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Laboratory Evaluation of Pharyngitis and Pneumonia

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Title: Laboratory Evaluation of Pharyngitis and Pneumonia


1
Laboratory Evaluation of Pharyngitis and
Pneumonia
  • Dr. John R. Warren
  • Department of Pathology
  • Northwestern University
  • Feinberg School of Medicine
  • June 2007

2
Laboratory Evaluation of Respiratory Tract
Infection
  • Pathophysiology of pharyngitis, acute pneumonia,
    nosocomial pneumonia, and chronic pneumonia
    prototypes
  • Microbiology of respiratory tract infection
  • Clinical signs and symptoms of respiratory tract
    infection

3
Laboratory Evaluation of Respiratory Tract
Infection
  • Specimen collection, staining, evaluation, and
    culture
  • Interpretation of respiratory cultures
  • Non-culture evaluation of respiratory tract
    infection

4
Pathophysiology of pharyngitis and pneumonia
prototypes
  • Streptococcal pharyngitis
  • Acute pneumococcal pneumonia
  • Ventilator-associated nosocomial pneumonia
  • Tuberculosis (chronic pneumonia)

5
Pathophysiology of Streptococcal Pharyngitis
  • Occurs predominantly among children 5-15 years of
    age
  • Streptococcus pyogenes spread person-to-person by
    droplets of saliva or nasal secretions
  • Pharyngeal carriage of Streptococcus pyogenes
    frequent in asymptomatic individuals (15-20 in
    schoolchildren)
  • Interference by viridans streptococci commensals
    likely important in balance between pharyngeal
    colonization and invasive infection by
    Streptococcus pyogenes

6
Pathophysiology of Streptococcal Pharyngitis
  • Strain-related virulence factors (hyaluronic acid
    capsule, M protein, lipoteichoic acid) major
    determinants of pharyngeal disease
  • Streptococcal tonsillopharyngitis characterized
    by intense neutrophilic inflammatory response
    with edema, erythema, and (often) gray-yellow
    exudation
  • Complications acute rheumatic fever, acute
    glomerulonephritis, and invasive infection
    (retropharyngeal or peritonsillar abscess)

7
Pathophysiology of Acute Pneumococcal Pneumonia
  • Occurs in older age groups (mid-50s to late
    60s) with chronic underlying disease (COPD,
    alcohol abuse, neurological disease such as
    stroke, congestive heart failure, malignancy,
    liver disease including hepatitis and cirrhosis,
    diabetes mellitus)
  • Colonization of nasopharynx by Streptococcus
    pneumoniae frequent in healthy individuals (5-10
    of adults, 20-40 of childen)
  • Colonization acquired by extensive and close
    person-to-person contact, invasive disease
    (pneumonia) develops in predisposed hosts
  • Predisposing factors impaired cough and
    epiglottic reflexes, disrupted bronchial
    mucociliary clearance, diminished production of
    opsonizing antibody

8
Pathophysiology of Acute Pneumococcal Pneumonia
  • With aspiration of Streptococcus pneumoniae into
    deep respiratory tract, bacteria proliferate in
    alveolar spaces
  • Alveolar macrophages initial line of defense, but
    if microbial mass exceeds ability of macrophages
    to contain infection, macrophages produce
    interleukin-8 (a potent chemotaxin for
    neutrophils)
  • Activation of alternate complement by bacteria
    also provokes intra-alveolar neutrophilic
    exudation and pulmonary consolidation
  • Complications empyema (5), bacteremia (25
    preantibiotic era)

9
Pathophysiology of Ventilator-Associated
Pneumonia (VAP)
  • Hospital-acquired (nosocomial) pneumonia
    pneumonia that occurs 48 hr or more after
    admission to the hospital, and was not incubating
    at the time of admission
  • Healthcare associated pneumonia pneumonia
    associated with 2 or more days of hospitalization
    within previous 90 days, residence in a nursing
    home or long-term care facility, receipt of
    intravenous antibiotic, chemotherapy, or wound
    care within the previous 30 days, or attendance
    at a hospital or hemodialysis clinic
  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia pneumonia that
    develops more than 48-72 hr after endotracheal
    intubation

