Difficulties in differentiating Neisseria cinerea from Neisseria gonorrhoeae in rapid systems used for identifying pathogenic Neisseria species

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Abstract

Neisseria cinerea and Neisseria gonorrhoeae may occur in the same body site and may have similar colony morphologies. Ideally, systems for rapid identification of N. gonorrhoeae should be able to differentiate N. cinerea from gonococci. We tested seven N. cinerea strains using the Gonochek II (Du Pont Diagnostics), Minitek (BBL Microbiology Systems), RapID-NH (Innovative Diagnostics, Inc.), RIM-N (American Microscan), and Phadebact (Pharmacia Diagnostics) systems. We found that the reactions produced by N. cinerea in Gonochek II, Minitek, and RapID-NH kits could be confused with the results produced by some strains of N. gonorrhoeae. The susceptibility of N. cinerea to colistin, its ability to grow on tryptic soy or Mueller-Hinton agar, and its ability to grow on modified Thayer-Martin medium help differentiate it from gonococci.

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Boyce, J. M., & Mitchell, E. B. (1985). Difficulties in differentiating Neisseria cinerea from Neisseria gonorrhoeae in rapid systems used for identifying pathogenic Neisseria species. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 22(5), 731–734. https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.22.5.731-734.1985

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