Method for concentration of parasites from small amounts of feces
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A total of 258 formalinized stool specimens received in our clinical laboratory were examined for parasites by direct smears and by the standard Formalin-ethyl acetate (FEAc) concentration method. Microconcentration (MC), a miniaturization of the FEAc method, was compared with the standard method for efficiency of parasite recovery. MC employed 0.25 to 0.50 ml of formalinized stools, 0.5 ml of Formalin, and 0.25 ml of ethyl acetate; the washing steps were omitted, whereas the rest of the procedure remained the same as the FEAc method. A total of 36 (13.9%) specimens were positive for parasites; of these, 23 (63.9%) were negative on direct examination. In 14 of these 23 specimens, the FEAc and MC methods were equivalent in detecting parasites. MC failed to detect parasites in eight specimens that were positive by FEAc and detected a parasite in one specimen that was negative by FEAc. Of 14 specimens positive by both concentration methods, FEAc detected additional parasite species in 2 specimens and MC did so in 1 specimen. The reduced sensitivity of parasite concentration evident in the MC we believe to be exclusively due to the drastically reduced sample size. We propose MC as an alternative to the FEAc concentration method when only small amounts of feces can be obtained.
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