Bacteriology of expectorated sputum with quantitative culture and wash technique compared to transtracheal aspirates.

Techniques to improve the reliability of expectorated sputum culture were evaluated in 46 patients using a wash technique, quantitative culture, and a combination of washing and quantification. The wash procedure consisted of a jet of tap water over the specimen contained in a tea strainer. The true lower respiratory tract flora was determined by percutaneous transtracheal aspirates, which served as the basis for evaluating the methods of processing expectorated specimens. Either washing alone or quantification alone decreased the number of specimens with organisms that were not present in companion transtracheal aspirates; however, results that were sufficiently improved to be clearly advantageous for clinical interpretation were achieved only when washing and quantification were combined. Washed sputum specimens yielded oropharyngeal "contaminants" in concentrations exceeding 10(6) bacteria per ml in 12 of 46 specimens (26 per cent). Using this technique, only one specimen contained a misleading potential pathogen, and only one specimen failed to yield a potential pathogen that was recovered with the transtracheal aspirate. The wash procedure decreased the mean concentrations of contaminants approximately 100-fold for all specimens and 1,000-fold for purulent specimens.

[1]  R. Gibbons,et al.  Bacterial adherence in oral microbial ecology. , 1975, Annual review of microbiology.

[2]  J. Bartlett,et al.  Percutaneous transtracheal aspiration in the diagnosis of anaerobic pulmonary infection. , 1973, Annals of internal medicine.

[3]  M. Wilson,et al.  Quantitative sputum culture as a means of excluding false positive reports in the routine microbiology laboratory , 1972, Journal of clinical pathology.

[4]  E. Barrett-Connor The nonvalue of sputum culture in the diagnosis of pneumococcal pneumonia. , 2015, The American review of respiratory disease.

[5]  H. N. Beaty,et al.  Transtracheal aspiration in the evaluation of patients with pneumonia. , 1970, Annals of internal medicine.

[6]  P. Hoeprich Etiologic diagnosis of lower respiratory tract infections. , 1970, California medicine.

[7]  P. Monroe,et al.  Diagnostic and therapeutic advantages of serial quantitative cultures of fresh sputum in acute bacterial pneumonia. , 1969, The American review of respiratory disease.

[8]  J. Sanford,et al.  Changing pharyngeal bacterial flora of hospitalized patients. Emergence of gram-negative bacilli. , 1969, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  R. C. Kory,et al.  Sputum liquefying agents: a comparative in vitro evaluation. , 1969, The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine.

[10]  M. Willis,et al.  Quantitative bacteriology of sputum. , 1968, The American review of respiratory disease.

[11]  G. Rawlins Use of a pancreatin-trypsin solution for the liquefaction of sputa for routine bacteriological examination. , 1968, Journal of clinical pathology.

[12]  R. Potter,et al.  The bacteriology of the lower respiratory tract. Bronchoscopic study of 100 clinical cases. , 1968, The American review of respiratory disease.

[13]  D. F. Gordon,et al.  Indigenous flora from human saliva. , 1968, Applied microbiology.

[14]  P. Khavari,et al.  Quantitative bacteriological analysis of sputum as a test of antibiotic efficacy. , 1967, Applied microbiology.

[15]  R. H. Parker,et al.  Diagnostic usefulness and safety of transtracheal aspiration. , 1967, The New England journal of medicine.

[16]  J. M. Dixon,et al.  Value of dilute inocula in cultural examination of sputum. , 1965, Lancet.

[17]  S. Katz,et al.  BACTERIAL SPECIES ISOLATED FROM THE SPUTUM OF PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC BRONCHITIS. A COMPARISON OF HOMOGENIZATION AND NONHOMOGENIZATION TECHNIQUES. , 2015, The American review of respiratory disease.

[18]  B. C. Taylor,et al.  AN EVALUATION OF SOME METHODS FOR CULTURING SPUTUM FROM PATIENTS WITH BRONCHITIS AND EMPHYSEMA. , 1964, The American review of respiratory disease.

[19]  T. Rosebury Microorganisms Indigenous to Man , 1964 .

[20]  D. Louria Uses of Quantitative Analyses of Bacterial Populations in Sputum , 1962 .

[21]  E. Kass,et al.  Bacteriologic flora of the lower respiratory tract. , 1961, The New England journal of medicine.

[22]  F. Maslloréns,et al.  The value of the method of Rawlins for sputum cultures. , 1961 .

[23]  D. Yegian,et al.  Bacteriology of the lower respiratory tract in health and chronic diseases. , 1958, The New England journal of medicine.