10
Pathophysiology of Ventilator-Associated
Pneumonia (VAP)
  • Sources of pathogens include the environment
    (water and equipment) and bacteria transferred
    between patients by staff
  • Severity of underlying disease, prior surgery,
    exposure to antibiotics, and use of invasive
    respiratory equipment major risk factors
  • Intubation and mechanical ventilation increase
    the risk of hospital-acquired pneumonia 6- to
    21-fold

11
Pathophysiology of Ventilator-Associated
Pneumonia (VAP)
  • Aspiration of oropharyngeal pathogens (aerobic
    gram-negative bacilli, Staphylococcus aureus) by
    leakage around the endotracheal tube cuff major
    route of entry for bacteria into lower
    respiratory tract
  • Infected biofilm in the endotracheal tube with
    subsequent embolization to distal airways may be
    important
  • Complications drug-resistant pneumonia,
    polymicrobial pneumonia, superinfection with
    Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Acinetobacter with high
    mortality, empyema, lung abscess, Clostridium
    difficile colitis, occult infection, bacteremic
    sepsis with multiple organ involvement

12
Pathophysiology of Tuberculosis (Chronic
Pneumonia)
  • Source of Mycobacterium tuberculosis an infected
    patient with active pulmonary disease
  • M. tuberculosis transmitted by coughing,
    sneezing, or talking with release of infected
    respiratory secretion as aerosols (droplet
    nuclei)
  • Droplet nuclei (1-5 µm) penetrate deep alveolar
    spaces and M. tuberculosis infects non-immune
    macrophages as facultative intracellular
    pathogens

13
Pathophysiology of Tuberculosis (Chronic
Pneumonia)
  • Active but clinically silent infection is
    contained (but not eliminated) within 2-3 months
    by CD4 T-cell dependent macrophage activation
  • Latent infection reactivates due to decrement in
    CD4 T-lymphocyte function (age, AIDS,
    immunosuppressive therapy, anti-TNF-a antibody
    treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, end stage
    renal disease, bronchogenic carcinoma)

14
Pathophysiology of Tuberculosis (Chronic
Pneumonia)
  • Type 4 hypersensitivity reaction produces chronic
    mononuclear inflammation of the lung which does
    not resolve in the absence of chemotherapy
  • Complications progressive tissue necrosis
    (cavitation), high mortality without specific
    drug therapy

15
Microbiology of Respiratory Tract Infection
  • Pharyngitis
  • Acute pneumonia
  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia
  • Chronic pneumonia

16
Microbiology of Pharyngitis (Usual Bacterial
Causes)
  • Streptococcus pyogenes (15-30 of cases in
    children, 10 in adults)
  • Beta-hemolytic group C and G streptococci
    (associated with foodborn outbreaks of
    pharyngitis)
  • Arcanobacterium haemolyticum (exudative
    pharyngitis similar to ß-hemolytic streptococci,
    associated with diffuse erythematous
    maculopapular rash on the extremities and trunk)

17
Microbiology of Pharyngitis(Unusual Bacterial
Causes)
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae (asymptomatic or mild
    pharyngitis)
  • Corynebacterium diphtheriae (tonsillar and
    pharyneal inflammatory pseudo- membrane)
  • Yersinia enterocolitica (exudative pharyngitis
    associated with ingestion of contaminated food or
    drink)

18
Microbiology of Pharyngitis(Non-Bacterial Causes)
  • Epstein-Barr virus (exudative pharyngitis in
    infectious mono- nucleosis)
  • Adenovirus types 3, 4, 7, 14, 21 (exudative
    pharyngitis accompanied by conjunctivitis)
  • Herpes simplex virus (exudative pharyngitis
    associated with palatal vesicles and shallow
    ulcers)

19
Microbiology of Pharyngitis(Common Cold,
Influenza, and HIV-1)
  • Exudative pharyngitis rarely associated with
    common cold and influenza virus
  • Common cold viruses rhinoviruses (100 types and
    1 subtype), coronavirus (gt3 types), and
    parainfluenza virus (types 1-4)
  • Febrile pharyngitis (hyperemia without exudation)
    characteristic of primary HIV-1 infection after
    3-5 week incubation period, followed in
    approximately 1 week by development of
    lymphadenopathy

