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Detection of Anaerobes in Different Clinicalsamples

A

Assiut University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Anaerobic Bacterial Infection

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Cultures

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03266341
Anaerobes detection in samples

Details and patient eligibility

About

Early detection of anaerobic bacteria to avoid its serious comlications

Full description

Infections caused by anaerobic bacteria are common and may be serious and life-threatening.Obligately anaerobic bacteria do not grow on solid media in room air (0.04% carbon dioxide and 21% oxygen); facultatively anaerobic bacteria can grow in the presence or absence of air. Microaerophilic bacteria do not grow at all aerobically or grow poorly, but grow better under 10% carbon dioxide or anaerobically. Anaerobic bacteria can be divided into strict anaerobes that can not grow in the presence of more than 0.5% oxygen and moderate anaerobic bacteria that are able of growing between 2 and 8% oxygen. Anaerobic bacteria usually do not possess catalase, but some can generate superoxide dismutase which protects them from oxygen.

Anaerobes are the predominant components of the bacterial flora of normal human skin and mucous membranes, and are therefore a common cause of bacterial infections of endogenous origin. Infections due to anaerobic bacteria can evolve all body systems and sites . The predominant ones include: abdominal, pelvic, respiratory, and skin and soft tissues infections. Because of their fastidious nature, they are difficult to isolate from infectious sites and are often overlooked. Failure to direct therapy against these organisms often leads to clinical failures. Their isolation requires appropriate methods of collection, transportation, and cultivation of specimens. Treatment of anaerobic bacterial infection is complicated by the slow growth of these organisms, which makes diagnosis in the laboratory possible only after several days, by their often polymicrobial nature and by the growing resistance of anaerobic bacteria to antimicrobial agent.

Almost all anaerobic infections originate from the patient's own microflora. Poor blood supply and tissue necrosis lower the oxidation-reduction potential and favor the growth of anaerobes. Any condition that lowers the blood supply to an affected area can predispose to anaerobic infection. Therefore, foreign body, malignancy, surgery, edema, shock, traum and vascular disease may predispose to anaerobic infection. Previous infection with aerobic or facultative organisms also may make the local tissue conditions more favorable for the growth of anaerobic organisms. The human defense mechanisms also may be impaired by anaerobic conditions .

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient with infection organism not yet detected

Exclusion criteria

  • patients with infection organism is already detected

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Safaa Ali samir hussien mohamed, Master

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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