Fiberoptic bronchoscopy in bacteriologic assessment of lower respiratory tract secretions. Importance of microscopic examination
F. E. Flatauer, J. J. Chabalko and E. Wolinsky
Use of fiberoptic bronchoscopy to acquire pulmonary secretions has been
shown to yield unreliable bacterial cultures. However, microscopic
examination of such material has received little attention. In this study,
69 bronchoscopies were evaluated. Clinical assessment of the presence of a
lower respiratory tract infection was made and cultures obtained. In
addition, each specimen was analyzed with a Gram-stained smear. The
Gram-stained smears of these specimens correlated extremely well with the
clinical assessment. In 67 of the 69 cases, bronchoscopy yielded material
whose Gram-stained smear accurately reflected the presence or absence of a
pyogenic infection. In patients with lower respiratory tract infections,
the smear also predicted the likely category of the causative organism.
This study suggests that microscopic examination of lower respiratory tract
secretions helps make fiberoptic bronchoscopy a potentially useful
alternative in the evaluation of bacterial lung infections.