Tuberculosis Laboratory Register

The Tuberculosis (TB) Laboratory Register is a paper-based recording register kept in all National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP) laboratories for recording details of diagnostic services offered to TB patients referred from both private and public health facilities.

 

The register is maintained in the Designated Microscopy Centre (DMC). It is the only register used for recording the details of specimen smear examinations. The Laboratory Technician (LT) is responsible for maintaining and updating the laboratory register.

 

Good Laboratory Practices

Good laboratory practices help to maintain biosafety in TB lab settings. However, it is good to keep in mind that:

 

  • NOTHING can totally eliminate the safety risk associated with the TB laboratory.
  • Good laboratory practices with an emphasis on biosafety, significantly reduce the risk of laboratory-acquired infection.
  • Specialized equipment aids good laboratory practice but does NOT replace it.

 

Good Laboratory Practices

 

Disposing Off Contaminated Material Safely in DMC Laboratory Settings

The Laboratory Technician (LT) must safely discard contaminated, biohazard waste generated by tuberculosis (TB) laboratories. This waste must be discarded along with the overall waste of the health facility in which TB services are provided.

 

There are 2 types of waste generated from DMC laboratory settings:

  1. Sputum containers with specimen and wooden sticks
  2. Stained slides

Disposal of Sputum Cups with Left-over Specimen, Lids and Wooden Sticks

Cold Chain Requirement for the Transport of TB Diagnostic Specimens

A cold chain is a system of transporting and storing TB specimens at optimum temperature while being transported from the peripheral health institutions to the diagnostic labs to reduce the growth of contaminating endogenous respiratory organisms.

 

Cold chain requirements for transportation of TB diagnostic specimens are (Figure 1):

Fluorescence Microscopy Using LED Microscope

Fluorescence Microscopy is a newer and better type of microscopy where the TB bacteria are stained using a fluorescent dye using the property of Acid Fastness. The dye will fluoresce when illuminated by UV light. When the UV light source is an LED Lamp, it is called LED fluorescent microscopy.

Here the bacilli appear as slender bright yellow fluorescent rods, standing out clearly against a dark background, as can be seen in the figure below.

Requesting a Test on Nikshay

Once a presumptive TB patient is identified, the patient is enrolled online by a healthcare worker or doctor in Nikshay online portal. For diagnosis of Tuberculosis, the treating physician can request a test utilizing the request test option of Nikshay online portal. The step-by-step approach for test request is as follows:

 

Step 0: Go to the Patients Page.

Step 1: Select the “Tests” tab.

Step 2: Click the “Add Test” button.

 

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