Poop, Pus and Positive Results: Cultural Oddities From the Clinical °®¶¹´«Ã½ Lab
Laboratory Phone Calls: Important and Uncomfortable
Nearly 11 years ago as a newly minted medical technologist, I observed eagerly as my trainer called a nurse to give an update on the identification of an organism from a positive blood culture. “This organism is a Bacillus species, but it is not cereus” she said, to which the nurse replied, “EXCUSE ME?! This is very very serious!” I learned something that day: calling results to the clinical team would be more challenging than it seems. Laboratory-related phone calls range from the notification of specimen rejection to the notification of a critical result that requires immediate follow up.Tests are clinically relevant only when they are used correctly, as Dr. Michael Wilson describes in his article on Although microbiologists are often met with angst when they ask for specimen recollection, it is an important part of the job. Laboratories should use explicit specimen rejection criteria, which should be rigorously enforced. In addition to specimen collection clarification, relaying microbiology results to the medical team via a phone call remains a . Although electronic communication methods are becoming available, phone calls are fast and direct, and can give providers information that can be acted on quickly.
Multi-source Sampling: Start From the Top and Work Your Way Down
One day I received a phone call from a nurse who wanted to collect a “multi-source” specimen on a child with a suspected enteroviral infection. Non-polio enteroviruses can cause a ranging from hand, foot and mouth disease to acute flaccid paralysis and meningitis.The virus can be detected in respiratory tract samples, stool/rectum, blood and CSF. At the time, it was not uncommon for multiple areas of the body to be sampled using one swab. This type of collection method is referred to as a “multi-source” swab. The nurse was getting ready to swab the throat and the rectum of the patient on a single swab and called to ask if she should sample the throat or the rectum first. After a short silence, I suggested that she avoid placing the swab from the rectum into the patient’s throat—and that it might be best to start from the top and work her way down.
The development of tools like the nasopharyngeal swab used for enterovirus (and other viral testing) has helped reduce patient discomfort during sampling compared with traditional nasal washes or larger swabs, and if used appropriately, can reduce unnecessary pain and suffering. It is important to think through sampling techniques before executing them! Additional collection methods for the testing and/or isolation of Enterovirus can be found
Culture Sampling: Less is Often More
Every once in a while, members of the medical community need reminders that the word microbiology actually means the science of extremely small things. Most of the powerful microbiological testing that happens in the laboratory can be accomplished with a very small amount of specimen (). Regardless of this fact, it seems that most clinical microbiologists have received an enormous specimen for culture at least once. When I asked microbiologists from across the U.S. about these types of specimens, the responses were impressive:And entire right leg, mid thigh to toes.
— Timothy Bowers (@InfectionPrvntn)
Half a leg (above knee amputation), still warm!
— Norelle Sherry (@norelle_sherry)
We once got a whole foot for culture!
— Ana Maria Cardenas (@AnaMaPhD)
I got an extra baby toe once... like, a 6th toe...
— Alison Gassett 🧬🦠🔬 (@omgAliG)
A whole arm was dropped off on a Saturday from surgery. The surgeon wanted a “culture”. That was an interesting case of Clostridium septicum. I ended up cutting a couple of pieces of dead muscle from the bicep for the “culture”.
— Zachary Ratzlaff (@ZacRatzlaff)
I’ve received whole breast implant, freshly removed from a patient. I’ve also had an entire bin bag of samples from a patient with delusional parasitosis, including a two litre bottle of backwashed tea and a toothpaste box containing her faeces ðŸ‘
— Ebony Hunter (@ebony_hunter90)
I wasn’t there for it but there is a pretty famous story in my clinical micro lab of receiving an entire penis to culture about 2 years ago I think.
— Rebecco Wafers 💖💙💜 (@beccabeaver8)
There is truly a science to processing tissue for culture in the laboratory. When a tissue is received, the most purulent (or infected looking area) is selected and then most often by hand, in order to homogenize the material and release trapped pathogens. While the might have use for entire body part, the microbiology department does not.
In summary, consider the following before sending tissue to the lab for culture:
- Let the lab know which pathogen is suspected. Even if an organism is low on the differential, telling a microbiologist what is suspected can improve yield (they can apply special growth techniques for many organisms) and helps keep them safe (in case the specimen grows a pathogen like Francisella tularensis, Brucella or Yersinia pestis that can be acquired by working with cultures in the laboratory).
- Surgical specimens should be an appropriate size. Specimens should be sent to the lab in and that have a lid. On the contrary, minimum specimen requirements should be followed to allow for all requested testing.
