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Laboratory diagnosis of Salmonella By, Dr.M.Malathi Postgraduate Department of Microbiology Chengalpattu Medical College
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Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Aug 06, 2015

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Page 1: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Laboratory diagnosis of Salmonella

By,Dr.M.MalathiPostgraduate

Department of MicrobiologyChengalpattu Medical College

Page 2: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Introduction

The genus Salmonella consists of bacilli that parasitise the intestines of a large number of vertebrate species and infect human beings, leading to enteric fever, gastroenteritis, septicemia with or without focal suppuration and the carrier state

Page 3: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Clinical Manifestations

• Typhoidal salmonella – Enteric fever• Non typhoidal salmonella – Gastroenteritis

• Bacteremia• Osteomyelitis• Localised infections• Carriers

Page 4: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Laboratory diagnosis of Enteric fever

• Typhoid fever + Paratyphoid fever

• Typhoid fever – S.Typhi• Paratyphoid fever – S.Paratyphi A, B, and C

Page 5: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Confirmed case of typhoid fever is defined(WHO), as a patient with fever (> 38°C) that has lasted for at least three days, with a laboratory confirmed positive culture of S.Typhi.

• Probable case of typhoid fever is a patient with fever (> 38°C) that has lasted for > 3 days, with a positive serodiagnosis or antigen detection test but without S.Typhi isolation.

• Chronic carrier is determined as excretion of S.Typhi in stools or urine for longer than one year after the onset of acute typhoid fever.

Page 6: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Specimen collection

BloodSerumUrineFecesBoneMarrowBile

PusCSFSputumGall bladderLiverSpleenMesentric lymph nodes

Page 7: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Ideal specimen

First week Blood (culture)

Second week Serum (Antibodies)

Third week Stool

Fourth week Urine

Page 8: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Chance of isolation

Specimens First week Third week

Blood 50 to 80% 30%

Feces 40 to 50% 80%

Urine - 25%

Page 9: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Blood culture

• Volume of blood : 10 to 15 ml from adults and adolescents , 2 to 4 ml in children

• Ratio of blood to bile broth: 1:10• Or add saponin to BHI broth with 0.05% SPS• Inoculate the blood immediately• Transport immediately, never store under 15degC• Incubate as soon as possible

Page 10: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Blood culture bottles

Page 11: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• When blood culture bottles are not available, direct plating of blood buffy coat from 5 to 10ml sterile heparinised blood onto columbia agar plates containing 0.05% saponin is recommended(Wain, J et al)

Page 12: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Check for turbidity and evidence of growth after 1,2,3 and 7 days

• Bottles showing signs of growth – Do culture on solid media

• Subculturing done in Mac Conkey agar and Blood agar

• On day 7, all the bottles subcultured before being discarded as negative

Page 13: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Casteneda`s method• Blood agar – Non hemolytic, 2 to 3mm,

smooth white colonies• Mac Conkey agar – non lactose fermenting

colonies• Confirmed by biochemical reactions and slide

agglutination test with high titre sera

Page 14: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Slide agglutination test - Serotyping

• Prepare a milky suspension of overnight slope culture with saline

• Place a drop in clean glass slide• Check autoagglutination• Add diagnostic sera in the following order for

serotyping

Page 15: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

1. Salmonella polyvalent O (Groups A-G)2. Salmonella polyvalent H phases 1 and 2

serum and polyvalent H phase 2 serum3. Individual Salmonella O group sera O2 – O13 4. Single factor H sera

Unusual Serotype ?Send to National Salmonella Reference Centre

Central Research Institute, Kasauli

Page 16: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Rapid detection tests from culture• MUCAP test – 4 methylumbelliferyl caprylate

test – rapid identification of Salmonella strains directly from agar plates

• The substrate combines with Salmonella C8 esterase – releases the umbelliferone – strongly fluoresent at 365 nm

• Apply a drop the reagent directly over the suspected colonies on agar plat and observe under a wood`s lamp within 5 minutes

• 100% sensitivity and specificity

Page 17: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• OBIS Salmonella test – Oxoid Biochemical Identification System – rapid colorimetric spot test

• For the determination of PYRase and NPA activity

• Sample from the colony on an agar plate and applied to the PYR and NPA test areas on the card

• Drop of buffer solution added to both test areas, after 5 minutes, one drop PYR reagent added in PYR test area, NPA reagent in NPA area

Page 18: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

InterpretationPYRase negative

NPA negativeSalmonella

PYRase positiveNPA negative

Citrobacter

NPA positivePYRase negative

Proteus, Morganella and Providencia

Page 19: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Automated systems

• BACTEC

• BacTalert

• Vitek

Page 20: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Clot culture

• Allow the blood to clot and serum pipetted off and used for widal test

• Clot is broken up with sterile glass rod and added to bottle of bile broth

• Add streptokinase (alternative)• Higher rate of isolation than blood cultures

(bactericidal action of the serum is obviated)

