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Sputum specimens are viscous materials contaminated with normal flora. Therefore, processing involves pre-treatment of the sputum specimens via:​

 

  • Digestion: To free the TB bacilli from the mucus in which they may be embedded.
  • Decontamination: To eradicate normal flora that grows more rapidly than TB bacilli, and would interfere with the ability to recover TB bacilli.
  • Homogenization: Of the digested materials.
  • Concentration: Of the TB bacilli by centrifugation before smear preparation and media inoculation.

Figure: Factors Affecting the Efficacy of Processing Methods

 

 

Methods of Culture Specimen Processing

 

Various processing methods are used for TB specimens; amongst them, the most common methods are:

  1. N-acetyl-L-cysteine - sodium hydroxide (NALC-NaOH) method: It is the mildest decontamination method which can kill about 33% of mycobacteria in a clinical specimen. It can be used with both liquid and solid media.
  2. Petroff’s sodium hydroxide method: It is a harsher method – it can kill up to 70% of mycobacteria in specimens. Although useful with highly contaminated specimens, it is not recommended for use with liquid MGIT media.

 

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