## Correct Answer: D. Pour plate culture Pour plate culture is a **quantitative culture technique** used for bacterial enumeration and colony counting, not an immediate screening test for UTI. Screening tests for UTI must be rapid (results within minutes), performed at bedside or in the laboratory without delay, and capable of presumptive identification of bacteriuria. Pour plate culture requires 24–48 hours of incubation, serial dilutions, and colony morphology assessment—making it a **confirmatory/diagnostic method**, not a screening tool. In Indian clinical practice (as per RNTCP and standard microbiology protocols), UTI screening relies on rapid presumptive tests that guide empirical therapy decisions before culture results return. Pour plate is reserved for quantitative bacterial load assessment and antimicrobial susceptibility testing, not for immediate screening in symptomatic patients presenting to OPD or emergency departments. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Wet mount examination** — Wet mount (fresh urine under light microscopy) is an **immediate screening test** that detects pyuria (WBCs), RBCs, bacteria, and casts within minutes. It is routinely performed in Indian laboratories and OPDs as a first-line presumptive test for UTI. The presence of >5 WBCs/hpf or bacteria suggests infection and warrants culture. **B. Griess Nitrite test** — The **Griess test** is a rapid chemical screening test (5–10 minutes) that detects nitrites produced by gram-negative bacteria (E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus) that reduce urinary nitrates. It is widely used in Indian clinical settings as an immediate presumptive test for bacteriuria, though sensitivity is lower in gram-positive infections. **C. Leukocyte esterase test** — Leukocyte esterase is a **rapid dipstick test** (≤1 minute) that detects the enzyme released by neutrophils in urine, indicating pyuria and suggesting UTI. It is highly sensitive and is part of routine urinalysis in all Indian laboratories and primary health centers as an immediate screening tool. ## High-Yield Facts - **Pour plate culture** requires 24–48 hours incubation and is a quantitative method for bacterial enumeration, not an immediate screening test. - **Wet mount microscopy** detects pyuria (>5 WBCs/hpf) and bacteria within minutes—immediate screening test. - **Griess nitrite test** is positive in gram-negative bacteriuria (especially E. coli) within 5–10 minutes; negative in gram-positive and anaerobic infections. - **Leukocyte esterase dipstick** detects neutrophil enzyme in urine within 1 minute; sensitivity ~90%, specificity ~95% for pyuria. - Immediate screening tests guide empirical therapy in Indian primary care; culture is confirmatory and guides antimicrobial susceptibility in resistant cases. ## Mnemonics **WGLN = Immediate Screening Tests for UTI** **W**et mount (microscopy), **G**riess nitrite, **L**eukocyte esterase, **N**one of these take >10 minutes. Pour plate = 24–48 hours (excluded). **Screening vs. Diagnosis** **Screening = Minutes** (wet mount, dipstick, Griess). **Diagnosis = Days** (culture, sensitivity testing). Pour plate is diagnosis, not screening. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "culture" with "screening" to trap students who conflate culture (the gold standard diagnostic test) with rapid presumptive screening. The question tests understanding that screening ≠ diagnosis in microbiology. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian primary health centers and OPDs, wet mount + Griess + leukocyte esterase are performed within 30 minutes to guide empirical antibiotics (e.g., nitrofurantoin, cephalosporin) in symptomatic UTI. Culture is sent simultaneously but results guide therapy adjustment only if resistance is suspected or symptoms persist after 48–72 hours. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, Ch. 19 (Urinary Tract Infections); Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Ch. 20 (Kidney & Urinary Tract)_
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