Abstract

To cultivate Campylobacter pylori from contaminated biopsy specimens, Brucella broth was supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, 1% Vitox, 1000 units/ml polymyxin B sulfate, 10 micrograms/ml vancomycin, and 2 micrograms/ml amphotericin B. Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Candida albicans, and Enterococcus fecalis were cocultivated with C. pylori. All four strains of C. pylori were recoverable at 24 h. When 21 C. pylori strains were studied in pure culture, 86% grew in the selective enrichment medium. In a clinical study, the selective enrichment technique resulted in isolation of C. pylori from 50% of patient samples, compared with isolation from only 36% of samples with agar cultivation. The selective enrichment technique may be more sensitive than techniques currently employed to isolate C. pylori from gastric tissue.

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