Bailey and Scott's Diagnostic MicrobiologyMosby, 1986 - 914 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 79
Pagina 323
... tissue is not very useful for recovery of viable microorgan- isms , although some organisms can be recov- ered at times so that an attempt should be made to subculture from formalin if that is the only specimen available . Material from ...
... tissue is not very useful for recovery of viable microorgan- isms , although some organisms can be recov- ered at times so that an attempt should be made to subculture from formalin if that is the only specimen available . Material from ...
Pagina 324
... TISSUE FOR MICROBIOLOGICAL CULTURE 1. Hold the tissue in a sterile Petri dish with sterile forceps and slice through it with a sterile scalpel blade . 2. Make an imprint of the sliced edge on two areas of each of the agar plates to be ...
... TISSUE FOR MICROBIOLOGICAL CULTURE 1. Hold the tissue in a sterile Petri dish with sterile forceps and slice through it with a sterile scalpel blade . 2. Make an imprint of the sliced edge on two areas of each of the agar plates to be ...
Pagina 325
... TISSUE 1. Cut a small piece of tissue , several millimeters cubed , aseptically in a sterile Petri dish .. 2. Weigh a second empty sterile Petri dish . 3. Add the tissue and reweigh the dish . 4. Place the specimen and 1 ml sterile ...
... TISSUE 1. Cut a small piece of tissue , several millimeters cubed , aseptically in a sterile Petri dish .. 2. Weigh a second empty sterile Petri dish . 3. Add the tissue and reweigh the dish . 4. Place the specimen and 1 ml sterile ...
Sommario
Diagnostic immunologic principles and Morganella Obesumbacterium Proteus | 12 |
Laboratory organization and quality | 19 |
Chlamydia Mycoplasma and Rickettsia Color Plates | 38 |
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Parole e frasi comuni
acid fast aerobic agar plate agglutination anaerobic antibody antigen antimicrobial antimicrobial agents aureus bacilli bacteremia bacteria Bacteroides beta biochemical biological safety cabinet blood agar blood culture broth catalase cause cell wall Chlamydia Clin clinical microbiology clinical specimens coagulase cocci colonies containing detection diagnosis differential dilution disease disk distilled water Enterobacteriaceae enzyme etiologic agents FIGURE filter fluid fluorescent fungal fungi ganisms genus glucose Gram stain gram-negative gram-negative bacilli gram-positive grow growth herpes human hyphae identification incubation infection inhibit inoculated isolated laboratory large numbers lesions material medium meningitis methods Microbiol microbiology microscopic mycobacteria negative Neisseria nitrate nosocomial organisms oxidase pathogens patients performed pneumonia positive procedures produce Pseudomonas rapid reaction reagents respiratory tract serologic serum sheep blood slide smears species sputum Staphylococcus sterile streptococci substrate surface susceptibility testing swab tion tissue tive toxin tube urine usually vancomycin viral virus viruses yeast µg/ml