Selective enrichment broth culture for detection of Clostridium difficile and associated cytotoxin.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

A procedure was devised for routine examination of feces for Clostridium difficile with selective enrichment broth culture containing increased levels of carbohydrates and antibiotics to detect cytotoxin and volatile acids in broths inoculated with fecal samples. C. difficile was detected and identified with a rapidity comparable to that of conventional culture on selective cycloserine-cefoxitin fructose agar. Detection rates for C. difficile in inoculated broths (111/401 or 27%) were significantly higher than for culture on cycloserine-cefoxitin fructose agar (47/401 or 11%, P greater than 0.001). All fecal samples containing C. difficile and cytotoxin were correctly identified by the procedure. Isocaproic acid peak heights greater than 2 mm in selective enrichment broths inoculated with fecal samples indicated that C. difficile was present in the fecal sample examined. Of the positive specimens examined, 58% (64/111) produced peak heights greater than 10 mm. Peak heights less than 2 mm were not associated with C. difficile in the fecal sample. The investigated procedure provided a reliable alternative to the routine processing of feces for detecting C. difficile and associated cytotoxin in feces. Inoculated broths with isocaproic acid peak heights greater than 2 mm, after 24 to 48 h of incubation, and in which cytotoxin was detected, were subcultured to blood agar to obtain isolates of the organism as required. Broths which showed isocaproic acid peak heights less than 2 mm, and in which cytotoxin was not detected, were discarded as negative for C. difficile. The procedure was deemed potentially useful for epidemiological surveys of C. difficile.

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