Bottle Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.
These are the MediaLab courses that cover Bottle and links to relevant pages within the course.
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| Which of the following statements are TRUE regarding storing and handling of reagent strips if you are using a manual method (visually read reagent strip): (Choose ALL of the correct answers) | View Page |
| Precautions The reagent strips must be handled and stored properly in order to ensure that results are accurate. The following precautions should be observed: Store strips according to the manufacturer's recommendation. DO NOT expose strips to moisture, direct sunlight or volatile fumes. Remove only enough strips for immediate use and immediately recap the bottle. Avoid contamination of test strips. Do not touch the test areas with fingers or do not lay the test strips directly on the workbench. DO NOT use discolored strips. Compare the color of the unused strip to the negative area on the color chart provided by the company. The color should be similar. Check the expiration date. Re-label the container with a revised expiration date if the manufacturer states a shortened usage period once the container has been opened. Reagent strips must be tested periodically (frequency defined by the laboratory) for clinical reactivity with normal and abnormal urine controls. Urine controls are available commercially or may be prepared and preserved in-house. | View Page |
| Which of the following statements are true for storing and handling reagent strips? (Choose ALL of the correct answers) | View Page |
| Which of the following substances cause a false positive result for blood on the urine reagent strip? (Choose ALL of the correct answers) | View Page |
| The colonies shown in the blood agar (upper) and MacConkey agar (lower) biplate are a 24 hour growth from an aerobic blood culture bottle that became positive at 12 hours after inoculation. The appearance of the colonies on MacConkey agar rules out the following two bacterial species: | View Page |
| Case History A 63 year old man was seen in the emergency room with the complaints of sudden onset of fever, chills, and abdominal pain, accompanied by mild diarrhea. The blood pressure was 140/84, the pulse rate 82/minute, and the body temperature 39.8C. A blood sample was drawn for a complete blood count, and a blood culture.A second blood culture was drawn from the opposite arm, with 10 ml of blood being placed into each an aerobic and an anaerobic bottle, following customary practice.The complete blood count revealed a hemoglobin of 15.8 mg/dl, a hematocrit of 45%, and a white blood count of 4.2/L. The neutrophils were 39%, lymphocytes 45%, monocytes 10%, eosinophils 4% and basophils 2%. The platelet count was 255/L. The patient was admitted to the hospital for further work-up and empiric antibiotic therapy.Within 24 hours after admission, the body temperature had decreased to 38.2C, although the mild diarrhea persisted.A stool toxin test for Clostridium difficile was negative and neither enteric pathogens nor Campylobacter species were recovered in stool culture after 24 hours incubation. Fecal neutrophils were not seen on direct examination.
The anaerobic blood culture became positive 36 hours after inoculation. | View Page |
| The gram stain shown in the photograph was prepared from a positive anaerobic blood culture bottle after 36 hours incubation. Based on the morphology of the bacterial cells (some with spores--blue arrows), the most likely identification is: | View Page |
| Group A Strep A Disk/SXT In follow up to the previous question, the upper image again illustrates the colonies recovered from the blood culture bottle. The colonies are small, transluscent, gray-yellow, and surrounded by a wide zone of beta hemolysis.The size of the colonies compared to the zones of hemolysis suggests a group A streptococcus.The susceptibility to bacitracin (zone of inhibition around the "A" disk)(lower photograph) is virtually diagnostic of a group A streptococcus.The absence of a zone of inhibition around the SXT disk indicates resitance to sulfamethoxazole/ trimethoprim. SXT resistance is also shared by group B streptococci, which are, however, resistant to bacitracin.The resistance to SXT is used for the primary recovery of groups A and B streptococci from specimens with mixed culture. Their resistance allows them to selectively grow out from contaminating bacteria that are inhibited by this antibiotic. | View Page |
| Beta hemolytic colonies grew from the blood culture bottle after 18 hours incubation (see photograph). The following tests would be helpful in making a preliminary identification: | View Page |
| Collector disperses specimen to bottle(s) After the donor has handed his or her specimen to the collector, the collector now opens the specimen bottle(s). Make sure that the security seals for the specimen bottle(s) are only opened in the presence of the donor.The collector, not the donor, disperses the urine specimen as follows:Federally Regulated (DOT):A minimum of 15 mL into one specimen container, a minimum of 30 mL into the second specimen container.Non-Regulated:A minimum of 30 mL into just one of specimen containers. | View Page |
| Which occurrence is a medical error? | View Page |
| Blood transfer device A blood transfer device allows the transfer of blood from a syringe into a blood collection tube or a blood culture bottle.
The BD™ blood transfer device is shown here.
| View Page |
| Collection methods Blood for culture can be collected in several ways:Standard needle attached to a syringe.Butterfly needle attached to a syringe.Blood culture bottle attached directly to tube holder (not generally recommended).Follow you own facilities’ procedure for blood culture collection. | View Page |
| Clean the bottle tops Clean blood culture bottles while the iodine on the venipuncture site is drying. Wipe the tops of the blood culture bottles, first with a new iodine swab, then with a clean alcohol pad. | View Page |
| Activate needle safety device After collecting the blood, activate the needle safety device according to manufacturer’s instructions, and place it in a sharps disposal container.
If blood was collected into a syringe, insert the syringe tip into the hub of a blood transfer device, and rotate the syringe clockwise to secure it to the device.
Push the blood culture bottle into the holder of the transfer device, and draw the appropriate volume of blood into the blood culture bottles. | View Page |
| Additional tips continued Good sterilization is the key to avoiding contaminates:Let the iodine dry before drawing the blood.Be sure to wipe your gloved finger with iodine if palpation is necessary after cleaning.
Always remove iodine from blood culture bottle with alcohol to prevent iodine from “sterilizing” the culture, and causing a false negative result. | View Page |
| Possible Corrective Action (3) Run the control using a new unopened bottle of control. Improper storage may have accelerated the deterioration of the original control or the testing material may have expired. | View Page |
| Put the troubleshooting steps below in the order in which they should be tried. | View Page |
| Control Slides Control slides must be checked before examining patients' smears. The positive control, Staphylococcus aureus, should stain blue and the negative control, Escherichia coli, should stain pink. Control slides serve as a quality control mechanism for staining reagents and techniques. Control slides should be prepared daily and when a new bottle/lot # of stain is used. | View Page |