Best Practice No 174: Best practice guidelines for the examination of specimens for the diagnosis of parasitic infections in routine diagnostic laboratories
Journal Title: Clinical Molecular Pathology - Year 2003, Vol 56, Issue 12
Abstract
Although most routine microbiology diagnostic laboratories process specimens for the diagnosis of parasitic infections, there are no best practice guidelines either for processing or for referral to specialist centres. Microscopy for parasites is most often requested on faecal samples, but urine, sputum, liver aspirates, duodenal aspirates, bile, corneal scrapings, contact lens fluid, and tissue are also encountered. Diagnosis of certain parasitic infections requires serology or polymerase chain reaction. These are undertaken in specialist laboratories, which should be consulted for expert advice on diagnosis and management of parasitic infections. Clinical Pathology Accreditation UK (CPA) has defined standards for assessing the quality of service provided by laboratories, but these do not include scientific and technical aspects. The Association of Medical Microbiologists has recently published Standards for laboratory practice in medical microbiology, which covers scientific and technical aspects, mainly bacteriological examination of specimens in routine diagnostic microbiology laboratories. These guidelines are complementary to the CPA standards and aim to ensure a consistent and high quality of service. This article provides best practice guidelines for the diagnosis of parasitic infections.
Authors and Affiliations
J Francis, S P Barrett, P L Chiodini
Renal disease in pregnancy
CORRECTION
Consensus primers for detecting monoclonal immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangement in B cell lymphomas. Uchiyama M, Maesawa T, Yashima A, et al.J Clin Pathol 2003;56:778–9. The second author should have been Mae...
Medical educators’ personal attitudes towards the necropsy
Hepatitis C virus genotype testing in paraffin wax embedded liver biopsies for specimen identification
Despite advances in medical technology, careful specimen identification is still a fundamental principle of laboratory testing. If pathological samples are mixed up, especially in the case of extremely small biopsy sampl...
The acquisition by the fetus of bacterial infection in pregnancy and labour