Page 21: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Serum

• 1 to 3 ml of blood inoculated into a tube without anticoagulant

• Second sample should be collected during convalescent phase

• Used for serological assays

Page 22: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Widal test

• Aim: Measurement of H and O agglutinins for typhoid and paratyphoid

• Principle : Tube Agglutination• Requirements:• Serum, Tubes, Antigen, Incubator, Waterbath• Tubes : Dreyer`s tube and Felix tube

Page 23: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Antigens

• O antigen of S.Typhi• H antigen of S.Typhi• H antigen of S.Paratyphi A and B

• Strain used to prepare : S.Typhi 901, O and H

Page 24: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Procedure:1. Serial dilutions of equal volumes of

serum and antigen mixed.2. Put controls3. Incubated overnight at 37degC4. Read the results5. No agglutination in controls6. For O antigen – disc like pattern7. For H antigen – loose, cotton wooly clumps

Page 25: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Highest dilution – TITRE• Moderate sensitivity and specificity• 30% of culture proven cases found to be Widal

negative ( WHO – TFguide)

• Slide Widal test – undiluted patient serum and antigens

Page 26: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

CAUTION• Stage of disease• Prior antibiotics• Prior immunisation• Anamnestic response• Antigen preparation – free from fimbriae• False positive – typhus, acute falciparum

malaria, chronic liver disease, rheumatoid arthritis, nephrotic syndrome

• False negative – antibiotics, severe hypoproteinemia

Page 27: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Interpretation

• Always rising titre by testing paired sera – fourfold rise in the titre needed

• Single report with caution• Baseline titre in endemic areas

O - > 1:100H - > 1:200

Page 28: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

IDL Tubex ® test

• Simple, Rapid• Slide latex agglutination test• O 9 antigen – Highly specific for S.Typhi, used

here , immunodominant epitope• Only for Typhoid fever, does not give positivity

for S.Paratyphi• Detects IgM antibodies

Page 29: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Test Pack:1. Sets of V shaped tubes – six samples per set –

tested simultaneously2. Reagent A, magnetic particles coated with

S.Typhi LPS3. Reagent B, Blue coloured latex particles

coated with a monoclonal antibody specific for the O9 antigen

Page 30: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Test serum ( one drop ) + Reagent A (one drop) – 1 minute – mix

• Then add two drops of Reagent B• Keep the tubes in magent embedded stand,

and slid it several times• Read the results immediately• Based on the colour of the reaction –

compared with the chart – Titre value noted• Stored sera has a better result in tubex than

widal

Page 31: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

IDL Tubex ® test

Page 32: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Typhidot ® test

• Simple, speed, economical• Sensitivity is 85.9%, Specificity 96.7%• To detect specific IgM and IgG antibodies to

S.Typhi• Typhidot - M ® - To detect IgM alone• Replaces the widal when used in conjunction

with the culture (Gold Standard)• High negative predictive value – useful in high

endemic areas

Page 33: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Typhidot ® rapid assay

Page 34: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

IgM dipstick test

• Detects IgM antibodies in serum and whole blood

• Materials:1. Dipstick2. Lyophilised non enzymatic detection reagent3. Liquid to reconsitute the detection reagent4. Liquid to wet the test strip of dipstick

Page 35: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Wet the test strip in a mixture of serum and detection reagent ( 1:50)

• Incubate for 3 hours at RT• Rinse the test strip with water• Allow it to dry• Compare the color with reference strip• Grade it as 1+, 2+, 3+ and 4+• Sensitivity – 65% to 77%• Specificity – 95% to 100%

Page 36: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Enterocheck - WB

• Immunochromatographic test in cassette from • 30 minutes test• Sensitivity – 79.3%• Specificity – 90.2%

Page 37: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Coagglutination test

• Demonstration of circulating antigen• Done in the blood and in urine• Done in early phase of the disease• S.aureus (Cowan I Strain) which contains

protein A is stabilised with formaldehyde and coated with S.Typhi antibody

• 1% above suspension + patient serum – in a slide – visible agglutination (2 min) – positive

Page 38: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Urine

• Irregular and infrequent shedding of bacilli• Positive only in second and third weeks• 25% cases +• Clean voided urine samples are inoculated

into enrichment and selective media

Page 39: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Feces

• Collected in a container • Spoonful amount• Transport immediately• 6ml of buffered glycerol saline transport

mediumAlternate specimen:• Rectal swabs• Fecel swabs

Page 40: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Shed throughout the course of the disease and also in convalescence

• Valuable in patients on antibiotics ( drug does not eliminate the bacilli from the gut)

• Fecal samples plated directly on MacConkeyDCA / XLD

Wilson Blair Media• Enrichment also done in selenite or

tetrathionate broth , incubated for 6 to 8 hours and subcultured.

