Author:
Mills D C,Midura T F,Arnon S S
Abstract
Isolation of lipase-positive Clostridium botulinum from fecal specimens establishes the diagnosis of infant botulism, contributes to the diagnosis of food-borne botulism, and is most easily accomplished by use of selective media. Modification of an available selective medium, C. botulinum inhibitory medium (CBI), enabled more rapid isolation of C. botulinum. The modified medium (botulinum selective medium [BSM] contained (per liter) 25 g of dehydrated heart infusion broth, 20 g of agar, 30 ml of egg yolk suspension, 250 mg of cycloserine, 76 mg of sulfamethoxazole, 4 mg of trimethoprim, and 100 IU of thymidine phosphorylase at pH 7.4. The two media were compared by using 15 fresh fecal specimens from infant botulism patients (10 type A and 5 type B) and a C. botulinum isolate that had been obtained from an infant botulism patient and that was mixed into a fresh stool specimen from a healthy human infant. In comparison to CBI, BSM always provided better suppression of the nonbotulinum fecal flora and earlier emergence of lipase-positive colonies. Diagnosis of infant botulism was accomplished sooner with BSM than with CBI because isolation of lipase-positive C. botulinum was easier.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
25 articles.
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