Aspirates
Duodenal aspirates may be useful in demonstrating Giardia lamblia
or Strongyloides stercoralis larvae. Material collected following
intubation through the nose and stomach into the upper small intestine
may be submitted to the laboratory. Centrifuge the specimen at 500 ×
g for 2 to 3 minutes and examine the wet mount. An unfixed
specimen can be examined immediately or if the specimen cannot be examined
within 1 to 2 hours after collection, it should be preserved in 10% formalin.
Sigmoidoscopy material and abscesses of the liver and lung
may demonstrate amebic trophozoites. Material from the mucosal surface
or from visible lesions should be aspirated. This material can be
examined immediately in a 0.85% saline wet mount preparation (or part
of this material could be placed in formalin) or can be fixed in PVA.
Once fixed in PVA, the material can be stained using trichrome stain and
examined for trophozoites of Entamoeba histolytica. If molecular
diagnosis is necessary, the specimen should not be preserved in a fixative.
Lymph node material, bone marrow, and spleen may be examined for
the presence of motile trophozoites of Trypanosoma brucei gambiense
or Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense. For Leishmania donovani
infections, material obtained by needle aspiration from bone marrow or
spleen can be used to demonstrate amastigote stages. Smears can
then be prepared by fixing in methanol and staining with Giemsa stain.
Skin ulcers may demonstrate the amastigote stages in cutaneous
and mucocutaneous leishmaniasis. Permanent stained smears made with
these specimens by fixing in methanol and staining with Giemsa stain.
For additional
information about aspirates, call the Division of Parasitic Diseases,
at 770-488-4474.
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