microbiology review blood

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Demetrio L. Valle Jr., MD, MSc., FPSP, FASCP, IFCAP Anatomic and Clinical Pathologist

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Page 1: Microbiology review  blood

Demetrio L. Valle Jr., MD, MSc., FPSP, FASCP, IFCAP

Anatomic and Clinical Pathologist

Page 2: Microbiology review  blood

OUTLINEDIAGNOSTIC BACTERIOLOGY

Blood Cerebrospinal FluidUrineStoolUpper respiratory tractLower respiratory tractPus and exudatesUpdates in Multidrug Resistance Bacteria

Page 3: Microbiology review  blood

BLOOD Expected Organisms

Bacteroides fragilis Brucella Burkholderia pseudomallei Candida albicans and Cryptococcus neoformans Haemophilus influenzae Neisseria meningitidis Non-fermenters other than Pseudomonas aeruginosa Other Enterobacteriaceae Pseudomonas aeruginosa Salmonella typhi and non-typhi Staphylococcus aureus Streptococci (S. pyogenes, S. pneumoniae, viridans

streptococci)

Page 4: Microbiology review  blood

Blood - Media and diagnostic reagentsCOLLECTION MEDIAAEROBIC - Tryptic soy broth (TSB) can be

replaced by any rich broth, e.g. Brain–heart infusion broth

ANAEROBIC- thioglycollate broth or Schaedler broth or Wilkins–Chalgren anaerobe broth

ISOLATION MEDIABlood agar, chocolate agar and MacConkey

agar

Page 5: Microbiology review  blood

Tryptic soy broth (TSB) Thioglycollate broth

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Blood - Media and diagnostic reagentsDIAGNOSTIC REAGENTS

Bacitracin disc (Group A β- Streptococci – S. pyogenes –susceptible)

Coagulase plasma (S. aureus) β-Lactamase test reagent (detection of Beta-lactamase enzyme)** Optochin disc (differentiate S. pneumoniae from other α hemolytic

strep) Oxidase reagent Salmonella agglutinating antisera V and XV factors (Identification of Hemophilus influenzae) Haemophilus influenzae type b antiserum Neisseria meningitidis agglutinating serum (polyvalent andspecific groups A, B, C)** penicillin, cephalosporins, cephamycins and carbapenems

Page 8: Microbiology review  blood

Oxidase Test (N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride) used to detect the presence of oxidase enzymes

produced by a variety of bacteria. oxidase test can be used to differentiate between

genera :Moraxella (+) and Neisseria (+) from Acinetobacter

(-) Aeromonas (+), Plesiomonas shigelloides (+), and

Vibrio (V+) from other Enterobacteriaceae (-) Burkholderia gladioli (-) and B. mallei (V) from B.

cepacia (+) and B. pseudomallei (+) Pseudomonas aeruginosa , Neisseria gonorrhoeae

and Campylobacter jejuni are oxidase-positive pathogens

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Oxidase Test V (Heme) & X (NAD) factor test

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BACTEREMIAPresence of bacteria in the blood streamCaused by:

Post-operative complicationsIntravascular cathetersLocalized infection

In-patient mortality – 20%Shock and organ failure – 90%

Page 11: Microbiology review  blood

BACTEREMIAEarly detection 77%Differentiation between Gram positive or

Gram negative is one of the most important factors.

Page 12: Microbiology review  blood

WHOLE BLOOD CULTURE

Most sensitive and the gold standard.

It requires incubation, subculturing, biochemical tests.

3-7 days TAT

http://www.flickr.com/photos/bjorn_banan/161825278/

Page 13: Microbiology review  blood

METHODS TO IMPROVE BLOOD CULTURE YIELDSKIN PREPARATIONSKIN PREPARATION

Strict aseptic technique (Chandrasekar & Brown, 1994).