20
Microbiology of Acute Community-Acquired Pneumonia
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae (16-60 of cases)
  • Haemophilus influenza (3-38 of cases)
  • Aerobic gram-negative bacteria (7-18 of cases
    with half due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa)
  • Staphylococcus aureus (2-5 of cases)
  • Legionella species (2-15 of cases)
  • Mycoplasma pneumoniae (2-14 of cases)
  • Chlamydophila pneumoniae (5-15 of cases)
  • Influenza virus (5-12, varies with season)

21
Microbiology of Acute Nosocomial Pneumonia Gram
Negative Bacteria
  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa (16 of cases)
  • Enterobacter species (11 of cases)
  • Klebsiella pneumoniae (7 of cases)
  • Other Enterobacteriaceae (9 of cases)
  • Acinetobacter species (3 of cases)
  • Legionella species (0-2 of cases)
  • Haemophilus influenza (0-2 of cases)
  • Other gram-negative bacilli (0-10 of cases)
  • Total Due to Gram-Negative Bacteria 46-60 of
    Cases
  • Carroll, JCM 403115-3120, 2002

22
Microbiology of Acute Nosocomial Pneumonia Gram
Positive Bacteria
  • Staphylococcus aureus (17 of cases)
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae (2-20 of cases)
  • Other (2-5)
  • Total Due to Gram-Positive Bacteria 21-42 of
    Cases
  • Carroll, JCM 403115-3120, 2002

23
Microbiology of Acute Nosocomial Pneumonia Other
Causes
  • Anaerobes (10-20 of cases)
  • Fungi (0-10 of cases)
  • Mixed (13-54 of cases)
  • Total Due to Other Causes 23-84 of cases)
  • Carroll, JCM 403115-3120, 2002

24
Microbiology of Chronic Pneumonia Most Common
Causes
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Mycobacteria other than tuberculosis (M.
    kansasii, M. avium complex)
  • Endemic dimorphic fungi (Coccidioides immitis,
    Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatiditis)
  • Other mycoses (Cryptococcus neoformans,
    Aspergillus species)
  • Mixed aerobic and anaerobic bacteria

25
Microbiology of Chronic Pneumonia Infrequent
Causes
  • Nocardia species
  • Rhodoccus equi
  • Burkholderia pseudomallei
  • Actinomyces israelii

26
Chronic Pneumonia Syndrome Non-Infectious Causes
  • Carcinoma (Primary or Metastatic)
  • Lymphoma
  • Cystic Fibrosis
  • Sarcoidosis
  • Amyloidosis
  • Pneumoconiosis
  • Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia
  • Lymphangioleiomyomatosis

27
Clinical Signs and Symptoms of Respiratory Tract
Infection
  • Pharyngitis
  • Acute pneumonia
  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia
  • Chronic pneumonia

28
Clinical Signs and Symptoms of Acute Suppurative
Pharyngitis
  • Marked pharyngeal pain, painful swallowing
  • Fiery red hyperemia of pharyngeal mucosa with
    patchy, gray-yellow exudate on tonsils and uvular
    edema
  • Temperature gt39.4oC
  • Leukocyte count gt12,000/mm3
  • Headache, chills, abdominal pain (variable)

29
Clinical Signs and Symptoms of Acute Community
Acquired Pneumonia
  • Sudden onset of chill followed by fever,
    pleuritic chest pain, and cough productive of
    mucopurulent sputum
  • Fatigue, anorexia, sweats, and nausea (variable)
  • Tachypnea (respiratory rate gt24-30
    breaths/minute), tachycardia (pulse rate gt100
    beats/minute), rales, signs of consolidation
    (variable)
  • Leukocyte count 15,000-30,000/mm3
  • Thick, purulent, often rust-colored sputum
  • Chest X-ray patchy infiltrates, lobar
    consolidation, pleural effusions

30
Clinical Signs and Symptoms of Atypical Pneumonia
Syndrome
  • Sore throat and hoarseness initially
  • Fever, malaise, coryza, headache, and cough with
    variable sputum production
  • Leukocyte gt10,000/mm3 in 20 of cases
  • Chest X-ray usually indicates more extensive
    pulmonary involvement than clinical findings
    suggest, with unilateral or bilateral patchy
    infiltrates in a bronchial or peribronchial
    distribution
  • Extrapulmonary findings with Legionella
    pneumophila mental status changes, loose stools
    or diarrhea, bradycardia, elevated liver enzymes,
    hypophosphatemia, hyponatremia, elevated serum
    lactate dehydrogenase, and elevated serum
    creatinine levels

