7 research outputs found

    Reviving Sternheimer stain: A single-center retrospective study to detect the diagnostic utility of urinary tract infections in the emergency department

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    Nagatomi H., Sada R.M., Abe N., et al. Reviving Sternheimer stain: A single-center retrospective study to detect the diagnostic utility of urinary tract infections in the emergency department. Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy 30, 768 (2024); https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jiac.2024.02.019.Introduction: Qualitative urinalysis using the Sternheimer stain is a common method in Japan for identifying bacteriuria, but there is a lack of studies examining its test characteristics. In this study, we aimed to investigate the sensitivity and specificity of the Sternheimer stain for urine culture results and compare it with the sensitivity and specificity of the Gram stain. Our goal was to determine the usefulness of the Sternheimer stain in identifying bacteriuria. Patients and methods: Among 986 patients aged 16 years or older from whom samples for both urinalysis and urine culture were obtained at the emergency room of Tenri Hospital from January 2019 to December 2019, 342 patients with pyuria, defined as the presence of 10 or more white cells per cubic millimeter in a urine specimen, who had not received prior antimicrobial therapy were included. Urine cultures were used for comparison to determine the sensitivity and specificity of Sternheimer and Gram stain in this patient group. A positive Sternheimer stain result was defined as bacteriuria ≥ (1+), and that of Gram stain was defined as ≥ 1/1 field of high-power ( × 1000) oil immersion. Results: Using urine culture results for comparison, the sensitivity of Sternheimer stain was 92.2%, the specificity was 48.5%, the positive likelihood ratio was 1.79, and the negative likelihood ratio was 0.16. Discussion: Sternheimer stain is a rapid and useful method to exclude bacteriuria in a group of patients with pyuria in the emergency department
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