Abstract
Enrichment of C. jejuni in metal, Morton-style capped tubes gave no growth. Cotton wool or sponge rubber plugged tubes yielded enrichment of C. jejuni to 1.6 × 10 3 cfu per ml from an inoculation of 0.18 cfu per ml in 10 ml medium. Enrichment of C. jejuni from egg melange in cotton plugged tubes and bottles showed that the ratio of egg melange to broth should not exceed 4:1 in bottles and 2:3 in tubes. When enriching from incubating fertile eggs infected by C. jejuni a decreasing quantitative and qualitative recovery was experienced with increasing time of egg incubation. Five enrichment broths and two selective plating media were compared in this experiment. The medium of Doyle and Roman (Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 43, 1343–1353 (1982)) and a routine enrichment broth plus rifampin (brucella broth containing per litre: 50 ml lysed horse blood, 10 mg rifampin, 5000 IU polymyxin B, 10 mg vancomycin, 5 mg trimethoprim lactate and the reductants of George et al. (J. Clin. Microbiol. 8, 36–41 (1978)) were superior to BNP broth. All media showed decreased enrichment of C. jejuni with increasing time of egg incubation, when growth was only of the order of 2 × 10 2 cfu per ml at day 15 of egg incubation. Rifampin was required to suppress contamination by Proteus species and Gram-positive cocci.
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