Test: | Bordetella pertussis Culture Order in NUlirt or complete NPHL Test Order Form |
Synonym: | Whooping Cough (Pertussis) Culture |
Method: | Bacterial Culture |
Availability: | Daily; results within 7 days |
Specimen: | Posterior nasopharyngeal swab (throat or anterior nasal swabs not acceptable) or nasopharyngeal aspirate - flush posterior nasopharynx with a saline wash (preferred specimen). Swabs are available from NPHL Client Services . |
Collection Device: | Nasopharyngeal wash: sterile container or Nasopharyngeal swab: swab tip must be polyester (such as Dacron®), rayon, or nylon-flocked with a flexible wire handle and contain Amies medium with charcoal medium for transport |
Volume: | Minimum of 0.5 mL for nasopharyngeal wash |
Storage/Transport: | Prior to and during shipment: Refrigerate 2-8°C immediately after collection. Ship as soon as possible. |
Unacceptable: | Incorrect collection device such as swabs that are cotton or calcium alginate tipped, wooden shafted, and those used to collect throat specimens; specimen not transported in Amies Charcoal medium; respiratory aspirates in collection containers with tubing; frozen specimen; improper specimen (i.e., sputum); and specimen in viral transport medium. |
Specimen Stability: | Stable at Refrigerated 2-8°C for 1 day |
Reference Interval: | Negative for Bordetella pertussis |
Reportable Disease: | Report positive results to local or state health department. Refer to Nebraska DHHS Title 173, Communicable Diseases. |
Comments: | Pre-approval needed from state or local health department. Send approval to NPHL@unmc.edu or call (402) 559-9444. Test Performed at CDC Consult the laboratory for collection/delivery instructions if transport time is greater than 24 hours. Culture is considered the gold standard test for diagnosing pertussis in children. Culture must be taken from nasopharyngeal specimens collected between 0 to 2 weeks post symptom onset. Adults are rarely positive by culture. The diagnostic sensitivity of culture is < 60% and highly dependent on specimen collection, transportation, and laboratory techniques. Thus a negative culture does not exclude the possibility of B. pertussis infection. |
Revised: | 12/18/2012 |