Tests

1st tests to order

CBC

Test
Result
Test

Nonspecific. Guided by clinical findings and may be part of routine workup. It can also be used to assess severity of illness. Might not be available in the field or in resource-limited settings.[76]

Elevated hematocrit may be found in nonanemic patients as a result of volume depletion and hemoconcentration.

High neutrophil count may be present in severe infection.

Result

may have elevated hematocrit or neutrophil count

serum electrolytes

Test
Result
Test

Nonspecific. Guided by clinical findings and may be part of routine workup. May not be available in the field or in resource-limited settings.[75]

A low serum bicarbonate, with elevated anion gap due to lactic acidosis, may be seen.

Serum potassium may be low, normal, or high. Potassium levels drop with correction of acidosis. Therefore, potassium supplementation is needed in initial intravenous fluids.

Result

possible potassium derangement, or acidosis

serum BUN and creatinine

Test
Result
Test

May not be available in the field or in resource-limited settings.[75]

BUN and creatinine may be elevated due to volume depletion and prerenal azotemia.

Result

possible elevated BUN and creatinine

serum lactate

Test
Result
Test

May be elevated due to hypoperfusion from impending cardiovascular collapse.

Nonspecific. Guided by clinical findings and may be part of routine workup.

Might not be available in the field or in resource-limited settings.[75]

Result

elevated

ABG

Test
Result
Test

ABG assessment is helpful because cholera infection often results in a low serum bicarbonate with accompanying acidosis, as well as elevated lactate with a high anion gap (due to hyperproteinemia, lactic acid, and hyperphosphatemia).

Nonspecific. Guided by clinical findings and may be part of routine workup.

Might not be available in the field or in resource-limited settings.[75]

Result

acidemia

ECG

Test
Result
Test

May be helpful in assessing severity of volume depletion.

Tachycardia is an appropriate response, so bradycardia is an ominous sign of severe illness.

Hypokalemia may produce a prolonged PR interval and flattened T waves.

Result

sinus tachycardia, bradycardia, prolonged PR, flat T waves

dark-field/phase-contrast microscopy of stool

Test
Result
Test

Microbiology laboratory test to confirm typical bacteria in fresh stool samples from patients with clinical disease.[4][79][80]

The dark-field exam should include viewing the motile bacteria, and then specific antiserum should be added to confirm that the antiserum has arrested their motility.

The hanging drop method of using a light microscope to examine fresh stool is useful in resource-limited settings.

Large quantities of curved bacilli vary in size from 1 to 3 micrometers in length and 0.5 to 0.8 micrometers in diameter, with a single polar flagellum, and shooting star motility; examination of saline suspensions is also possible.

Result

large quantity of curved bacilli

rapid dipstick testing of stool

Test
Result
Test

A study of 101 stool specimens during a cholera outbreak in Guinea Bissau found that the commercially available rapid dipstick test was 97% sensitive and 71% to 76% specific compared with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (screening for cholera toxin ctxA and biotype-specific tcpA) as the standard. Dipstick testing thus had a positive predictive value of 87% to 89% and negative predictive value of 92% to 93%.[77][78]

It is highly sensitive and moderately specific for Vibrio cholerae O1/O139 in the epidemic setting. There is emerging evidence that the dipstick test may out-perform culture in some circumstances where culture positivity rates are lower than expected.[90]

Local laboratory technicians are able to perform the test correctly.[77][78]

Result

positive

Tests to consider

Gram stain of stool

Test
Result
Test

Cheap and widely available but not particularly helpful.

Staining with crystal violet might be a more rapid technique but has not found favor.[79]

Result

small, curved gram-negative rods

stool culture of liquid stool, fecal suspension, or rectal swab

Test
Result
Test

Cary-Blair or similar commercially available preservation media for storage of stool samples required for adequate specimen transport to laboratory.

Vibrio cholerae is sucrose and oxidase positive. Sucrose fermentation produces yellow colonies. Thiosulfate citrate bile salts sucrose (TCBS) as well as Monsur media are commercially available, easy to prepare, require no autoclaving, and are highly differential and selective.

Alkaline peptone water is the enrichment broth of choice, recommended especially in nonacute or chronic cases where numbers of V cholerae are expected to be low and numbers of competing organisms high.[4][79][80][81]

Result

yellow, shiny colonies, 2 to 4 mm diameter; selective growth of V cholerae on TCBS agar

serogroup confirmation using antisera

Test
Result
Test

Non-O1, non-O139 strains are seen in nonepidemic, sporadic cases of diarrheal illness.

Biochemical confirmation of isolate usually not required in endemic areas.[79] On thiosulfate citrate bile salts sucrose agar, the colony is inoculated onto heart infusion agar slant for 6 to 24 hours. Then slide-based serology using polyvalent O1 or O139 group-specific antisera is performed.[4]

Result

positive for O1 or O139

antibiogram (sensitivities)

Test
Result
Test

Antibiotic susceptibility (antibiogram) is usually determined using the disk-diffusion method, but epsilometer (E)-test strips for rapid susceptibility tests are also used if borderline resistance is suspected.

Result

antibiotic resistance or sensitivity indicated

enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) assay of stool

Test
Result
Test

Used in combination with polymerase chain reaction and culture to detect Vibrio cholerae.

Use of new-generation molecular diagnostic techniques is limited by availability in resource-limited settings. However, these efficient and reliable tests prevent the rapid spread of the disease by early detection of outbreaks of cholera, may be easily employed in central government laboratories, and may come to be part of the next generation of rapid tests.

Result

positive

molecular testing of stool

Test
Result
Test

New-generation molecular tests, such as one-step multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays, can detect various toxigenic, pathogenic, and regulatory genes: ompW, ctxB, rfbO1, tcp, zot, rtxC, ace, hlyA, ompU, and toxR. Quadruplex PCR testing for toxigenic Vibrio cholerae O1/O139 is able simultaneously to determine serotype, biotype, and other factors by detecting the ctxA, tcpA El Tor and/or classical, wbe/wbf, and toxR genes.[83]​​

Efficient and reliable molecular diagnostic techniques allow simultaneous, rapid testing for a range of enteric pathogens, including V cholerae.[86] In low- and middle-income countries, such technology might only be available in central government laboratories.

Result

positive

loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay of stool

Test
Result
Test

Faster and simpler than conventional polymerase chain reaction in detecting cholera toxin-producing Vibrio cholerae, indicating its importance in early diagnosis of cholera in humans.[84][85]​​

Use of new-generation molecular diagnostic techniques is limited by availability in resource-limited settings. However, these efficient and reliable tests, which prevent the rapid spread of the disease by early detection of outbreaks of cholera, may be easily employed in central government laboratories and may come to be part of the next generation of rapid tests.

Result

positive

CXR and abdominal x-ray

Test
Result
Test

Radiologic tests are rarely helpful in the initial stages of managing cholera cases and should not delay rehydration attempts.

Chest and abdominal radiographs are nonspecific tools to exclude emergencies involving the small intestine following severe volume depletion, as a result of secretory diarrhea.

These imaging tests may also be part of the initial routine workup of a returning traveler with diarrhea, but in the epidemic setting are rarely helpful.

They can be used to try to rule out possible complications from severe diarrhea (e.g., small bowel obstruction, ileus, and perforation) or noninfective abdominal pathology (e.g., severe constipation causing overflow diarrhea).[87]​ However, attempting to perform these tests may delay intensive rehydration therapy.

Result

typically normal

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