- Samples should be suspicious for infection. In the case of a large specimen, the surgeon should select the area most likely to be infected and send that piece to the laboratory.
Animal Sampling: Best Left to Veterinarians
Every day across the world, humans and animals interact in a variety of ways. Because of this, humans are at risk of acquiring pathogenic organisms from colonized or infected animals. What types of animal specimens do clinical microbiologists see?Not sure what you consider strange, but my graduate adviser once plopped a cow patty (bagged) with alfalfa sprouts sticking out of it on my desk and asked me to try to isolate Salmonella from it. 😂ðŸ§ðŸ˜·
— William Zaragoza (@Drapester)
I'm a veterinary microbiologist, I've seen it all.
— Dr. Anne Midwinter (@ACMidwin)
My least fave samples were entire lamb foetuses (Campylobacter) and horse eyeballs (Lepto). I really hate it when the sample looks back at you.
Have also done kakapo bones (Erysipelothrix) which prob counts as rarest sample
A dead pigeon. A few days dead from the smell.
— Victoria (@ClinSciGeek)
While veterinary and state laboratories can perform testing on specimens from animals, it is not unusual to receive these specimens in the clinical “human” lab as well. Oftentimes the medical team will want to culture a pet or suspected vector to determine where the patient acquired their infection. While the clinical laboratory has strict operating procedures for the management and culture of human specimens, they often don’t have procedures for environmental and animal culturing procedures, and those protocols should be left to veterinary and public health laboratories.So.....sooooooo, many more stories. One more: I worked many years in the lab. This mean, we received animal heads for testing (brains). Once, we received a box with bats for testing. HOWEVER, the bats were alive and trapped in women's underwear! I can't make this up! 🤪
— Rodney E. Rohde, PhD "Doc R" (@RodneyRohde)
In summary, consider the following when submitting animal samples for testing:
- Inform the lab staff about the suspected pathogen.
- for rabies testing typically includes the brain and brainstem of the infected animal, except in cases of small animals like bats (when the entire animal can be sent).
- Whole animals submitted to the laboratory should be deceased and not wriggling around in a pair of women’s underwear.
Inanimate Objects: Causation is Difficult to Demonstrate
In the 1960’s, hospitals regularly cultured all sorts of environmental items such as floors, counters and hospital supplies. This use of this practice declined after 1970. While it is possible to isolate pathogens from inanimate objects, it is nearly impossible to prove that they are the cause of human infection without knowing the series of events that lead to human contact and subsequent infection. It’s also difficult to ensure that the object is not grossly contaminated with environmental organisms that make the pathogen of interest difficult to isolate. In addition to these limitations, the act of culturing an inanimate object can be cumbersome and challenging, as in a case shared by Dr. Rodney Rohde:When I () was working for the Bureau of Labs right after 9/11 & the events in DC, we had a mailbox (with pole attached) brought in b/c someone had thrown a baby powder substance in it...Chain of custody also meant DPS stayed with it entire time! 🔬
— Texas State CLS Program (@TXST_CLS)
Diarrhea Obsession
If you ask any clinical microbiologist, they will tell you the same thing: they want to receive diarrhea. Are they crazy? No, there is a very sane reason for this obsession with liquid stool: with respect to C. difficile testing, liquid, loose, or lightly-formed stool is a must.Patients with solid stools (lovingly termed “rattlers” by many microbiologists) , and unnecessary testing can lead to unjustified costs and clinically misleading positive results. Giving a patient a false-positive C. difficile result can have very like increasing the risk of inappropriate antibiotic use and the length of stay in the hospital. Every day, microbiologists are given the difficult task of rejecting formed stools and frustrating the medical staff. As in most of the specimen requests microbiologists make, there is a valid scientific rationale for this request.
The Importance of Specimen Collection
Microbiologists work with some of the strangest specimens imaginable. But no matter how strange the specimen is, special attention should be paid to specimen collection. The quality of the specimen collected will always dictate the quality of the answers the microbiology lab is able to give.To increase chances of proper diagnosis, submitted samples
- Contain the infecting organism.
- Be collected under appropriately clean, preferably sterile, conditions.
- Come with information about the suspected pathogens, particularly if unusual, fastidious, or dangerous organisms are suspected.
- Be properly labeled.
- Be appropriate for the test that is ordered.
Continue to share your personal experiences in the clinical laboratory using the comments section below!
Special thanks to who shared their experiences on Twitter and contributed greatly to the development of this article.
The above represent the views of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the American Society for °®¶¹´«Ã½.