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Stool Specimen Processing Guide

This document from the CDC describes procedures for processing stool specimens to test for parasites. It explains that fresh specimens should be examined within 1 hour to observe motile trophozoites, while preserved specimens can be tested using various techniques. The most common concentration technique uses zinc sulfate or Sheather's sugar solution to float parasites, while sedimentation places parasites in the sediment. The CDC uses a formalin-ethyl acetate sedimentation technique to concentrate specimens for further testing. Specimens preserved in PVA are mostly used for trichrome staining after being heat fixed on a slide.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views2 pages

Stool Specimen Processing Guide

This document from the CDC describes procedures for processing stool specimens to test for parasites. It explains that fresh specimens should be examined within 1 hour to observe motile trophozoites, while preserved specimens can be tested using various techniques. The most common concentration technique uses zinc sulfate or Sheather's sugar solution to float parasites, while sedimentation places parasites in the sediment. The CDC uses a formalin-ethyl acetate sedimentation technique to concentrate specimens for further testing. Specimens preserved in PVA are mostly used for trichrome staining after being heat fixed on a slide.

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C. Hidalgo
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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3/27/23, 10:12 PM CDC - DPDx - Diagnostic Procedures - Stool Specimens

DPDx - Laboratory Identification of Parasites of Public Health Concern

DPDx - Laboratory Identification of Parasites of Public Health


Concern

Stool Specimens - Specimen Processing


Stool specimens
can be examined
fresh or
preserved.

Examination of
fresh specimens
permits the
observation of
motile
trophozoites, but
this must be
carried out
This flow chart shows how specimens preserved in formalin and PVA are processed and tested at CDC.
without delay.
Liquid (diarrheic)
specimens (which are more likely to contain trophozoites) should be examined within 30 minutes of passage (not within 30
minutes of arrival in the laboratory!), and soft specimens (which may contain both trophozoites and cysts) should be
examined within one hour of passage. If delays cannot be avoided, the specimen should be preserved to avoid disintegration
of the trophozoites. Formed specimens (less likely to contain trophozoites) can be kept for up to one day, with overnight
refrigeration if needed, prior to examination.

The flow chart on the right shows how specimens preserved in formalin and PVA are processed and tested at CDC.

Specimens preserved in formalin can be tested directly (wet mount, immunoassay, chromotrope stain, UV fluorescence) or
can be concentrated prior to further testing.

Concentration procedure separate parasites from fecal debris and increase the chances of detecting parasitic organisms
when these are in small numbers. They are divided into flotation techniques and sedimentation techniques.

Flotation techniques (most frequently used: zinc sulfate or Sheather’s sugar) use solutions which have higher specific gravity
than the organisms to be floated so that the organisms rise to the top and the debris sinks to the bottom. The main
advantage of this technique is to produce a cleaner material than the sedimentation technique. The disadvantages of most
flotation techniques are that the walls of eggs and cysts will often collapse, thus hindering identification. Also, some parasite
eggs do not float.

Sedimentation techniques use solutions of lower specific gravity than the parasitic organisms, thus concentrating the latter in
the sediment. Sedimentation techniques are recommended for general diagnostic laboratories because they are easier to
perform and less prone to technical errors. The sedimentation technique used at CDC is the formalin-ethyl acetate technique,
a diphasic sedimentation technique that avoids the problems of flammability of ether, and which can be used with specimens
preserved in formalin, MIF or SAF.

Formalin-Ethyl Acetate Sedimentation Concentration

1. Mix the specimen well.

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3/27/23, 10:12 PM CDC - DPDx - Diagnostic Procedures - Stool Specimens

2. Strain 5ml of the fecal suspension (more or less depending on its consistency) through wetted cheesecloth-type gauze placed
over a disposable paper funnel into a 15 ml conical centrifuge tube. (Conical paper cups with the tips cut off are sufficient).
3. Add 0.85% saline or 10% formalin through the debris on the gauze to bring the volume in the centrifuge tube to 15 ml.
Distilled water may be used; however, Blastocystis hominis may be deformed or destroyed.
4. Centrifuge at 500 × g for 10 minutes.
5. Decant supernatant. Add 10 ml of 10% formalin to the sediment and mix thoroughly with wooden applicator sticks.
6. Add 4 ml of ethyl acetate, stopper the tube, and shake vigorously in an inverted position for 30 seconds. Carefully remove the
stopper.
7. Centrifuge at 500 × g for 10 minutes.
8. Free the plug of debris from the top of the tube by ringing the sides with an applicator stick. Decant the top layers of
supernatant.
9. Use a cotton-tipped applicator to remove debris from sides of the centrifuge tube.
0. Add several drops of 10% formalin to resuspend the concentrated specimen. Proceed with applicable testing.
*Commercial fecal concentration tubes are available that decrease processing time and supplies needed for concentrating
specimens (e.g., Fecal Parasite Concentrator, Evergreen Scientific).

Specimens preserved in PVA are mostly used for permanent staining with trichrome. Prior to staining, they are processed as
follows:

1. Insure that the specimen is well mixed.


2. Prepare a smear using 2 to 3 drops of the specimen depending on density.
3. Heat fix on slide warmer set at 60°C for 5 minutes or air dry completely at room temperature.

Slides may be trichrome stained or kept for several months in a protective slide tray or box for future staining.

For additional information on stool processing, call the Division of Parasitic Diseases at (404) 718-4110.
Page last reviewed: May 3, 2016

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