Page 41: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Pale non lactose non sucrose fermenting colonies – DCLS

Red, black centred colonies – XLD

• Rule out proteus by urease test• Check for purity by subculturing in nutrient

agar• Do biochemical reactions and sugars• Do serotyping by slide agglutination test

Page 42: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

InterpretationProvisional report – given on third or fourth day and

inform the clinician

Secondary confirmation test panel:1. Citrate agar slope2. Lysine decarboxylase medium with control3. Salicin peptone water4. ONPG5. Mac Conkey secondary purity plate6. Nutrient agar slope7. Sensitivity agar plate

Page 43: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

If the secondary tests – confirm – pure culture of Salmonella seed it on to two Dorset egg slopes and send one to a Salmonella Reference Laboratory for final serotyping.

Send a confirmation report to clinician

Page 44: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Final report

S.enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhi

Page 45: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Other specimens

• Vomitus• Bile• Pus

• Bone marrow (Gold standard specimen)

Page 46: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Antimicrobial susceptibility testing

Drugs :1. Amoxycillin 2. Co-amoxiclav3. Cefuroxime4. Cotrimoxazole5. Ciprofloxacin6. Chloramphenicol

Page 47: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Most of the strains are sensitive• Resistant – depends on serotype, phage type

and country of origin• 1990 – 20% strains resistant to

Chlorampenicol isolated in UK• 90% of strains are resistant to ampicillin and

trimethoprim• In Multidrug resistant areas – Ciprofloxacin is

the drug of choice

Page 48: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• A multidrug resistant strain of S.Typhimurium definitive type 104 that is resistant to five antibiotics emerged around 1990s

• 50% of the S.Typhimurium isolates were resistant to one or more drugs and 28% had a five drug resistance pattern

• 1998 – S.Newport – emerged as a major MDR pathogen

Page 49: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Molecular methods

• PCR is sensitive, but not widely used

Page 50: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Miscellaneous tests

• Leucopenia with relative lymphocytosis

Page 51: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Diagnosis of Carriers

• High incidence due to carrier state• Contamination of food by food handlers

(Carriers)• Convalescent carriers • Temporary carriers• Chronic carriers ( 2 to 5%)• Bacilli persists in the Gallbladder and kidney• Intermittent shedding

Page 52: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• Repeated sampling – Bile or Faeces, urine for culture (Confirmatory)

• Demonstration of antibodies to Vi antigens (Screening test)

• IgG is the primary indicator of carriers• IgA and secretory IgA are seen. In Vaccinated –

No secretory IgA• Hence High IgA content indicate typhoid

carrier state

Page 53: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Public health ?

• In cities – tracing of carriers – Sewer Swab technique

• Sewage – Filtration through Millipore membrane – culture in Wilson and blair media

• Food safety – Carriers in hotels – Eg: Typhoid mary

Page 54: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Salmonella and Eggs

• According to the Centers for Disease Control, 1 in 10,000 eggs contain Salmonella.

• Experts say that chickens carry the bacteria in their own bodies, and pass Salmonella along to the yolk and white while the egg is forming in the ovaries.

• Chickens can also pass bacteria to the eggshell—and through the shell pores into the inner egg—when the egg is laid.

Page 55: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

• The eggs are then submerged in all-natural water bath, where computer-controlled temperature zones monitor & heats the eggs in their shells to the exact temperature needed to destroy all bacteria, without cooking the egg.

• After pasteurization, the eggs are sealed with an FDA-approved, food-grade wax coating to prevent contamination and preserve product freshness.

• After pasteurization, the eggs are dried, cooled, and then stamped as P , which identifies them as pasteurized .

Page 56: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Pasteurised eggs

Page 57: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Typing methods

Bacteriophage typing :• Depends on Vi antigen• Used in epidemiological surveillance• National Salmonella Phage Typing Centre –

Lady Hardinge Medical College• S.Typhi phage types A and E1 – common in

India• S.Paratyphi A , types 1 and 2

Page 58: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Molecular methods:• PFGE• MLEE• IS 200 profilinng• Random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis

Page 59: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

Summary

• Culture – Gold standard – Late results – AST• Widal – Duration – Endemicity – paired sera• Slide tests – Discrepancies between labs

Ideal diagnostic test rapid, specific, sensitiveTYPHIDOT EIA

Page 60: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

In this study ,• 66% blood culture +• 66% Widal test +• 74% Typhidot +

Typhidot is found to have high sensitivity and good specificity , alternate to blood culture

Page 61: Laboratory diagnosis of salmonella

References• Mackie & McCartney – Practical Medical Microbiology –

14th Edition• Konemann – Colour atlas of diagnostic microbiology – 6th

edition• Harrisons – principle of internal medicine – 18th edition• District laboratory practive in tropical countries – 2nd

edition – Monica cheesbrough• Wain J et al, Specimens and culture media for the

laboratory diagnosis of typhoid fever• WHO – Salmonella surveillance report• Nitte journal of health science• Malaysian journal of medical sciences