Infection and Drug Resistance Dovepress open access to scientific and medical research Open Access Full Text Article ORIGINAL RESEARCH Effects of Blood Culture Aerobic/Anaerobic Bottle Collection Patterns from Both Sides of the Body on Positive Blood Culture Rate and Time-to-Positivity Hainan Wen1,*,...
aeruginosa from chronically infected CF adults with those of strain PAO1 and other clinical non-CF isolates under aerobic and anaerobic culture conditions. The CF isolates overall displayed a reduced ability to form biofilms in standard in vitro short-term models. They also grew more slowly in ...
including aerobic, anaerobic, viral, or fungal (for yeasts and molds). Each specific type of culture is handled differently by the laboratory. Most blood cultures test for both aerobic and anaerobic microbes. Fungal, viral, and mycobacterial blood cultures can also be done, but are less common...
Blood culture begins with the introduction of a blood specimen into 2 types of culture medium. The medium is designed to promote the growth of organisms; one group of organisms require oxygen (aerobic) and the other either requires sparing amounts to no oxygen at all (anaerobic). A blood ...
Most plant pathogenic fungi are aerobic, requiring oxygen for respiration (generation of energy). Some fungi such as the common yeast (S. cerevisiae), however, do not need oxygen for respiration and are anaerobic or fermentive. There are a few plant pathogens that derive energy by either oxida...
aeruginosa by decomposing H2O2 under the aerobic growing conditions. Cyanobacterial blooms are common phenomena in several freshwater environments, including drinking water sources, around the world. These blooms are often associated with production of cyanotoxins, oxygen depletion, unpleasant odor, and ...
A total of 1049 NR 6A and 7A bottles that were instrument-positive in the BACTEC 660 nonradiometric system, but were Gram stain-negative, had aerobic and anaerobic subcultures as well as an acridine orange stain performed. Only five of 1049 (0.5%) instrument-positive, Gram stain-negative ...
A sterile swab may be used to collect cells or pus from a superficial wound site. From deeper wounds, aspirations of fluid into a syringe and/or a tissue biopsy are the optimal specimens to allow for the recovery of aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. ...
Human cell lines can then be brought into suspension with a cell scraper and the suspension inoculated into aerobic (tryptone soy) and anaerobic (thioglycollate) nutrient broths. Inoculate both types of broths with sterile phosphate buffered serum (PBS) to serve as negative controls and incubate...
Gram stain− Spores− Motility+ Flagellapolar monotrichate Behavior toward oxygenaerobic Oxidase+ Catalase+ OFO Pigment of colonybrown Requirement for Na++ Requirement for salts Growth on 0% NaCl medium+ Growth on 1% NaCl medium+ Growth on seawater medium+ ...