| Literature DB >> 21938254 |
Nita Pal1, Rajni Sharma, Suman Rishi, Leela Vyas.
Abstract
The culture results of 4,807 blood and 383 sterile body fluid specimens received in our laboratory during a 54-month period, were analyzed to determine the time required for culture to become positive, time at which a culture could safely be considered negative, and the spectrum of isolated organisms. The specimens were processed by automated BACTEC 9120 culture system. A total of 1,677 clinically significant microorganisms were isolated. Gram positive and negative bacterial isolation rates were found to be 62.55% and 32.20%, respectively. Yeasts were recovered in 5.24%. False positivity rate was 1.5%. Clinically significant isolates recovered on day four and five were 97.81% and 99.88%, respectively. At day five, the sensitivity was 99.94% and negative predictive value 99.96%. Our data support a five-day incubation protocol for recovery of all clinically significant organisms with sensitivity reduced by 0.06%, when compared with a six-day protocol.Entities:
Keywords: Automated blood culture system; BACTEC; time to detection
Year: 2009 PMID: 21938254 PMCID: PMC3167972 DOI: 10.4103/0974-2727.59703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Lab Physicians ISSN: 0974-2727
Culture isolation results from blood and sterile body fluids by BACTEC 9120 system
Time to detection of microorganisms isolated in BACTEC culture vials