Abstract

The diagnosis and treatment of urinary infection are often delayed, causing renal damage, largely because of the unavailability of quick, accurate, diagnostic examinations. Three hundred and twenty‐five urine samples from 130 patients were examined for significant bacteriuria using the standard culture method. The urine samples were also examined using the Gram‐stain method and quantitative unspun‐urine microscopy. When particles could not be distinguished definitely as bacilli by quantitative microscopy, the unspun urine was examined on a slide glass using oil‐immersion microscopy at ×1000 magnification. Significant bacteriuria in 37 urine samples was detected by bacterial culture. Using quantitative microscopy, rods were found in 30, cocci in a chain in 3, and indefinite particles in 44 samples. In the 44 indefinite samples, oil‐immersion microscopy was able to distinguish rods in one, cocci in a chain in one, cocci in a cluster in two, and negative in 40, which were confirmed by culture as rods, streptococci, staphylococci, and negative, respectively. The quantitative microscopy method was similarly reliable (94.6% sensitivity, 99.3% specificity) for diagnosis of significant bacteriuria when compared with the Gram‐stain method (89.2% sensitivity, 98.6% specificity). Quantitative unspun‐urine microscopy, confirmed by oil‐immersion, is a quick, reliable method for diagnosis of significant bacteriuria, and is considered to be useful for early diagnosis of urinary infection.

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