Smear (medicine)

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Taking a smear during the COVID-19 pandemic

A medical smear is the removal of the body's own test material from the surface of wounds or mucous membranes (mouth, urethra, vagina, anus) with sterile cotton swabs, small brushes or small spatulas for microbiological and / or cytological diagnostics.

Cytological smears

With smears for cytodiagnostic examination, cells are taken from the areas to be examined with the help of small spatulas, brushes and swabs . The examination is usually carried out after smearing the cells on a microscope slide and then microscopic assessment.

Examples

Microbiological smear

With the help of a sterile cotton swab, material is removed from a source of infection. The swab is usually streaked on culture media in a microbiology laboratory. After incubation, bacteria and resistance of the bacteria can be determined and the antibiotic therapy adapted to the pathogen.

Oral swab for DNA analysis

With the help of a sterile swab, the collection is made from the inside of the oral cavity. The DNA can be extracted from the few mucous membrane cells obtained in this way and examined ( saliva sample ).

It is used at:

literature

  • Stephan Dressler, Christoph Zink: Pschyrembel, Dictionary Sexuality . Walter de Gruyter Verlag, 2003, ISBN 3-11-016965-7 , p. 4.