Lab Approaches to Infectious Diseases Flashcards
types of specimen collected for lab testing
- sterile body fluid (blood, CSF, peritoneal/pleural/pericardial fluid, urine, eye/middle ear)
- pus or sputum
- stool
- tissue biopsy (ex. lymph nodes)
- lavage
- swab of infected surface
collection/transport methods for lab testing
-sterile cup (for stool/urine)
-blood culture bottles (has a vacuum in them)
-swabs
-viral transport media
-syringe
laboratory accession and preparation
-specimens processed if needed (grinding of tissue or bone)
-specimens for molecular testing processed separately
-DIRECT MICROSCOPY performed on most specimens (gram stain, fungal smear, mycobacterial smears)
-cultures plated
acid-fast stain
detect bacteria that have long-chain mycolic acid in the cell wall, which resist decolorization with acid
dark-field microscopy
a special condenser is used that prevents transmitted light from directly illuminating the specimen
*used for spirochetes
fluorescence microscopy
used to see a small number of organisms by using fluorochrome stain
4 methods for bacterial identification in the lab
- selective/chromogenic agar
- biochemical analysis
- MALDI-TOF
- molecular
MALDI-TOF
*rapid (get results in 1 hour)
*take a color, put it in matrix, a laser aerosolizes it; the further it goes down the column, the heavier it is
*computer tells you what organism is
molecular testing
*several different tests, all based on identification of DNA or RNA
*PCR is an example of molecular testing
PCR (polymerase chain reaction)
powerful technique for amplification and subsequent identification of DNA
1) denaturation into single strands
2) annealing of primers
3) extension of new DNA strnds
*requires Taq
serology
-performed on serum usually
*can detect either ANTIGEN or IgM or IgG antibody
*ELISA is the most common form of serology
*useful for several viruses and bacteria
minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)
concentration of antimicrobial that INHIBITS growth
-commonly used by clinical lab
minimal bacteriocidal concentration (MBC)
concentration that KILLS bacteria
-used clinically only in special circumstnaces
resistant
somewhat arbitrary designation that implies that an antimicrobial will NOT inhibit bacterial growth at clinically achievable concentrations
susceptible
somewhat arbitrary designation that implies that an antimicrobial WILL inhibit bacterial growth at clinically achievable concentrations