31
Clinical Signs and Symptoms of Chronic Pneumonia
  • Initially fever, chills, and malaise
  • Progressive anorexia and weight loss
  • Pulmonary symptoms appear later with worsening
    cough productive of sputum, dyspnea, hemoptysis,
    and/or pleuritic chest pain
  • Leukocyte count often normal (exceptions
    pancytopenia in miliary tuberculosis,
    neutrophilic leukocytosis in pulmonary
    actinomycosis)
  • X-ray findings nodular or rounded lesions,
    cavities, with characteristic involvement of
    upper lobes (tuberculosis, histoplasmosis)

32
Specimen Collection, Staining, Evaluation, and
Culture
  • Pharyngitis throat swab
  • Acute pneumonia sputum
  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia bronchoalveolar
    lavage (BAL), bronchial brushings
  • Chronic pneumonia sputum, BAL

33
Pharyngitis Throat Swab for Streptococcus
pyogenes
  • Collect two throat swabs, one for direct antigen
    testing (Lancefield group A antigen) and one for
    culture
  • Throat swabs transported in Amies or modified
    Stuarts medium and refrigerated if not tested
    within a few hours of collection
  • Test one swab for Lancefield group A antigen, if
    positive (sensitivity 31-95) culture not
    necessary, if negative culture performed
  • Inoculate the second swab to sheep blood agar
    (SBA)

34
Pharyngitis Throat Swab for Streptococcus
pyogenes
  • Streak SBA plate for isolation and make several
    stabs, incubate for 48 hours at 35oC with air
  • After 18-24 hours 0.5 mm translucent or
    transparent colonies with wide zone of
    ß-hemolysis (2-4 times the colony diameter) and
    enhanced ß-hemolysis in stabs, gram-positive
    cocci by Grams stain, negative for catalase
  • If PYR positive, confirm as S. pyogenes by
    Lancefield grouping (group A)
  • SBA plate culture negative at 24 hours are
    incubated an additional 24 hours
  • SBA plate culture the gold standard for
    laboratory confirmation of group A streptococcal
    pharyngitis

35
Pharyngitis Throat Swab for Group C and G
Streptococci and Arcanobacterium haemolyticum
  • Colonies identical in appearance to group A
    streptococci on SBA plate, but PYR negative and
    positive by Lancefield grouping for group C or
    group G, report as group C or G ß-hemolytic
    Streptococcus
  • After 48-72 hours incubation in SBA plate
    culture, 0.5 mm colonies showing ß-hemolysis,
    irregular (diphtheroid-shaped) gram-positive rods
    by Grams stain, catalase negative, positive for
    reverse CAMP test, report as Arcanobacterium
    haemolyticum
  • No direct antigen test for group C or group G
    Streptococcus, or for Arcanobacterium
    haemolyticum

36
Pharyngitis Throat Swab for Unusual Bacteria
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae Inoculate to modified
    Thayer-Martin medium, incubate 72 hours in
    presence of 5 CO2 (gram-negative diplococci by
    Grams stain)
  • Corynebacterium diphtheriae Inoculate to
    Loefflers serum medium and potassium tellurite
    agar, incubate 48 hours in 5 CO2 (methylene blue
    stain of irregular gram-positive rods growing on
    Loefflers reveals metachromatic granules,
    colonies on tellurite agar black with brown halo,
    gram-positive coryneform rods by Grams stain)
  • Yersinia enterocolitica Inoculate to CIN
    (cefsulodin-irgasan-novobiocin) agar, selective
    for Yersinia which forms red bulls-eye colonies
    due to mannitol fermentation with neutral red pH
    indicator, gram-negative coccobacilli by Grams
    stain)

37
Acute Pneumonia SputumGeneral Principles
  • Upper respiratory tract to the larynx major
    source of bacterial contamination of sputum
    specimens
  • The tracheobronchial tree sterile or harbors
    sparse numbers of bacteria during good health
  • Most bacterial pathogens responsible for lower
    airway infection present at gt106/mL respiratory
    secretions, equivalent to moderate to heavy
    growth on primary isolation plates
  • Expectorated sputum should be obtained by deep
    coughing and processed for Grams stain and
    culture within 1 hour or refrigerated

