Microbiology Diagnosis of Chest Infections Flashcards
name some diagnostic techniques
> microscopy and culture of sputum
antigen detection methods
nucleic acid amplification
serology
what are the major respiratory pathogens that are cultured for?
> strep. pneumonia
haemophilus influenza
Moraxella catarrhalis
what ways can a bronchio-alveolar lavage sample be taken?
> a lower airways sample collected via bronchoscopy
> a catheter aspirate in ventilated patient (more representative of the patients lung)
what sort of culture is created from a BAL?
a quantative culture in units/ml to show the colony count
what sort of pneumonia is BAL used to diagnose?
ventilator associated pneumonia
when are blood cultures taken from a patient?
when they have severe sepsis, presenting with an increased heart and respiratory rate
after a blood culture why is a gramm stain carried out?
to rationalise what antibiotic the patient should be on
what organisms can not easily be blood cultured?
> legionella pneumophila
mycoplasma pneumonia
chlamydia psittaci
coxiella burnetti
what is antigen detection?
this is a non-cultural demonstration of the presence of an organism by detecting the specific antigen in immunology.
in latex agglutination what are the latex particle coated with?
monoclonal antibodies specific for organism in question.
in latex angulation how can you tell if the organism is present?
there is clumping that is visible to the naked eye
what does EIA stand for?
enzyme linked immuno-assay
describe the process of EIA/ELISA
the monoclonal anti-legionella is coated on a well of micro titre plate. this is then incubated with the patients urine and if the antigen is present it will bind. this is incubated with enzyme linked monoclonal anti-legionella and then anything that is not attached is washed away. the enzyme substrate is added and a colour change will occur if the enzyme is present. the more antigen present the denser the colour will occur.
why may a false positive occur in a polymerase chain reaction?
if there is contamination as it is very sinsitive
describe how the DNA molecule in PCR is amplified for visualisation
it is denatured at 95 degrees. at 60 degrees the primers anneal to complementary bases flanking the region of interest. at 75 degrees tag polymerase extends the single stranded DNA molecule creating a double stranded DNA molecule. this process is repeated 25-35 times.