Povidone iodine versus 2% tincture of iodine (Little et al., 1999)Tincture of iodine -> significant reduction in

skin flora contamination due to the faster onset of action

0.5% Alcoholic chlorhexidine (Mimoz et al., 1999)Reduced the incidence of blood culture

contamination15 to 30 seconds

Page 14: Microbiology review  blood

METHODS TO IMPROVE BLOOD CULTURE YIELD

TIMING OF BLOOD EXTRACTIONTIMING OF BLOOD EXTRACTIONContinuous Bacteremia Intermittent Bacteremia

Chandrasekar & Brown, 1994 drawing multiple blood culture sets in 24 hour

period have been shown to detect intermittent bacteremia

Li et al., 1994 Similar yields if samples were collected within

2 hours or within 24 hoursMylotte & Tayana, 2000

Patients with antibiotics, samples drawn close to the time antibiotic conc. have reached low levels.

Page 15: Microbiology review  blood

METHODS TO IMPROVE BLOOD CULTURE YIELD

VOLUME OF BLOODVOLUME OF BLOODIs the most important factor ( Shafazand &

Weinacker, 2002)At least 10 mL, provide the highest yield

and lowest number of false-negative blood culture results (Mermel and Maki, 1993).

Extracting more than 30 mL of blood does not improve the sensitivity of blood and contributes to iatrogenic causes of anemia (Weinstein et al., 1983)

Page 16: Microbiology review  blood

METHODS TO IMPROVE BLOOD CULTURE YIELD

ANTIBIOTIC TREATMENTANTIBIOTIC TREATMENTSignificant decrease the yield of blood

cultures (Chandrasekar & Brown, 1994; Leibovici, 1991)

10 mL per 100 mL of culture broth dilutes the concentrations of antibiotics and neutralizing serum bactericidal activity in the culture (Washington & Ilstrup, 1996).

Antibiotic-absorbent resins (BacT/Alert, Biomerioux, France).

Antimicrobial removal device (BACTEC,Beckton Dickinson, MD).

Page 17: Microbiology review  blood

Common causes of bacteremia

Page 18: Microbiology review  blood

Processing of blood culturesIncubation SubculturesFinal processing Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST)Detection 0f contaminants

Page 19: Microbiology review  blood

Incubation timeManual

35-37⁰CInspected twice a day for at least 3 days for signs of microbial

growthSedimented red bloodSigns of microbial growth

a floccular deposit on top of the blood layer uniform or subsurface turbidity hemolysis coagulation of the broth a surface pellicle production of gas white grains on the surface or deep in the blood layer.

Perform gram stain

Page 20: Microbiology review  blood
Page 21: Microbiology review  blood

Subculturesfor Gram-negative rods: MacConkey agar,

Kligler iron agar, motilityindole–urease (MIU) medium, Simmons citrate agar;

for small Gram-negative rods: blood agar;for staphylococci: blood agar, mannitol salt

agar;for streptococci: blood agar with optochin,

bacitracin, and tellurite discs, sheep blood agar for the CAMP test, and bile–esculin agar.

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SubcultureMicroorganisms may grow without producing

turbidity or visible alteration of the broth. e.g. S. Pneumoniae (autolysis and die rapidly)Subculture in chocolate agar after 18-24 hours

incubation. After 7 days of incubation without growth –

inoculate in thioglycollate broth (incubate for another 3 days)

Page 24: Microbiology review  blood

Antimicrobial susceptibility testingTime is gold in BLOOD CULTURE. Gram stain result – gram positive cocci

(Staph) or gram negative rodsSwab dipped into the turbid broth swab

inoculate in Mueller-Hinton medium (95% of cases correlate with the standardized test)

Page 25: Microbiology review  blood

ContaminantsAseptic skin preparationAseptic procedures during inoculation and

subculturesUsual contaminants

S. epidermidis, P. acnes, diphtheroids, Acinetobacter spp. and Bacillus spp.

Page 26: Microbiology review  blood

True bacteremia if the same organism grows in two bottles of

the same blood specimen;if the same organism grows in cultures from

more than one specimen; if growth is rapid (within 48 hours);if different isolates of one species show the

same biotypes and antimicrobial-susceptibility profiles.