38
Acute Pneumonia SputumGrams Stain for
Assessment of Quality
  • Gram-stained smear of sputum screened
    microscopically at low power (X100) magnification
    for numbers of squamous epithelial cells and
    leukocytes
  • gt10 squamous epithelial cells/low power field
    indicates gross contamination of specimen by
    oropharyngeal contents (saliva) and should not be
    cultured
  • gt25 leukocytes/low power field indicates purulent
    respiratory secretions
  • Optimal sputum specimen lt10 squamous epithelial
    cells and gt25 leukocytes/low power field

39
Acute Pneumonia SputumGrams Stain for
Etiological Diagnosis
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae Predominance of
    lancet-shaped gram-positive diplococci
  • Haemophilus influenzae Small faintly-stained
    gram-negative coccobacilli
  • Staphylococcus aureus Gram-positive cocci in
    tetrads and grape-like clusters

40
Acute Pneumonia SputumGrams Stain for
Etiological Diagnosis
  • Definitive Presumptive Diagnosis1
  • Pneumococcal H.
    influenzae Pneumonia
    Pneumonia
  • Sens 57.0 82.3
  • Spec 97.3 99.2
  • PPV 95.1 93.3
  • NPV 71.3 97.6
  • 1Definitive normally sterile specimen culture
    positive
  • Presumptive sputum culture positive
  • Roson et al., Clin Inf Dis 31869-874, 2000

41
Acute Pneumonia SputumGrams Stain for
Etiological Diagnosis
  • Definitive
    Diagnosis1
  • Pneumococcal H.
    influenzae Pneumonia
    Pneumonia
  • Sens 35.4 42.8
  • Spec 96.7 99.4
  • PPV 90.6 75.0
  • NPV 62.7 98.2
  • 1Definitive normally sterile specimen culture
    positive
  • Roson et al., Clin Inf Dis 31869-874, 2000

42
Acute Pneumonia Sputum Culture
  • Inoculate sputum specimens acceptable by Grams
    stain screen to sheep blood, chocolate, and
    MacConkey agar
  • Streak for isolation
  • Incubate at 35oC in 3-5 CO2 for 2 days
  • Report potential respiratory pathogens with
    predominant growth on sheep blood agar (gt10
    colonies in primary streak, gt5 colonies in
    secondary streak, and any growth in tertiary
    streak)

43
Potential Respiratory PathogensHospital Acquired
Infection1
  • Enterobacteriaceae
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • Other nonfermentative gram-negative bacilli
  • Less commonly, same as community acquired
  • 1Cultivable by routine sputum culture procedures
  • ASM Manual 2003

44
Potential Respiratory PathogensCommunity
Acquired Infection1
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Haemophilus influenzae
  • Moraxella catarrhalis
  • Nocardia asteroides complex
  • Pasteurella multocida
  • 1Cultivable by routine sputum culture procedures
  • ASM Manual 2003

45
Oropharyngeal Commensals1
  • Viridans group streptococci other than
    Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus
  • Neisseria (saprophytic species)
  • Corynebacterium species
  • 1Cultivable by routine sputum culture but not
    reported

46
Acute Pneumonia Sputum Culture
  • Using quantitation of streaked blood agar,
    predominant growth of one to three potential
    respiratory tract pathogens generally observed
  • Sensitivity of sputum culture for bacteremic
    pneumococcal pneumonia 50-55 (equivalent to a
    coin flip)
  • Sensitivity of sputum culture for bacteremic
    Haemophilus influenzae pneumonia 53-66
  • Contamination of sputum culture by colonizing
    gram-negative bacilli 32 of sputum cultures
  • Pleural effusion and blood cultures from an
    uncontaminated specimen source (relatively) and
    thus highly specific with recovery of potential
    respiratory pathogens, including anaerobic
    bacteria

47
Acute Pneumonia Etiological Organisms
Non-Cultivable by Routine Sputum Cultures
  • Legionella (culture on buffered charcoal yeast
    extract medium, urine antigen, serology)
  • Chlamydophila pneumoniae (serology)
  • Mycoplasma pneumoniae (serology)
  • Anaerobic bacteria (protected bronchoscope
    brushing for anaerobic culture)

48
Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
  • Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Fiber-optic
    bronchoscope wedged tightly into bronchial
    orifice of involved segment, and distal airspaces
    lavaged with a minimum of 140 ml of fluid
    (approximately 100 million alveoli are sampled)
  • Protected specimen brush. Protected
    brush-catheter consists of a double-lumen
    catheter with a distal occluding plug inserted
    through the inner suction channel of a
    bronchoscope wedged into the bronchial orifice of
    an involved area, brushings obtained, the brush
    severed from a retracting wire, and the brush
    placed directly into 1 ml of sterile saline.

