Anaerobic cultures on inappropriate sources
- Unpreserved specimens over 2 hours old
14Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Refrigerated blood cultures
- Dried-up specimens
- Specimens in formalin
- Processing of Clinical Samples for Optimal
Organism Recovery - Prioritization (Table 7-2, p. 247)
- Level 1- Critical/invasive
- Level 2 Unpreserved
- Level 3 Accuracy of quantitation affected
- Level 4 Protected/Preserved
15Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Gross Examination of Specimens check specimen
and requisition - Direct Examination Techniques
- Direct Microscopic Examination (Table 7-3, p.
250, text) - Determine quality of specimen
- Diagnose infectious disease
- Guide routine culture interpretation
- Dictate the need for nonroutine processing
16Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Smear Preparation
- Tissues
- Swabs
- Aspirates and body fluids
- Single drop smear
- Centrifuged sediment smear
- Layered smear
- Cytocentrifuged smear
- Additives
17Chapter 7- General Concepts in Specimen
Collection and Handling (contd)
- Direct Smears NOT useful
- Throats, nasopharyngeal swabs
- Urine
- Female genital tract
- Primary Inoculation of Routine Specimens
- Types of Culture Media
- Nonselective vs. Selective
- Differential
- Enriched
- Broths