Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious Agents

Diagnostic electron microscopy has two advantages over enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and nucleic acid amplification tests. After a simple and fast negative stain preparation, the undirected, “open view” of electron microscopy allows rapid morphologic identification and differential diagnosis of...

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Main Authors: Paul R. Hazelton, Hans R. Gelderblom
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2003-03-01
Series:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/9/3/02-0327_article
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spelling doaj-5d86105a892741aa9435c87899d50bd82020-11-25T00:34:59ZengCenters for Disease Control and PreventionEmerging Infectious Diseases1080-60401080-60592003-03-019329430310.3201/eid0903.020327Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious AgentsPaul R. HazeltonHans R. GelderblomDiagnostic electron microscopy has two advantages over enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and nucleic acid amplification tests. After a simple and fast negative stain preparation, the undirected, “open view” of electron microscopy allows rapid morphologic identification and differential diagnosis of different agents contained in the specimen. Details for efficient sample collection, preparation, and particle enrichment are given. Applications of diagnostic electron microscopy in clinically or epidemiologically critical situations as well as in bioterrorist events are discussed. Electron microscopy can be applied to many body samples and can also hasten routine cell culture diagnosis. To exploit the potential of diagnostic electron microscopy fully, it should be quality controlled, applied as a frontline method, and be coordinated and run in parallel with other diagnostic techniques.https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/9/3/02-0327_articleRapid diagnostic electron microscopymorphological diagnosisnegative stainingparticle enrichmentbioterrorismagri-terrorism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul R. Hazelton
Hans R. Gelderblom
spellingShingle Paul R. Hazelton
Hans R. Gelderblom
Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious Agents
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Rapid diagnostic electron microscopy
morphological diagnosis
negative staining
particle enrichment
bioterrorism
agri-terrorism
author_facet Paul R. Hazelton
Hans R. Gelderblom
author_sort Paul R. Hazelton
title Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious Agents
title_short Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious Agents
title_full Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious Agents
title_fullStr Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious Agents
title_full_unstemmed Electron Microscopy for Rapid Diagnosis of Emerging Infectious Agents
title_sort electron microscopy for rapid diagnosis of emerging infectious agents
publisher Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
series Emerging Infectious Diseases
issn 1080-6040
1080-6059
publishDate 2003-03-01
description Diagnostic electron microscopy has two advantages over enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and nucleic acid amplification tests. After a simple and fast negative stain preparation, the undirected, “open view” of electron microscopy allows rapid morphologic identification and differential diagnosis of different agents contained in the specimen. Details for efficient sample collection, preparation, and particle enrichment are given. Applications of diagnostic electron microscopy in clinically or epidemiologically critical situations as well as in bioterrorist events are discussed. Electron microscopy can be applied to many body samples and can also hasten routine cell culture diagnosis. To exploit the potential of diagnostic electron microscopy fully, it should be quality controlled, applied as a frontline method, and be coordinated and run in parallel with other diagnostic techniques.
topic Rapid diagnostic electron microscopy
morphological diagnosis
negative staining
particle enrichment
bioterrorism
agri-terrorism
url https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/9/3/02-0327_article
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