Abstract
The ability of C. trachomatis immunotype E to produce intracytoplasmic inclusions in cycloheximide-treated McCoy [mouse fibroblast] cells after being exposed to different types of sampling swabs in experimentally infected transport medium was studied. A larger number of inclusions was obtained with cotton-tipped aluminum and rayon-tipped plastic swabs than with calcium alginate-tipped aluminum and cotton-tipped wooden swabs (P < 0.0001). Transport medium stored in glass tubes caused a cytopathic effect when inoculated on to McCoy cell cultures; no such effect occurred with plastic tubes. When cotton-tipped aluminum instead of calcium alginate-tipped aluminum swabs were used to collect 50 male urethral specimens, significantly more were chlamydia-positive (P < 0.025). This was also true when cotton-tipped aluminum swabs were used instead of alginate-tipped swabs in a study of 123 cervical specimens (P < 0.01). When the calcium alginate-tipped aluminum and cotton-tipped wooden swabs were shaken in the transport medium after sampling from the male urethra and the cervix, instead of being left in the medium during transport to the laboratory, more specimens were chlamydia-positive and a greater number of chlamydial inclusions were found per culture-positive sample; these results were not statistically significant (P > 0.05).