49
Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid
  • Grams stain presence of intracellular bacteria
    indicative of potential pathogen presence of gt1
    of all cells as squamous epithelial cells
    indicates falsely elevated counts of potential
    pathogens due to oropharyngeal contamination
  • Quantitative cultures obtained by inoculation of
    sheep blood agar with 0.01 and 0.001 ml aliquot
    of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid
  • MacConkey and chocolate agars also inoculate to
    enhance recovery of gram-negative bacteria
    (including fastidious organisms) with
    polymicrobial infections

50
Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid
  • Recovery of lt10,000 bacteria/ml of lavage fluid
    suggests contamination
  • Recovery of gt100,000 potential respiratory
    pathogen/ml indicates infection
  • Detection of 10,000-100,000 potential respiratory
    pathogen/ml a gray zone (prior antibiotic
    therapy, inadvertent contamination of lavage
    fluid)

51
Protected Specimen Brush
  • Recovery of gt1,000 of potential respiratory
    pathogen/ml saline indicates infection

52
Chronic PneumoniaSputum
  • Grams Stain for Nocardia
  • Acid fast stain for mycobacteria
  • Gomori methenamine silver or periodic acid-Schiff
    stain for fungi
  • Cytologic preparations for neoplastic cells and
    fungi

53
Predictive Power of Acid-Fast Smear for
Tuberculosis
  • Sputum Volume
  • Any Volume Minimum of 5
    ml
  • Sens 72.5 92.0
  • Spec 98.2 98.5
  • PPV 56.3 79.9
  • NPV 99.1 99.5
  • 1Values of sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV
    calculated using culture results positive or
    negative for Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Warren et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med
    1611559-1562, 2000

54
Chronic PneumoniaSputum Culture
  • Mycobacteria Lowenstein-Jensen slants,
    Middlebrook agars (7H10, 7H11, S7H11),
    Middlebrook broths
  • Fungi Brain heart infusion (BHI) agar,
    inhibitory mold agar (contains chloramphenicol),
    cornmeal agar

55
Recommended Readings
  • Bisno, AL. Pharyngitis, in Mandell, Douglas, and
    Bennets Principles and Practice of Infectious
    Diseases, 6 ed., 2005, pp. 752-758.
  • Donowitz, GR, Mandell, GL. Acute pneumonia.
    Ibid., pp. 819-845.
  • Pappas, PG, Dismukes, WE. Chronic pneumonia.
    Ibid., pp. 857-869.

56
Recommended Readings
  • Roson et al. Prospective study of the usefulness
    of sputum gram stain in the initial approach to
    community-acquired pneumonia requiring
    hospitalization. Clin Inf Dis 200031869-874.
  • Bartlett et al. Laboratory diagnosis of lower
    respiratory tract infections. Cumitech 7A,
    American Society for Microbiology, September
    1987.
  • Carroll, KC. Laboratory diagnosis of lower
    respiratory tract infections controversy and
    conundrums. J Clin Micro 2002403115-3120.

57
Recommended Readings
  • Official statement of the American Thoracic
    Society and the Infectious Diseases Society of
    America. Guidelines for the management of adults
    with hospital-acquired, ventilator-associated,
    and healthcare-associated pneumonia. Am J Respir
    Crit Care Med 2005171388-416.
  • Warren et al. A minimum 5.0 ml of sputum
    improves the sensitivity of acid-fast smear for
    Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Am J Respir Crit
    Care Med 20001611559-1562.

58
Recommended Readings
  • Thomson,RB, Jr, Miller, JM. Specimen collection,
    transport, and processing bacteriology, in
    Manual of Clinical Microbiology, 8th edition,
    2003, pp. 286-330.
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