COSTECH Integrated Repository

Diagnosis of tuberculosis by trained African Giant Pouched Rats and confounding impact of pathogens and microflora of the respiratory tract

Show simple item record

dc.creator Mgode, G
dc.creator Weetjens, B
dc.creator Nawrath, T
dc.creator Cox, C
dc.creator Jubitana, M
dc.creator Machang’u, R
dc.creator Cohen-Bacrie, S
dc.creator Bedotto, M
dc.creator Drancourt, M
dc.creator Schulz, S
dc.creator Kaufmanna, S
dc.date 2017-04-04T12:23:06Z
dc.date 2017-04-04T12:23:06Z
dc.date 2012-11-30
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:51:42Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:51:42Z
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/1379
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/91663
dc.description Journal of Clinical Microbiology 2012, vol 50(2): 274–280
dc.description Trained African giant-pouched rats (Cricetomys gambianus) can detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis and show potential for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB). However, rats’ ability to discriminate between clinical sputum containing other Mycobacterium spp. and nonmycobacterial species of the respiratory tract is unknown. It is also unknown whether nonmycobacterial species produce odor similar to M. tuberculosis and thereby cause the detection of smear-negative sputum. Sputum samples from 289 subjects were analyzed by smear microscopy, culture, and rats. Mycobacterium spp. were isolated on Lowenstein-Jensen medium, and nonmycobacterial species were isolated on four different media. The odor from nonmycobacterial species from smear- and M. tuberculosis culture-negative sputa detected by >2 rats (“rat positive”) was analyzed by gas chromatographymass spectrometry and compared to the M. tuberculosis odor. Rats detected 45 of 56 confirmed cases of TB, 4 of 5 suspected cases of TB, and 63 of 228 TB-negative subjects (sensitivity, 80.4%; specificity, 72.4%; accuracy, 73.9%; positive predictive value, 41.7%; negative predictive value, 93.8%). A total of 37 (78.7%) of 47 mycobacterial isolates were M. tuberculosis complex, with 75.7% from rat-positive sputa. Ten isolates were nontuberculous mycobacteria, one was M. intracellulare, one was M. avium subsp. hominissuis, and eight were unidentified. Rat-positive sputa with Moraxella catarrhalis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus spp., and Enterococcus spp. were associated with TB. Rhodococcus, Nocardia, Streptomyces, Staphylococcus, and Candida spp. from rat-positive sputa did not produce M. tuberculosis-specific volatiles (methyl nicotinate, methyl para-anisate, and ortho-phenylanisole). Prevalence of Mycobacterium-related Nocardia and Rhodococcus in smear-negative sputa did not equal that of smear-negative mycobacteria (44.7%), of which 28.6% were rat positive. These findings and the absence of M. tuberculosis-specific volatiles in nonmycobacterial species indicate that rats can be trained to specifically detect M. tuberculosis.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher American Society for Microbiology
dc.title Diagnosis of tuberculosis by trained African Giant Pouched Rats and confounding impact of pathogens and microflora of the respiratory tract
dc.type Article


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Mgode10.pdf 486.6Kb application/pdf View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search COSTECH


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account