CHROMagar Pseudomonas

  Description Article No.
 Size
Pseuomonas 18 CHROMagarTM Pseudomonas PS832 5000ml
For isolation and detection of Pseudomonas sp.

 • Pseudomonas spp, including P.aeruginosa
   
→ blue-green
 
Most of Enterobacteriaceae
    → Mauve to violet or inhibited
  Gram + bacteria
    → inhibited

PS833-25

 

25L

 

 
Pseudomonas are ubiquitous bacteria found in the soil, on plants and in freshwater and marine habitats. Many strains can grow at low temperature (psychrophilic strains) and may contaminate food or pharmaceutical products stored in the refrigerator.
Pseudomonas strains can occasionally be isolated from the intestinal flora of humans or animals.
 
Clinical issues:
Their ability to resist to many antibiotics and antiseptics explains their increasingly frequent presence in hospitals. They behave as opportunistic pathogens, often causing nosocomial infections. According to data from the CDC’s National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System, P. aeruginosa can be rated as the Number 1 cause of intensive care unit (ICU)–related pneumonia.
Drinking water in hospitals may also be a source of serious infection for patients with a compromised immune system or for patients in burn care units where it prevents the regeneration of healthy tissue.
Pseudomonas strains have also been shown to be harmful to sufferers of cystic fibrosis.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is among the bacteria most frequently isolated from drinking water in health facilities.

 
Food industry and environmental issues:
P. aeruginosa is a valid indicator allowing verification of recreational water disinfection efficacy. This parameter is currently used as a criterion in the regulation of wading and swimming pools. Moreover, the absence of P. aeruginosais important not only in terms of its role as an indicator, but also because it is an opportunistic pathogen whose transmission is often associated with water.
Other forms of Pseudomonas bacteria are known to cause food spoilage at low temperatures. These psychrophillic Pseudomonas strains include: P. fragi, which causes spoilage of dairy products, P. taetrolens which causes mustiness in eggs and P. mudicolens and P. lundensis, which cause spoilage of milk, cheese, meat, and fish, but are rarely a cause of food poisoning.

 

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