Söderström M, Hovelius B, Prellner K, Schalén C
Department of Health Sciences Centre, University of Lund, Sweden.
Scand J Infect Dis. 1990;22(3):333-7. doi: 10.3109/00365549009027056.
Agreement between clinical signs of bacterial respiratory tract infections and quantities of respiratory tract pathogens in nasopharynx was studied in 77 children, aged 6-13 years. Specimens were obtained from 27 clinically bacterial and 51 clinically non-bacterial respiratory tract infections, and in 124 instances from healthy children. Viable counts of Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Branhamella catarrhalis, and beta-haemolytic streptococci were made from swab specimens suspended in saline before being plated on agar media. The frequency of these species in children with clinically bacterial, non-bacterial and no signs of respiratory tract infections were 85%, 47% and 26%, respectively. Bacterial counts greater than 10(4) colony-forming units (CFU)/ml of the pathogens occurred in 59% of clinically bacterial infections, as compared with 18% in clinically non-bacterial infections (p less than 0.001), the corresponding figures for counts greater than 10(3) CFU/ml being 85% and 41% (p less than 0.01), respectively. At neither level of bacterial count (i.e. greater than 10(4) or greater than 10(3], was there a significant difference between the healthy and those with a clinically non-bacterial infection. The quantification of bacteria in nasopharyngeal samples may thus be of clinical diagnostic value.