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. 1973 Dec;26(6):867–873. doi: 10.1128/am.26.6.867-873.1973

Method for Radiorespirometric Detection of Bacteria in Pure Culture and in Blood

J Rudolph Schrot 1, Walter C Hess 1, Gilbert V Levin 1
PMCID: PMC379924  PMID: 4588194

Abstract

Methods are described for the detection of low numbers of bacteria by monitoring 14CO2 evolved from 14C-labeled substrates. Cell suspensions are filtered with membrane filters, and the filter is then moistened with 0.1 ml of labeled medium in a small, closed apparatus. Evolved 14CO2 is collected with Ba(OH)2-moistened filter pads and assayed with conventional radioactivity counting equipment. The kinetics of 14CO2 evolution are shown for several species of bacteria. Fewer than 100 colony-forming units of most species tested were detected in 2 h or less. Bacteria were inoculated into blood and the mixture was treated to lyse the blood cells. The suspension ws filtered and the filter was placed in a small volume of labeled medium. The evolved 14CO2 was trapped and counted. A key development in the methodology was finding that an aqueous solution of Rhyozyme and Triton X-100 produced lysis of blood but was not detrimental to bacteria.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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