Bailey and Scott's Diagnostic MicrobiologyThis text covers all aspects of diagnostic microbiology, including bacteriology, virology, mycology and parasitology. New to this ninth edition is up-to-date coverage of Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, multiple drug-resistant tuberculosis, gram-negative rods, Mycobacterium haemophilum, and Rochalimaea. A new chapter on the role of the microbiologist in medical practice identifies the microbiologist's responsibilities within the medical team, with regard to: specimen collection; examination of tissue; designing appropriate test requisition forms; defining rejection criteria for specimens; deciding what is clinically relevant in terms of specimen processing, culturing, identification and susceptibility testing; and implementing cost-saving strategies in the laboratory. |
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Page 412
... smear should show no fluorescence , and the known positive smear should yield brightly fluorescing short bacilli and coccobacilli . QUALITY CONTROL Obtain a B. pertussis culture ( from your local health department or large university ...
... smear should show no fluorescence , and the known positive smear should yield brightly fluorescing short bacilli and coccobacilli . QUALITY CONTROL Obtain a B. pertussis culture ( from your local health department or large university ...
Page 780
... smear Adult worm / worm segments Aspirates Biopsy Sputum Lavage ( centrifuged sediment ) Transbronchial aspirate Tracheobronchial aspirate Brush biopsy Sterile Sterile plus air - dried smears Sterile ; nonsterile to histology Sterile ...
... smear Adult worm / worm segments Aspirates Biopsy Sputum Lavage ( centrifuged sediment ) Transbronchial aspirate Tracheobronchial aspirate Brush biopsy Sterile Sterile plus air - dried smears Sterile ; nonsterile to histology Sterile ...
Page 784
... smear if the specimen has been submit- ted to the laboratory in preservatives ; any organ- isms present would be killed , and thus no motility would be seen . One should proceed directly to the concentration and permanent stained smear ...
... smear if the specimen has been submit- ted to the laboratory in preservatives ; any organ- isms present would be killed , and thus no motility would be seen . One should proceed directly to the concentration and permanent stained smear ...
Contents
Purpose and Philosophy | 3 |
Laboratory Safety | 8 |
Laboratory Organization and Continuous Quality Assessment | 17 |
Copyright | |
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acid Actinomyces aerobic agar plate agglutination anaerobic antibiotic antibody antigen antimicrobial antimicrobial agents assay aureus bacilli bacteremia bacteria Bacteroides biochemical biological safety cabinet blood agar blood culture broth Campylobacter catalase cause Chapter Chlamydia Clin clinical microbiology clinical specimens Clostridium coagulase cocci coli colonies commercially containing detection diagnosis differential dilution disease disk ELISA Enterobacteriaceae enzyme etiological agents fermentation Figure fluid fluorescent fragilis fungal fungi ganisms genus Gram stain gram-negative gram-negative bacilli gram-positive grow growth Haemophilus human hyphae identification incubation infection influenzae inoculated isolated lesions medium meningitis methods Microbiol microbiology microscopic morphology mycobacteria negative Neisseria nosocomial organisms pathogens patients performed pigment pneumonia positive Prevotella procedures produce Pseudomonas QUALITY CONTROL rapid reaction reagents respiratory tract serologic serum slide smear species sputum Staphylococcus sterile streptococci substrate surface susceptibility testing swab tion tissue toxin tube urease urine usually vancomycin viral virus viruses yeast µg/ml