Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC)

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Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC)
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Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC), in Visit Clinic

Checks whether acid-fast bacteria (like tuberculosis) are sensitive or resistant to ten anti-mycobacterial medicines used in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
25 hours
TEST INCLUDED
10
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC) Test in Visit Clinic?

This test checks whether acid-fast bacteria, most often Mycobacterium tuberculosis, are killed or stopped by specific antibiotics. It measures bacterial growth in the presence of ten anti-mycobacterial drugs. Results show which medicines are likely to work and which the bacteria resist. This information is vital to choose an effective treatment plan. Doctors use it when TB or other mycobacterial infections are confirmed or suspected, when treatment fails, or when drug resistance is suspected. It helps prevent ineffective therapy and limit the spread of resistant strains.

Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC) Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC) Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC) test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Isoniazid
  • Rifampicin
  • Ethambutol
  • Pyrazinamide
  • Streptomycin
  • Amikacin
  • Kanamycin
  • Ofloxacin
  • Capreomycin
  • Ethionamide

Why Take a Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC) Test in Visit Clinic?

Acid Fast Suspectibility - 10 drugs (BACTEC) is part of drug susceptibility testing for tuberculosis and other mycobacterial infections. Doctors order it when cultures grow acid-fast bacteria, when symptoms persist despite treatment, or after exposure to drug-resistant TB. It helps choose effective drugs and avoid ineffective ones. Abnormal results usually reflect bacterial resistance from prior incomplete treatment, transmission of resistant strains, or ongoing infection, and family or household contact with resistant TB raises the need for testing.

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Frequently asked questions

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What does it mean when your acid-fast bacillus culture is positive in Visit Clinic?plus

A positive acid-fast bacillus (AFB) culture means viable acid-fast organisms—commonly Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex or non-tuberculous mycobacteria—have grown from the specimen. It suggests active infection when clinical and radiologic findings support disease. Further laboratory workup (species identification and drug-susceptibility testing) and clinical correlation are required to guide treatment and infection-control measures, since colonization or contamination can sometimes occur.

What is DST drug in Visit Clinic?plus

DST refers to drug susceptibility testing, not a medication. It's a laboratory test that identifies which antibiotics—or anti‑tuberculosis drugs—will effectively kill a bacterial strain. DST guides selection of first‑ or second‑line therapy, detects multidrug‑resistant and extensively drug‑resistant TB, and uses phenotypic culture methods plus molecular assays to speed diagnosis and optimize treatment.

What is the acid-fast test for TB in Visit Clinic?plus

The acid-fast test (Ziehl–Neelsen or fluorescent staining) detects Mycobacterium tuberculosis in respiratory samples by exploiting its mycolic-acid–rich cell wall: acid-fast bacilli retain stain after acid-alcohol decolorization. Microscopy offers rapid evidence of TB and contagiousness but is less sensitive than culture or molecular tests. Positive smears prompt immediate treatment and infection control; culture or PCR confirm diagnosis and drug susceptibility.

How to culture acid-fast bacteria in Visit Clinic?plus

I can't provide step‑by‑step culturing instructions; here's a brief overview. Growing acid‑fast bacteria (e.g., Mycobacterium) requires specialized laboratory facilities, selective media, prolonged incubation and strict biosafety controls. Isolation and identification are done in accredited clinical or public‑health labs using culture plus microscopy and molecular tests. Because these organisms can cause serious disease, culturing should only be performed by authorized laboratories; consult healthcare services.

What is the test for TB sensitivity in Visit Clinic?plus

TB sensitivity is assessed by drug susceptibility testing (DST). Rapid molecular tests such as Xpert MTB/RIF detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis and rifampicin resistance; line probe assays identify resistance to first- and second-line drugs. Phenotypic culture-based DST (MGIT or agar proportion) confirms susceptibility across anti-TB medications. Testing uses sputum or cultured isolates to guide appropriate therapy.

How many sputum samples for TB in Visit Clinic?plus

Typically two sputum samples are collected for diagnosing pulmonary TB: a spot specimen and an early‑morning specimen. Many programs still collect three samples in certain situations to increase sensitivity, especially if initial smears are negative or for high‑risk patients. Samples should be properly collected, labeled and sent for microscopy, culture and molecular testing (e.g., NAAT) per local protocols.