Authors
Alan J Wolfe, Evelyn Toh, Noriko Shibata, Ruichen Rong, Kimberly Kenton, MaryPat FitzGerald, Elizabeth R Mueller, Paul Schreckenberger, Qunfeng Dong, David E Nelson, Linda Brubaker
Publication date
2012/4
Journal
Journal of clinical microbiology
Volume
50
Issue
4
Pages
1376-1383
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Description
Clinical urine specimens are usually considered to be sterile when they do not yield uropathogens using standard clinical cultivation procedures. Our aim was to test if the adult female bladder might contain bacteria that are not identified by these routine procedures. An additional aim was to identify and recommend the appropriate urine collection method for the study of bacterial communities in the female bladder. Consenting participants who were free of known urinary tract infection provided urine samples by voided, transurethral, and/or suprapubic collection methods. The presence of bacteria in these samples was assessed by bacterial culture, light microscopy, and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Bacteria that are not or cannot be routinely cultivated (hereinafter called uncultivated bacteria) were common in voided urine, urine collected by transurethral catheter (TUC), and urine collected by suprapubic aspirate …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AJ Wolfe, E Toh, N Shibata, R Rong, K Kenton… - Journal of clinical microbiology, 2012