Contamination of cultures processed with the isolator lysis-centrifugation blood culture tube
- 1 February 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Clinical Microbiology
- Vol. 19 (2) , 97-99
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.19.2.97-99.1984
Abstract
Overall contamination (on- plus off-streak) of the Isolator (Du Pont Co.) blood culture tube (23%) was greater than that of a conventional broth blood culture bottle (0.6%) or that of a biphasic blood culture bottle (1.3%). To determine the source of this contamination, Isolator cultures of blood from 59 healthy volunteers and of sterile broth from 60 vials were made. A total of 37% of the blood cultures and 22% of the broth cultures were contaminated (P = 0.06). Staphylococcus epidermidis-contaminated cultures represented 31 and 10% of the blood and broth cultures, respectively (P = 0.06). Contamination of plates processed on a bench top, in front of horizontal laminar flow, and in a biological safety cabinet with vertical laminar flow were compared. Processing plates in a biological safety cabinet resulted in a significant reduction in the number of contaminated plates (P less than 0.05). The contamination rate for 7,874 Isolator blood cultures processed in the biological safety cabinet was significantly decreased to 6.7% on-streak (9.3% on- plus off-streak). Contamination of Isolator-processed blood cultures originated from the laboratory and the patient. The former can be reduced by inoculating plates in a vertical laminar flow biological safety cabinet and by maintaining adequate quality control of media. The latter may be unavoidable.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microbiological and clinical evaluation of the isolator lysis-centrifugation blood culture tubeJournal of Clinical Microbiology, 1983
- Evidence for transient Staphylococcus epidermidis bacteremia in patients and in healthy humansJournal of Clinical Microbiology, 1983
- Improved blood culture technique based on centrifugation: clinical evaluationJournal of Clinical Microbiology, 1979