Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a widespread disease, and thus, the most common samples tested in diagnostic microbiology laboratories are urine samples. The "gold standard" for diagnosis is still bacterial culture, but a large proportion of samples are negative. Unnecessary culture can be reduced by an effective screening test. We evaluated the performance of a new urine cytometer, the Sysmex UF-1000i (Dasit), on 703 urine samples submitted to our laboratory for culture. We compared bacteria and leukocyte (WBC) counts performed with the Sysmex UF-1000i to CFU-per-milliliter quantification on CPS agar to assess the best cutoff values. Different cutoff values of bacteria/ml and WBC/ml were compared to give the best discrimination. On the basis of the results obtained in this study, we suggest that when the Sysmex UF-1000i analyzer is used as a screening test for UTI the cutoff values should be 65 bacteria/ml and 100 WBC/ml. Diagnostic performance in terms of sensitivity (98.2%), specificity (62.1%), negative predictive value (98.7%), positive predictive value (53.7%), and diagnostic accuracy (73.3%) were satisfactory. Screening with the Sysmex UF-1000i is acceptable for routine use. In our laboratory, we have reduced the number of bacterial cultures by 43%, speeded up their reporting, and decreased the inappropriate use of antibiotics.The urinary tract is the most common site of infection, and urine culture is the standard diagnostic test for urinary tract infection (UTI). The growing need to enhance the performance of urine culture combined with the need to free up resources by rejecting negative samples quickly and economically has drawn attention to solutions that can be used as screening tests to reduce the number of unnecessary culture tests. In this study, we sought to evaluate and optimize the performance of the Sysmex UF-1000i (Dasit) on 703 urine samples submitted at the same time to bacterial culture analysis. MATERIALS AND METHODSA comparison between the Sysmex UF-1000i urinary cytometer and urine culture was conducted on 703 samples, 128 of which (18.2%) were from hospitalized patients and 575 (81.8%) from outpatients. The urine samples were collected in sterile containers using the technique of midstream capture and were processed within 2 h of collection (5, 10). Each sample was divided into two sterile tubes with a vacuum system (Vacutainer; Becton-Dickinson); one tube was used for urine culture and the other for analysis by the Sysmex UF-1000i.The urine culture was performed by sowing 10 l of the urine sample on chromogenic agar plates (CPS agar; bioMérieux) with calibrated loops. CPS agar is a specific medium for isolation of bacteria in urinary samples. It allows identification of several bacteria-Enterobacteriaceae and Gram-positive bacteriaand it contains specific chromogenic substrates for detecting different enzymatic activities. The resulting colonies are well isolated and easily identifiable by differentiating colors (1). All plates were incubated for 24 h at 37°C, and the results were ex...
Parasitological diagnosis was achieved in four cases by recovery of typical operculated eggs in stool specimens; in two others by morphological features of proglottids recovered from feces. Treatment with niclosamide, as a single oral dose, cured the infection in all subjects. This is the first report of this infection in Italy in the last 10 years.
We describe the adoption of high sensitive troponin I (hsTnI) in clinical practice in two hospital settings in Italy. Samples from 426 consecutive patients (mean age 68.8 ± 17.0) admitted to the Emergency Department with a suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS) have been tested at admittance and after 3 and 6 hours by contemporary TnI and hsTnI. Results have been compared to the final clinical diagnosis. Troponin was detectable in 68.6% by TnI and 89.9% by hsTnI. Since hsTnI has a lower threshold for females, 38/41 patients with positive values only by hsTnI were women. The correlation between the assays was very high (r = 0.92). A diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) was made in 45 cases (10.5%). The negative and positive predictive values for a 50% troponin variation at 3 hours were 95.8% and 66.7% for hsTnI and 95.0% and 52.6% for TnI and at 6 hours 90.3% and 100% for hsTnI and 88.9% and 78.9% for TnI, respectively. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis demonstrated a greater efficiency by hsTnI at 3 hours versus 6 hours (AUC = 0.91 versus 0.72). The main benefits of hsTnI are the adoption of gender-specific 99th percentile and the shortening of time to decision.
We report the first observation of Hb G-Honolulu [α30(B11)Glu→Gln (GAG>CAG); HBA2:c.91G>A] in a Caucasian family and the first case of this variant to be found in association with Hb S [β6(A3)Glu→Val, GAG>GTG]. The proband was a healthy 4-year-old Italian boy. His chromatographic hemoglobin (Hb) pattern showed an abnormal peak having the typical retention time of Hb S (25.6% ), a second abnormal peak eluted soon after (13.6%) and a third minor peak eluted at the end of the run (6.5%). Identification of Hb variants were performed by peptide mapping using liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS/MS). Two abnormal peptides at m/z 765.1 and 922 were found, corresponding to the αT-4 and βT-1 peptides characteristic for Hb G-Honolulu and Hb S, respectively. The third minor abnormal peak presumably corresponded to the hybrid molecule (α(G-Honolulu)/β(S)). The concomitant presence of Hb G-Honolulu and Hb S does not seem to produce any relevant clinical manifestation.
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