It has been recommended that routine microbiological processing of urine specimens include quantitative plating onto blood agar medium along with a selective and differential agar such as MacConkey agar for gram-negative organisms. Few data have been published to justify this combination. To evaluate the validity of this recommendation 2,553 midstream, clean-voided urine samples were quantitatively plated onto blood agar, MacConkey agar, and colistin-nalidixic acid agar, which is a selective medium for gram-positive organisms. The amounts of growth on each of the three media were compared. Results indicated that the best medium combination was colistin-nalidixic acid agar and Mac-Conkey agar. The use of colistin-nalidixic acid agar instead of blood agar increased the detection of significant growth of enterococci, lactobacilli, and Torulopsis glabrata.
CITATION STYLE
Fung, J. C., Lucia, B., Clark, E., Berman, M., Goldstein, J., & D’Amato, R. F. (1982). Primary culture media for routine urine processing. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 16(4), 632–636. https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.16.4.632-636.1982
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