1 / 23

laboratory diagnosis of infectious diseases

A Great Islamic scolar ,Ibn-al Qayyaum R.A said: the things that make the body sick are: Too much! talking, Too much sleeping, Too much Eating. laboratory diagnosis of infectious diseases. Bacteriologic Immunologic(serologic) Molecular (nucleic acid–based) tests. Koch , s postulates.

elu
Télécharger la présentation

laboratory diagnosis of infectious diseases

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Great Islamic scolar ,Ibn-al Qayyaum R.A said: the things that make the body sick are: Too much! talking, Too much sleeping, Too much Eating

  2. laboratory diagnosis of infectious diseases • Bacteriologic • Immunologic(serologic) • Molecular (nucleic acid–based) tests

  3. Koch,s postulates • Organism must be present in lesions in every case of disease • Possible to isolate org in pure culture • Inoculation of pure culture in lab animal should produce disease • Possible to reisolate the org

  4. MICROBIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS • Multi-step process • Clinician- patient meeting • Specimens – quality of specimens is crucial • Specimen from sterile sites- enrichment media • Specmen from a site with a normal flora- selective media to supress the growth of commensal organisms

  5. MICROBIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS • Specimen choice • Apropriate specimens • Containers –labelled sterile containers • Transport – • Specimen quality control –result depend on quality of specimen • Identify unsatisfactory specimens

  6. MICROBIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS-LAB EXAM • Direct exam – • Microscopy –rapid presumptive diagnosis • Saline wet preparation of stool • Gram,s stain, Ziehl-Neelsen stain, Leishman,s stain, • Culture –amplification in number of pathogens, • Selective media –discrimination between pathogens & non-pathogens

  7. MICROBIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS-LAB EXAM • Culture on solid media –isolated colonies for identification & susceptibility testing • Media for bacterial culture • Serology & antigen detection –rapid diagnosis, organisms difficult to culture

  8. HAZARDS IN PATH LABS • unsafe premises • Naked flames • Chemical hazards • Glassware hazards • Equipment hazards • Explosions • Microbial hazards

  9. BIOHAZARDS IN PATH LABS • Ingestion – • Contaminted fingers, mouth pipettting,eating food in lab, • Inoculation – • Needlestick injuries , injury from broken contaminated glassware, open uncovered skin wound

  10. BIOHAZARDS IN PATH LABS • Inhalation – • Infected airborne droplets • Infection of general public – • Escape of microorganisms during transport, improper disposal of infectious waste

  11. Classificaton of infective microorganisms • Risk group 1 – • Low risk to lab worker & members of community eg . Food spoilage bacteria, yeasts, common moulds

  12. Classificaton of infective microorganisms • Risk group 2 – • moderate risk to lab worker & limited risk to members of community, • Can cause serious human disease • Staphylococci, streptococci, enterobacteria, clostridia, vibrio, adenovirus, poliovirus, hepatitis viruses, toxoplasma, leishmania

  13. Classificaton of infective microorganisms • Risk group 3 – • High risk to lab worker & low risk to members of community, • Can cause serious human disease • Brucella spp, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, S. typhi,francisella, arboviruses, LCM virus, rickettsiae, chlamydia, coccidioides, histoplasma, HIV

  14. Classificaton of infective microorganisms • Risk group 4 – • High risk to lab worker & to members of community, • Can cause serious human disease & readily transmitted from one person to another • Viruses of haemorrhagic fevers, Marburg, Lassa, Ebola

  15. SAFE LAB PRACTICES • Safe working environment – • Display safety signs & notices • Keep lab clean • Separate & dispose waste • Decontamination procedures • Disinfectants & their use in lab • Sterilization • Regulations for safe packaging & transport of specimens • Reporting of faults

  16. SAFE LAB PRACTICES • SAFE WORKING PRACTICES- • Personal hygiene • Protective clothing • Preventing lab acquired infections • Handling of spillage of a specimen • Working tidily, use of racks, • Use of protective gloves, goggles, face shield, dust mask,

  17. DUTIES OF LAB SAFETY OFFICER • Monitor safety reg in lab • Staff taught to handle fire, equipment fault, specimen or chemical spillage • Test methods are safe • No mouth pipetting • Use of protective clothing in lab • No smoking, eating, drinking, applying cosmetics

  18. DUTIES OF LAB SAFETY OFFICER • maintenance of first aid box, eye wash bottles, fire extinguishers • Cleanliness of lab, benches free of books & personal property • Maintenance of equipment • Observe safety reg regarding pts & visitors to lab are followed • Check structural defects in lab • Review & discuss safety reg with staff

  19. UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS • Blood & certain body fluids ( amniotic fluid, CSF, pleural fluid, peritoneal fluid, pericardial fluid, semen, vaginal secretions, any fluid visibly contaminated with blood ) of all patients are potentially infective.

  20. UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS • Hand washing before & after all patient contact • Use of gloves if soiling of hands with blood is likely • Gowns should be worn if soiling of skin or clothing is likely • Mask • Protective eyewear • Private room for patient if hygienic practices are poor

  21. UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS • Proper disposal of contaminated needles/sharps in puncture resistant containers • No resheathing/recapping of used needles • Spills of blood – cleaned with 1:10 dil of bleach • Barrier precautions ( masks, protective eyewear, gowns ) indicated, when splashes are expected to be generated.

  22. LAB INFECTIONS - TYPES OF ACCIDENTS • Splashes & sprays • Needlesticks, sharp objects, • Mouth pipetting • Animal bite or scratch

  23. MICROBIOLOGY • Five basic techniques in microbiology –five I,s • Inoculation, incubation, isolation, inspection, identification

More Related