Manual of Clinical MicrobiologyEdwin H. Lennette, American Society for Microbiology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 85
Page 534
... specimens are not contami- nated in the laboratory or plated on contami- nated media . Concurrent use of serological tests to demonstrate a specific rising titer often helps to clarify the diagnosis in clinical settings of this type ...
... specimens are not contami- nated in the laboratory or plated on contami- nated media . Concurrent use of serological tests to demonstrate a specific rising titer often helps to clarify the diagnosis in clinical settings of this type ...
Page 602
... clinical specimens , that the morphology of the fungus in the clinical specimens be com- patible with the suspected etiological agent , and that the recovered fungus be properly identified . The repeated recovery of a suspected ...
... clinical specimens , that the morphology of the fungus in the clinical specimens be com- patible with the suspected etiological agent , and that the recovered fungus be properly identified . The repeated recovery of a suspected ...
Page 876
... specimens is that they be taken with sterile instruments . Instruments used for one animal head must be sterilized by boiling or autoclaving before they are used for removal of another specimen . Separate sets of instruments must be ...
... specimens is that they be taken with sterile instruments . Instruments used for one animal head must be sterilized by boiling or autoclaving before they are used for removal of another specimen . Separate sets of instruments must be ...
Contents
Indigenous and Pathogenic Microorganisms of Humans | 25 |
Procedures to Use During Outbreaks of FoodBorne Disease | 40 |
Collection Handling and Processing of Specimens HENRY D ISENBERG JOHN | 52 |
Copyright | |
88 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abscesses acid aerobic aeruginosa agar plate agents agglutination anaerobic antibiotics antibody antigen antimicrobic antisera assay aureus bacilli bacteria biochemical biotypes blood agar broth carbohydrates catalase cells Center for Disease Chapter characteristics Clin clinical specimens cocci coli colonies concentration conidia containing cultures decarboxylase detection diagnosis diameter differentiated dilution disk Enterobacteriaceae Esculin examination fermentation flagella fluid fluorescence fungi gentamicin genus glucose Gram stain gram-negative gram-positive grow growth hemolysis human hyphae identification incubation indole infections inhibition inoculated inoculum isolated Kingella laboratory lactose lesions maltose medium method Microbiol Microbiology microorganisms microscope morphology Motility mycobacteria negative Neisseria nitrate organisms oxidase pathogenic patients penicillin pigment positive prepared procedures produce Pseudomonas reactions reagents Salmonella sample serological serotypes serum slide smears species sputum Staphylococcus sterile strains streptococci subculture susceptibility testing swab Table technique temperature tion tissue titer tive tract treponemal tube urease urine usually Vibrio Xylose yeast µg/ml