Part
II: Microscopy
specimen handling
Receipt of incoming specimens
Specimens
should be received at a separate specimen delivery counter and
the following procedures applied:
- Wear
disposable gloves, if available, during receipt and inspection
of incoming specimens
- Inspect the delivery
box for signs of leakage. If mass leakage is evident discard
the box by autoclaving or burning
- Disinfect
the outside of the delivery box using cotton wool or paper
towels saturated with a suitable disinfectant (eg. 5% phenol)
- Open
the delivery box carefully and check for cracked or broken
specimen containers. Autoclave or burn these without processing
and request another specimen
- Check
that specimens have been adequately labelled with individual
identification numbers and that these correspond with
the numbers on the accompanying list
- Note
the relevant patient and specimen details into the laboratory
register
- Disinfect
the inside of the delivery box, discard gloves and wash hands
after handling specimen containers
Safe
handling of specimens
Transmission of
M. tuberculosis results essentially from infectious aerosols,
ie. droplet nuclei of 1-5Fm in diameter containing tubercle
bacilli, sufficiently small to reach lung alveoli and initialise
an infection.
Infection
control in the microscopy laboratory must aim at reducing the
production of aerosols. Good ventilation is necessary for the
protection of laboratory staff from infectious airborne nuclei.
A simple way to ensure ventilation and directional airflow is
by properly placed windows and doors.
Microscopy
procedures differ considerably in their potential to create
aerosols:
Specimen
collection
Tuberculosis
suspects are sometimes referred directly to the laboratory for
sputum collection. This practice exposes laboratory workers
to a high risk of infection by aerosols produced during collection
procedures. Precautions to lower this risk include instructing
tuberculosis suspects to cover their mouths while coughing,
standing behind (and not in front of) coughing individuals and
collecting specimens outdoors where aerosols are diluted and
sterilised by direct sunlight.
Smear
preparation
While
opening sputum containers and preparing smears may produce aerosols,
these manipulations entail less risk of transmission than unprotected
coughing. There is very little epidemiological evidence that
preparing sputum smears is correlated with an increased risk
of tuberculosis infection. Expensive and sophisticated equipment
is no substitute for good laboratory practice, and biological
safety cabinets are therefore not mandatory in peripheral laboratories
performing smear microscopy only.
Evaluation of sputum quality and volume
A
good sputum specimen consists of recently-discharged material
from the bronchial tree, with minimum amounts of oral or nasal
material. Satisfactory quality implies the presence of mucoid
or mucopurulent material and is of greater significance than
volume. Ideally, a sputum specimen should have a volume of 3-5ml,
although smaller quantities are acceptable if the quality is
satisfactory. Induced sputum resemble saliva and it is important
that these specimens not be discarded as unsuitable.
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