Method for radiorespirometric detection of bacteria in pure culture and in blood.
- 1 December 1973
- journal article
- Vol. 26 (6) , 867-73
Abstract
Methods are described for the detection of low numbers of bacteria by monitoring (14)CO(2) evolved from (14)C-labeled substrates. Cell suspensions are filtered with membrane filters, and the filter is then moistened with 0.1 ml of labeled medium in a small, closed apparatus. Evolved (14)CO(2) is collected with Ba(OH)(2)-moistened filter pads and assayed with conventional radioactivity counting equipment. The kinetics of (14)CO(2) evolution are shown for several species of bacteria. Fewer than 100 colony-forming units of most species tested were detected in 2 h or less. Bacteria were inoculated into blood and the mixture was treated to lyse the blood cells. The suspension ws filtered and the filter was placed in a small volume of labeled medium. The evolved (14)CO(2) was trapped and counted. A key development in the methodology was finding that an aqueous solution of Rhyozyme and Triton X-100 produced lysis of blood but was not detrimental to bacteria.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Radiometric detection of some food-borne bacteria.1972
- Evaluation of the Sterifil lysis-filtration blood culture system.1972
- Automated radiometric detection of bacteria in 2,967 blood cultures.1971
- Radiometric method for detection of bacteremia.1971
- Automated radiometric detection of bacterial growth in blood cultures.1970
- Early Detection of Bacterial Growth, with Carbon-14-Labeled GlucoseRadiology, 1969
- II. RAPID CARBON-14 TEST FOR SEWAGE BACTERIA.1964
- "Gulliver"—A Quest for Life on MarsScience, 1962
- A Radioisotope Technic for the Rapid Detection of Coliform OrganismsAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1956