Literature DB >> 12029006

Preservation of urine for flow cytometric and visual microscopic testing.

Timo Kouri1, Lotta Vuotari, Simo Pohjavaara, Pekka Laippala.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Preservatives that could prevent destruction of cells, casts, and bacteria in urine are of great practical importance because they allow centralization and improvement of accuracy of urine particle counting. We compared two in-house mixtures and one commercial solution, as well as refrigeration, for their ability to preserve urine for both automated analysis (flow cytometry) and visual microscopy.
METHODS: Urine specimens were preserved by refrigeration at 4 degrees C without preservatives (procedure 1); in a lyophilized solution intended to preserve specimens for bacterial culture (Urine C&S tubes; BD Preanalytical Solutions; procedure 2); in 10 mL/L formalin-0.15 mol/L NaCl (procedure 3); in 80 mL/L ethanol-20 g/L polyethylene glycol (procedure 4); and by storage at 20 degrees C without preservatives (procedure 5). Test strip measurements were used to select specimens positive for leukocyte esterase, hemoglobin, albumin, or nitrite. For 106 consecutive strip-positive specimens, urinalysis was performed by UF-100 (Sysmex) and by phase-contrast microscopy after Sternheimer supravital staining. Automated analysis was performed at arrival in the morning, on the same day in the afternoon, and after 1 and 3 days. Visual microscopy was performed at arrival and 3 days later.
RESULTS: Urine bacterial counts were well preserved with procedures 1-3, with a false-positive rate of 0.0-3.4% at day 3 vs 28% without preservation (procedure 5). Erythrocytes were poorly preserved for 3 days (kappa coefficients, 0.24-0.61); after 1 day, fair preservation was seen with procedure 2 (kappa = 0.78), compared with less favorable preservation with procedure 1 (kappa = 0.61) or procedure 5 (kappa = 0.66). Leukocytes were well preserved by all five procedures in the acidic adult urines investigated. Counts of casts and large epithelial cells were artifactually increased by procedure 3. Procedure 2 performed at least as well as refrigeration for specimens analyzed with visual microscopy.
CONCLUSIONS: Urine specimens from adults can be stabilized at room temperature for both automated particle analysis and visual microscopy.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12029006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chem        ISSN: 0009-9147            Impact factor:   8.327


  4 in total

1.  Evaluation of the appropriate time period between sampling and analyzing for automated urinalysis.

Authors:  Ramona C Dolscheid-Pommerich; Ute Klarmann-Schulz; Rupert Conrad; Birgit Stoffel-Wagner; Berndt Zur
Journal:  Biochem Med (Zagreb)       Date:  2016       Impact factor: 2.313

2.  A new concept and a comprehensive evaluation of SYSMEX UF-1000i  flow cytometer to identify culture-negative urine specimens in patients with UTI.

Authors:  T Monsen; P Ryden
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2017-04-06       Impact factor: 3.267

Review 3.  Preanalytical requirements of urinalysis.

Authors:  Joris Delanghe; Marijn Speeckaert
Journal:  Biochem Med (Zagreb)       Date:  2014-02-15       Impact factor: 2.313

4.  The effectiveness of BD Vacutainer® Plus Urinalysis Preservative Tubes in preservation of urine for chemical strip analysis and particle counting.

Authors:  Merve Kaymak Ekşioğlu; Özlem Çakır Madenci; Nihal Yücel; Abdullah Elçi; Bülent Turhan; Gani Orhan; Asuman Orçun
Journal:  Biochem Med (Zagreb)       Date:  2016       Impact factor: 2.313

  4 in total

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