Inhibition of fungal growth in the cultural isolation of mycobacteria.
- 1 August 1972
- journal article
- Vol. 24 (2) , 205-7
Abstract
Antifungal antibiotics were compared to determine their usefulness in primary mycobacterial cultures. Amphotericin B was found to be more effective in preventing fungal growth from bovine fecal specimens than were cycloheximide, nystatin, and tetracycline. Amphotericin B did not affect the growth rate of the following Mycobacterium species: M. avium, M. bovis, M. intracellulare, M. paratuberculosis, M. phlei, or M. tuberculosis, but it inhibited the growth of M. fortuitum. There was no observable effect on numbers of colonies of M. paratuberculosis on primary isolation from fecal specimens. It is recommended that, for the primary isolation of pathogenic mycobacteria from specimens likely to contain fungi, the inoculum should be pretreated with benzalkonium chloride, followed by mixing with amphotericin B or inoculation onto media containing amphotericin B.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Susceptibilities of mycobacterial and nocardial species to benzalkonium chloride.1968
- Vaccination Against Johne’s Disease in Cattle Exposed to Experimental InfectionBritish Veterinary Journal, 1965
- IMPROVEMENTS IN TECHNIQUES FOR PRIMARY CULTIVATION OF MYCOBACTERIUM PARATUBERCULOSIS1964
- Use of Fungizone(R) in Control of Fungi and Yeasts in Tissue CultureExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1961
- THE RESISTANCE OF TUBERCLE BACILLI TO THE BACTERICIDAL ACTION OF BENZALKONIUM CHLORIDE (ZEPHIRAN)Published by Elsevier ,1954