Instruments used in microbiology
Instruments used specially in microbiology are as follows:[1][2]
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Instrument list
| Instrument | Uses | 
|---|---|
| autoclave | used for sterilization of glass ware and media | 
| auto-destruct syringes | specimen collection | 
| Bijou bottle | a cylindrical small glass bottle with a screw cap used as a culture medium holder | 
| Blood collection bottle | to collect blood by venipuncture | 
| Brittany | a process of free from spore-bearing bacteria | 
| Candle jar | historically used for anaerobiosis; a lit candle was placed in as air-tight jar such that when it went out it would be because it used up all the available oxygen | 
| Castaneda's medium / Castaneda's bottle | used for simultaneous solid and liquid cultures in many bottles | 
| Centrifuge | to separate supernatant & palette | 
| Cragie tube | see link | 
| Desiccator | to dry things | 
| Durham's tube | used to detect gas production in sugar fermentation media; the tube is placed in an inverted fashion so that gases produced get trapped in it and do not float away to the surface | 
| Gas-pak | releases gases to remove oxygen from a closed container, usually for anaerobiosis | 
| Haemagglutination plate | for viral culture detection | 
| Incubator | used for bacterial or fungal cultures | 
| Inoculation loop: | used to inoculate test samples into culture media for bacterial or fungal cultures, antibiograms, etc. | 
| Latex agglutination tiles | for serological analysis | 
| Lovibond comparator | a type of a colorimeter | 
| McCartney's bottle or Flat medical bottle | for simultaneous solid and liquid cultures. | 
| McIntosh and Filde's anaerobic jar | production of anaerobic conditions for organisms that die in the presence of even little oxygen (anaerobiosis), e.g. tetanus bacteria | 
| Microtitre plates | for ELISA | 
| Nichrome wire loop | used to inoculate test samples into culture media for bacterial or fungal cultures, antibiograms, etc.; reheated by flaming to red hot before use | 
| Petri dish/agar plate | to act as a supporting container to hold the culture medium in | 
| Platinum wire loop | used to inoculate test samples into culture media for bacterial or fungal cultures, antibiograms, etc.; reheated by flaming to red hot before use | 
| Pre-sterilized disposable container | specimen collection | 
| Pre-sterilized disposable swabs / NIH swab / postnasal swab | specimen collection | 
| Pre-sterilized disposable syringe / auto-destruct syringes | specimen collection | 
| Serological test slides like those for ASO, VDRL, rheumatoid factor | vide links | 
| Sterile loops | used to inoculate test samples into culture media for bacterial or fungal cultures, antibiograms, etc.; not heated before use—these are disposable pre-sterilised | 
| Thermal cycler | used to amplify segments of DNA via the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) process. | 
| Tissue culture bottles | to grow or keep alive cells or tissue from a living organism, e.g. stem cells | 
| Tuberculin syringe | as a normal syringe or to perform Mantoux test | 
| Universal container | a cylindrical small glass bottle with a screw cap used as a culture medium holder | 
| Vaccine bath | used to heat vaccine containing medium gently to around 45-55 degrees Celsius during vaccine production | 
| Microscope | to observe tiny organisms that can't be seen with the naked eye by Chidi eze Nd1 therapy | 
| Vacuum pump | to draw out the air from any closed chamber before pumping back CO2, O2 or N2, usually for anaerobiosis | 
| VDRL rotator | for VDRL test | 
As well as those "used in microbiological sterilization and disinfection" (see relevant section).
Image gallery
- 
An inoculation loop is used to transfer bacteria for microbiological culture. 
- 
 Petri dish 
- 
 Agar plates 
- 
 Agar plate with colonies 
- 
 Tuberculin syringe 
- 
 Candle jar 
References
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