Effects of volume and periodicity on blood cultures

Author:

Li J1,Plorde J J1,Carlson L G1

Affiliation:

1. Veterans Administration Medical Center, Seattle, Washington 98108.

Abstract

Blood specimens collected for culture by using the high-volume resin-based BACTEC system over an 18-month period at the Seattle Veterans Administration Center were examined in this study. Of 7,783 cultures obtained, 624 were classified as true positives. Patients in this group had between 20 and 60 ml of blood drawn per culture and separated into 10-ml aliquots for incubation. Analysis of the results stratified by cultured volume and time interval between specimen collection accorded yield advantage to culture volume at the maximal amounts tested. No advantage was observed with any particular interval of collection. Increasing cultured volume from 20 to 40 ml increased yield by 19%. Increasing cultured volume from 40 to 60 ml increased yield by an additional 10%. The same effect was seen whether cultures were drawn simultaneously or serially within 24 h. These observations support other reports demonstrating increased yield with increased cultured blood volume. However, they demonstrate increases in yield at volumes much higher than previously considered. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that high-volume blood cultures drawn serially or simultaneously return the best yields.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

Reference19 articles.

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2. Effect of volume of blood cultured on detection of bacteremia;Hall M. M.;J. Clin. Microbiol.,1976

3. The importance of volume of blood cultured in the detection of bacteremia and fungemia;Ilstrup D. M.;Diagn. Microbiol. Infect. Dis.,1983

4. Kirkwood B. R. 1988. Essentials of medical statistics. Blackwell Scientific Publications Oxford.

5. Quantitation of bacteria in cerebrospinal fluid and blood of children with meningitis and its diagnostic significance;La Scolea L. J.;J. Clin. Microbiol.,1984

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