or have complicated UTIs, as well as for inpatients that develop UTIs.
infections, and they are the second most common cause of bacteremia in hospitalized patients.
cultures; as many as 80% of these urine cultures are submitted from the outpatient setting.
percentage of UTIs caused by yeasts, group B streptococci, and Klebsiella pneumoniae increased.
Section I– Microbiology By Dr. Mohammed Ayad
(and thereby cause UTI), and rare complications have been reported.
suprapubic aspiration or straight catheterization.
stream to pass into the toilet, and collecting urine for culture from the midstream.
agents or whether anatomic abnormalities, stones, or an indwelling urinary catheter were present).
thereby leading to false-positive results.
Section I– Microbiology By Dr. Mohammed Ayad
the second most common cause of nosocomial infections.
uropathogens or specimens from patients with suspected funguria are incubated for 48 hours.
Detection of bacteriuria by urine microscopy
with bacterial concentrations of 102
-103 CFU/ml may not be detected by this test.
Section I– Microbiology By Dr. Mohammed Ayad
3- Because it may not detect bacteria at concentrations of 102
-103 CFU/ml, it should not be used in the outpatient setting for
patients with uncomplicated UTIs.
Detection of bacteriuria by nitrite test
saprophyticus, Pseudomonas species, or Enterococci.
for bacteria to convert nitrate to nitrite at levels that are reliably detectable.
Detection of pyuria by urine microscopy
serious infections are suspected.
hemocytometer count of ⩾10 leukocytes/mm3
correlates with a urinary leukocyte excretion rate of ⩾400,000 leukocytes/h.
bacterial concentrations of >105 CFU/ml have urine leukocyte counts of ⩾10 leukocytes/mm3
. Although using a hemocytometer
leukocyte esterase as a surrogate for microscopic leukocyte counts.
Detection of pyuria by leukocyte esterase tests
Section I– Microbiology By Dr. Mohammed Ayad
even specimens that have not been preserved properly may yield a positive test result.
oxidizing agents or formalin react with the test strips to generate false-positive test results.
Routine bacterial urine cultures
of the test without making the test impractical for clinicians and laboratories to use.
via suprapubic aspirate or catheterization is a bacterial concentration of ⩾102 CFU/ml.
Interpretation of urine culture results
Section I– Microbiology By Dr. Mohammed Ayad
recovered, the quantity of each microorganism, and the probable clinical importance of each isolate.
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing
susceptibility for purposes of routine patient care
alone may be insufficient to make a definitive diagnosis of UTI.
specify the method of collection on test requisition forms.
usually available only to the clinician.
Section I– Microbiology By Nada Sajet
Invasion of the bloodstream by microorganisms constitutes one of the most serious situations in
transiently—are a threat to every organ in the body.
reproducing within the bloodstream.
Microbial invasion of the bloodstream resulting from any organism can have serious immediate
Approximately 200,000 cases of bacteremia and fungemia occur annually, with mortality
most important functions of the microbiology laboratory.
Pathogens of all four major groups of microbes—bacteria, fungi, viruses, and parasites—may be found
diagnosis, as well as a specific etiologic diagnosis.
most common, clinically significant bacteria isolated from
blood cultures are listed in Table 1. (Table 1 Organisms Commonly Isolated from Blood Cultures)
Organisms Commonly Isolated from Blood Cultures:
Coagulase-negative staphylococci
Section I– Microbiology By Nada Sajet
Anaerobic bacteria: Bacteroides and Clostridium spp.
clinically significant anaerobic isolates has decreased since the early 2000s.
blood, the possibility of an abscess should be considered.
Fungemia (the presence of fungi in blood) is usually a serious condition, occurring primarily in
bloodstream infections. Except for Histoplasma, which multiply in leukocytes
infection elsewhere in the body.
Section I– Microbiology By Nada Sajet
for the manifestations of toxoplasmosis. Also, microfilariae are
parasites and damaged red blood cells; the immune response may also
parasites for which traditional diagnosis is dependent on observation of the organism
currently used to detect malaria, babesiosis, and trypanosomiasis.
lymphocytes), and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
by diverting the cellular machinery to create new viral components
or by other means, the virus may prevent the host cell from performing its normal function. The cell
to the pathogenesis. Although many viral diseases have a viremic stage,
Section I– Microbiology By Nada Sajet
normally the bacteria are cleared from the blood by scavenging
leptospirosis, bacteria are continuously present in the bloodstream.
blood from a sequestered focus of infection, such as an
abscess, bacteria are released into the blood approximately 45 minutes before a febrile episode.
and the rate of mortality as a result of septicemia.
Types of blood stream infections:
antibiotics that suppress the normal flora and allow the emergence
extensive surgical procedures, and prolonged survival of debilitated and seriously ill patients.
infections in the cardiovascular system are extremely serious and considered life threatening.
Infective Endocarditis. The development of infective endocarditis (infection of the endocardium most
damage cardiac endothelium. This damage to the endothelial
Section I– Microbiology By Nada Sajet
inflammatory cells, and entrapped organisms is called a vegetation (Figure -1).
frequently isolated in streptococcal endocarditis.
Gram-negative bacilli, known as the AACEK group, Aggregatibacter aphrophilus, Actinobacillus
actinomycetemcomitans Cardiobacterium hominis, Eikenella corrodens, and Kingellakingae, can also be
pneumonia, as well as sepsis related to indwelling intravascular catheters.
Figure 1 Vegetations of bacterial endocarditis. Arrow indicates the vegetations.
(Courtesy Celeste N. Powers, MD, PhD, Virginia Commonwealth
University Medical Center, Medical College of Virginia Campus, Richmond, Va.
Section I– Microbiology By Nada Sajet
Table 2 Agents of Infective Endocarditis
Agents of Infective Endocarditis:
Nutritionally deficient streptococci (Abiotrophia spp. and
Staphylococci (coagulase-negative)
Pseudomonas spp. (usually in drug users)
Unusual gram-negative bacilli (e.g., Actinobacillus,
Cardiobacterium, Eikenella, Coxiella burnetii)
Other (including polymicrobial infectious endocarditis)
*Most common organisms associated with native valve endocarditis in non-drug-using
Table -3 Common Agents of IV Catheter–Associated Bacteremia:
Other coagulase-negative staphylococci
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