Bailey & Scott's Diagnostic MicrobiologyBailey & Scott's Diagnostic Microbiology, Tenth Edition, is a classic resource in the field. This edition has been extensively updated to be better than ever. The tenth edition has been reorganized and rewritten to help you find information more quickly. Now in seven logically sequenced parts, the book clearly and concisely addresses general issues in clinical microbiology, the scientific and laboratory basis for clinical microbiology, diagnosis by organ system, bacteriology, parasitology, mycology, and virology. |
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Page 161
... incubation temperature occurs only when dictated by special circumstances . Recovery of certain organisms can be enhanced by incubation at other temperatures . For example , the gastrointestinal pathogen Campylobacter jejuni grows at 42 ...
... incubation temperature occurs only when dictated by special circumstances . Recovery of certain organisms can be enhanced by incubation at other temperatures . For example , the gastrointestinal pathogen Campylobacter jejuni grows at 42 ...
Page 162
... incubation , and mycobacteria frequently take weeks before detectable growth Occurs . THE PROCESS OF BACTERIAL CULTIVATION The process of bacterial cultivation involves the use of optimal artificial media and incubation conditions to ...
... incubation , and mycobacteria frequently take weeks before detectable growth Occurs . THE PROCESS OF BACTERIAL CULTIVATION The process of bacterial cultivation involves the use of optimal artificial media and incubation conditions to ...
Page 293
... incubation will also enhance the growth of most aerobic bacteria . DETECTING GROWTH After 6 to 18 hours of incubation , most bacteria responsible for clinically significant infections are present in numbers large enough to recover by ...
... incubation will also enhance the growth of most aerobic bacteria . DETECTING GROWTH After 6 to 18 hours of incubation , most bacteria responsible for clinically significant infections are present in numbers large enough to recover by ...
Contents
Part Four Bacteriology 423 | 4 |
Laboratory Safety | 20 |
Laboratory Management | 51 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
acid-fast aerobic aminoglycosides anaerobic antibiotics antibody antigen antimicrobial antimicrobial agents assay aureus bacilli bacteremia bacteria beta-lactam blood agar blood culture broth Campylobacter CDC group cells cephalosporins Chapter Chlamydia chocolate agar Clin Clinical Laboratory clinical microbiology cocci coli colonies containing detection disk editors Enterobacteriaceae enterococci enzyme etiologic agents Figure flora fluid fluorescent genes genus Gram stain gram-negative gram-positive grow growth Haemophilus Haemophilus influenzae hospital host human identification imipenem incubation infections caused infectious diseases influenzae inoculated isolated Legionella lesions MacConkey agar medium membrane meningitis microbial Microbiol microbiology microbiology laboratory microorganisms mycobacteria Mycoplasma negative Neisseria nosocomial nucleic acid organisms PATHOGENESIS pathogens patients penicillin performed plate pneumoniae procedures produce protein Pseudomonas resistance respiratory tract rods serum sheep blood Shigella skin species staphylococci sterile streptococci surface swab Table therapy tion tissue toxin trachomatis tract infections transport tube tuberculosis urine usually vancomycin virulence virus viruses