Part
III: Culture
introduction
Tuberculosis
is a disease of global importance. One-third of the world population
is estimated to have been infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis
and nine million new cases of tuberculosis arise each year.
The tuberculosis crisis is likely to escalate since the human
immunodeficiency (HIV) epidemic has triggered an even greater
increase in the number of tuberculosis cases. The majority of
tuberculosis patients are 15 to 45 years of age, persons in
their most productive years of life. Tuberculosis kills over
two million people world-wide each year, more than all other
infectious diseases combined, including AIDS and malaria.
Transmission
of tuberculosis is virtually entirely by droplet nucleii created
through coughing by untreated persons suffering from pulmonary
tuberculosis (the most common form) in a confined environment.
Infected droplets remain airborne for a considerable time, and
may be inhaled by susceptible persons.
Pulmonary
tuberculosis usually occurs in the apex of the lungs. These
develop cavities which contain large populations of tubercle
bacilli that can be detected in a sputum specimen. Pulmonary
tuberculosis is suggested by persistent productive cough for
three weeks or longer, weight loss, night sweats and chest pain.
The diagnosis can only be made reliably on demonstrating the
presence of tubercle bacilli in the sputum by means of microscopy
and/or culture in the laboratory.
The
cornerstone of the laboratory diagnosis of tuberculosis is direct
microscopic examination of appropriately stained sputum specimens
for tubercle bacilli. Between 5 000 and 10 000 tubercle bacilli
per millilitre of sputum are required for direct microscopy
to be positive and only a proportion of tuberculosis patients
harbour large enough numbers of organisms to be detected in
this way. It is also virtually impossible to distinguish different
mycobacterial species by microscopy. Patients who have positive
smears carry the greatest number of tubercle bacilli, are the
most infectious and are therefore the most important patients
to detect early because they are responsible for spreading tuberculosis
disease.
Sputum
examination by microscopy is relatively quick, easy and inexpensive
and must be performed on ll cases suspected of having tuberculosis.
Smear microscopy is also used to monitor treatment progress
and control programme outcome.
Examination
by bacteriological culture provides the definitive diagnosis
of tuberculosis. Depending on the decontamination method and
the type of culture medium used, as few as ten viable tubercle
bacilli can be detected. However, the usual microbiological
techniques of plating clinical material on selective or differential
culture media and sub-culturing to obtain pure cultures cannot
be applied to tuberculosis bacteriology. Compared to other bacteria
which typically reproduce within minutes, M. tuberculosis
proliferate extremely slowly (generation time 18-24 hours).
Furthermore, growth requirements are such that it will not grow
on primary isolation on simple chemically defined media. The
only media which allow abundant growth of M. tuberculosisare
egg-enriched media containing glycerol and asparagine, and agar
or liquid medium supplemented with serum or bovine albumin.
Culture
increases the number of tuberculosis cases found, often by 30-50%,
and detects cases earlier, often before they become infectious.
Since culture techniques can detect few bacilli, the efficiency
of diagnosing failures at the end of treatment can be improved
considerably. Culture also provides the necessary material for
drug susceptibility testing. Culture of specimens is, however,
much more costly than microscopy and requires facilities for
media preparation as well as skilled staff.
Culture
should be used selectively, in the following order of priority:
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Selective
use of culture
- Surveillance
of tuberculosis drug resistance as an integral part
of the evaluation of control programme performance
- Diagnosis
of cases with clinical and radiological signs of pulmonary
tuberculosis where smears are repeatedly negative
- Diagnosis
of extra-pulmonary and childhood tuberculosis
- Follow-up
of tuberculosis cases who fail a standardised course
of treatment and why may be at risk of harbouring
drug resistant organisms
- Investigation
of high-risk individuals who are symptomatic, eg. Laboratory
workers, health care workers looking after multidrug
resistant patients
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